Amid the rambling dialogue and semi-lucid metaphors we become privy to a sense of the director's desperation to conjure up some kind of meaning. |
|
All the while we're privy to Bridget's innermost thoughts as she discovers the pratfalls and perils of being a single woman in the city. |
|
There you can be a fly on the wall and listen in on the conversations that men are rarely privy to. |
|
The team watches the success of its efforts from another room, not privy to reaping the benefits firsthand. |
|
The search group was not privy to the coin toss and placement of the target, and the placement group was not present for the actual search. |
|
Are you two anonymous riders privy to the knowledge of the Midnight Rider's name? |
|
The threat to global stability vastly eclipses that of terrorism, say the few experts privy to its contents. |
|
We are not privy to his innermost thoughts here, but to what he chose to record. |
|
We are never privy to their motivations, or to the reasons they abandon principle, or to how the baddies can live without it. |
|
Hacking also becomes useful in tapping into intranet networks, making you privy to who is talking about what. |
|
Clearly in many situations there are dynamics that hold people together that outsiders are just not privy to. |
|
It is not enough for a few savants to be privy to esoteric mathematical knowledge for that knowledge to be influential in a wider culture. |
|
In fact, it seems that the only people privy to the scheming duplicity of most of the contestants are the camera operators. |
|
But we're not privy to what is going on inside the artist's head, as his ideas evolve from inchoateness to coherence. |
|
For a century, they bestrode court and country, privy to the innermost controversy. |
|
The committee was also privy to Cabinet papers that had traversed the issue with a lot of scrutiny. |
|
Some Church leaders have already been privy to advanced showings of the film. |
|
He continued to smile, as if he was sharing a moment that only one of them was privy to. |
|
We are only privy to snippets of information and media speculation, whereas he has all the factors to consider. |
|
Suddenly the student becomes convinced that he is among the elect, the wise, the few who are privy to a secret, dark but terrible truth. |
|
|
The United States also has been privy to increased chatter regarding possible terror attacks. |
|
Teachers are privy to information on honor societies, school clubs, internships, or educational organizations. |
|
Calgary has been privy to teases of his product at shops such as Oxygen in Bankers Hall, and in Kensington at both Brooklyn for men and Splash for women. |
|
You grew up in West Virginia, so were you privy to any Midwestern quirkiness? |
|
These individuals have significant influence within the gang and are privy to all its information and benefits. |
|
He was privy to the people and politics of this intense, highly productive period of social policy reform. |
|
It was entered into without proper consultation by the Government of the day, with even the Cabinet of Ministers not being privy to its contents. |
|
Stewards may be overhearing conversations that they should not be privy to. |
|
Thus, FOs are routinely privy to considerable personal information that is normally not relevant to their decision-making process. |
|
Meanwhile, those who were not privy to such discussions, either enjoyed some rest, or carried on with their tasks. |
|
The feedback has further value in that the intelligence practitioner is now privy to the value and quality of their product as others see it. |
|
Only the three board members who were present at the hearing actually were privy to the evidence and the arguments. |
|
All sorts of rumors had been circulating over the weeks prior, and me being the secretive type, derived a perverse pleasure in being privy to the real story. |
|
Pinsky was also privy to payouts for his celebrity, accepting a lucrative consulting gig with Janssen Pharmaceutica. |
|
As it is a basic principle of contract law that a contract cannot be enforced against someone who is not privy to the contract, one might foresee difficulties arising. |
|
I'm not privy to any inside information but you have to trust somebody. |
|
As a mere backbencher I'm not privy to negotiations that go on. |
|
Inherently distrustful of the situation and the number of witnesses privy to the scene, Ed finally rushed forward and grabbed his friend's arm, leading him towards the door. |
|
I'm not privy to the inner workings except through the grapevine. |
|
Those of us in the industry that are not privy to the details of the propulsion system guess the pearls are the result of a pulse jet type systems. |
|
|
I'm not a judge nor a jury, nor am I privy to any of the evidence. |
|
The rest of the population was not privy to this information. |
|
We have reason to believe he was privy to this report before it was released. |
|
Viewers are privy to real-life intimacy, as she wraps herself in blouses and negligees. |
|
If they were privy to inside information about revenues looking weak, is that a problem? |
|
This is particularly important in countries where the government has a monopoly on authority and tends to use such services for its own purposes, to attain aims it alone is privy to. |
|
This is one element of a broader, long-standing convention that members of Parliament are not privy to classified information routinely available to ministers. |
|
I am not privy to the statistical analysis of the purveyors of the credit-score system. |
|
All the colors of the rainbow shower me as if I were privy to the ancient wonders of a time lost to the outside world. |
|
Although privy to courtship behaviour of these familiar harbingers, we weren't lulled into thinking that spring had irrefutably sprung. |
|
They might become privy to personal problems that an occasional across-the-Plexiglas conference with a caseworker would never reveal. |
|
He believes he is privy to information not reflected in polls. |
|
Teachers are not privy to that information. |
|
When the third party attempted to sue for the payment, he was held to be not privy to the contract, and so his claim failed. |
|
I am not privy to all of the details but what I do know is that there are intense negotiations ongoing at the moment to resolve this in the interests of both countries. |
|
Once the special advocate is privy to the classified and confidential information, he or she can no longer communicate with anyone about the proceeding while it is ongoing, except as specifically authorized by the judge. |
|
States parties are often not privy to plans of the sites where the land mines and unexploded ordnance were planted and the cost of mine clearance is very high. |
|
For example, this process normally implies that if an employee is privy to an irregular activity, he must first report it to his or her supervisor and such supervisor will attempt to correct it. |
|
Any firm privy to such information is under obligation to keep silent. |
|
Spectators are privy to awe inspiring castles, baffling forks, and breathtaking en passants. |
|
|
An official privy to the details said the idea was to have motorable roads right up to the border, just like the Chinese. |
|
I'm just an average citizen not privy to that kind of information. |
|
It can also happen that the interpreter, or the team of interpreters, is privy to sessions of which the participants do not wish the contents to be revealed. |
|
This placement would be inappropriate and leave a military judge in a delicate situation, arguing before former colleagues and having been privy to the kinds of discussions that take place between colleagues on the bench. |
|
These account themselves the ministers of the Gods, and the horses privy to his will. |
|
One person privy to the activities taking place in these rooms was Martin Gilbertson, a computer expert hired to design websites and firewalls for the bookshop and adjoining community center. |
|
There is little evidence in Canada that either Parliament or the public would accept Parliament as part of the inner circle of control, privy to the secrets of state. |
|
But perhaps the greatest appeal of amphibians is not visual, but acoustic as anyone who has been privy to a chirping chorus of frogs as they begin their courtship ritual in early spring will attest. |
|
Thus, it is in the secret proceedings that the real case against him is being presented to the judge without the author being privy to this information or given an opportunity to contest it. |
|
Any individual privy to confidential information is prohibited from communicating such information to anyone else, unless it is in the necessary course of business to do so. |
|
In addition, Dr. Robbins was privy to all the Claimant's reports from his hepatologist and Dr. Rona, and as such was familiar with his bloodwork, ultrasounds, endoscopies, liver biopsy and urine analyses. |
|
Hamdan's defense team claims that he was not privy to any specific terror-related information and was only a lower-tier legman for Al-Qaeda's leader. |
|