Wilde's remarkable essay exemplified the links between aestheticism and individualist socialism. |
|
His first album appeared in late 1961, a remarkable achievement for a hick who'd landed in the city only a few months earlier. |
|
McCarthy is only 19 years old and to reach a World final and finish fifth is a remarkable achievement. |
|
Winning the French Open the year before had been a remarkable achievement, but he had to beat his old friend, Alex Corretja, to do it. |
|
Even so, for an entire family to achieve Black Belt status is a remarkable achievement. |
|
It is a remarkable achievement for the club and establishes them as one of the best ladies club sides ever to come out of the province. |
|
It was a remarkable achievement and was hailed genius after his predicted crash of 1929 occurred. |
|
This was Simon's third year in a row to win the National Long Jump title, a remarkable achievement. |
|
It will be a remarkable achievement for the whole of the State, which has a persisting tendency to delay projects. |
|
If offers a wide ranging programme for all ages which in itself is a remarkable achievement for the organisers. |
|
That's a remarkable achievement given the bitter division between those two parties. |
|
The building is truly a remarkable achievement and is the result of much planning and hard work by all involved. |
|
It's a remarkable achievement, a testimony to Hall's skill, his knowledge and motivational qualities. |
|
I want to congratulate them on their achievements as it is remarkable in how they did it. |
|
That is a remarkable achievement given the present redevelopment work which has disrupted movement around the city centre. |
|
A remarkable achievement for someone who is well over 80, and is often accused of being neither use nor ornament. |
|
A quite remarkable number of tree and shrub species can be found here, including spindle, wayfaring trees, aspen and wild service trees. |
|
Moreover the public interest may be as much involved in the circumstances of a remarkable acquittal as in a surprising conviction. |
|
Emery was estranged from his fourth wife and a remarkable and acrimonious dispute blew up between the two women. |
|
Dausgaard is a conductor with remarkable gifts and a fine ear for balance and quality of sound. |
|
|
The performance is a remarkable example of the maestro's eloquent stick technique and ear for instrumental balance. |
|
The intervening time has seen a remarkable amount of rumormongering, jingoism, blind adherence to rumor, and armchair patriotism. |
|
In this business to broadcast 4,000 programmes on the same radio station is a remarkable achievement. |
|
The tournament is expected to be one of the most remarkable displays of athleticism that the sport of weightlifting has seen. |
|
Enzymes continually surprise scientists with their remarkable adaptability to extreme conditions. |
|
A remarkable amount of Toyota's hybrid technology is adaptable to fuel cells. |
|
Especially, the time effect is remarkable for it to patch corners of stone material, to adhibit at location to speed up curing. |
|
I mean, it's a remarkable example of the great juggle that so many working women do today. |
|
The audience found themselves in awe and admiration of a truly remarkable and talented cast. |
|
The remarkable thing is that, for all its many faults, the garden is much admired. |
|
What made it more remarkable was the weather, which was wet, cold and very windy, with the odd snow shower thrown in for good measure. |
|
Now, in recognition of his remarkable achievement, he has been awarded a special long-service award by the Cheshire Agricultural Society. |
|
The remarkable similarities between these deposits indicate that they were formed by identical processes. |
|
He would have been remarkable in any age, in the age in which he lived, he is utterly amazing. |
|
Mandelbrot has received numerous honours and prizes in recognition of his remarkable achievements. |
|
But the race was remarkable after he stunned the leading names in the race by taking the yellow jersey in the prologue. |
|
To have won a major title at the age of 17 was a remarkable feat but it landed her with a frightening burden of expectation. |
|
Dermot Weld's feat in landing a second Melbourne Cup is a remarkable achievement. |
|
He was a remarkable American poet and writer whose alarmingly chaotic personal life impacted decisively on his work. |
|
Its most remarkable feature is that the large keep is itself protected by further curtain walls. |
|
|
In his most remarkable feat, he constructs a low-lying town in a dry lakebed only to drown it for a spectacular inundation. |
|
Almost 40 years ago Ed Lewis discovered a remarkable fly that differs from an ordinary fly by one extra pair of wings. |
|
This book tells the extraordinary stories of the most remarkable air-sea rescues in Irish waters. |
|
But one of the most remarkable things about Dylan is the way he reinvents himself. |
|
It is a fruit of the Argentine which according to Emerson possesses remarkable qualities. |
|
Besides, it gives her a window on community wretchedness and some remarkable efforts to combat it. |
|
You can find this same remarkable system in humans, albatrosses, rattlesnakes, bullfrogs, and all other land vertebrates. |
|
Then, in a remarkable burst of rail building energy, engineers began cutting straight swaths across the lay of the land. |
|
A most remarkable little ruddy blossom is that which we find on the sweet-scented shrub or Carolina allspice from May to August. |
|
Attended by a lady-in-waiting, the remarkable royal matriarch arrived at the north nave door and was conducted to the quire. |
|
A remarkable 25 percent of employees responded in the affirmative to this question. |
|
The town was commenced in 1837, and has increased with remarkable rapidity. |
|
A few years after the Allied victory, NBC television aired a remarkable documentary series. |
|
That, by a remarkable coincidence, is the minimum requirement for inclusion in the rankings. |
|
Nelson has digested, reassembled, and constructed a remarkable amount of material to render Harlem Gallery into a text that is newly accessible. |
|
With remarkable royal originality, the Prince first inquired as to Ron's line of work. |
|
For most of us this remarkable series of volumes will be a constant source of wonder, amazement, and re-thinking. |
|
Gavin Rae took his shooting opportunity reasonably enough, but Main somehow got a hand to the ball and pulled off a remarkable save. |
|
It was really quite remarkable to watch, and she stared in awe as he wielded his weapon with expert precision and timing. |
|
This is an impressive range for a VHF radio network, and is remarkable technology. |
|
|
She has a remarkable likeness to an unknown figure who appears in his recurrent dreams, a fact that Paul takes as some sort of omen. |
|
Her wide-eyed innocence and a remarkable number of overcoats help her through her poorly written role. |
|
Such a remarkable achievement was made just four years and four months after the service was introduced. |
|
A remarkable man named Reginald Scot was a Justice of the Peace in Kent, England. |
|
The owner and his team have displayed a remarkable agility in offering options to meet the diverse needs of the dining public. |
|
There are two accounts of the remarkable case of the Honourable Mr. Justice Harbottle. |
|
For many humans, bewitched by this remarkable place, the pull is just as strong. |
|
Only a simple plaque at the graveyard entrance hints at what a remarkable man he was. |
|
Pangolins are conspicuous and remarkable because their backs are covered with large, overlapping scales made up of agglutinated hairs. |
|
This remarkable reversal of roles is the film's strongest dynamic and occurs between virtually all the characters. |
|
She came out of the coma after two weeks and then the long road to her remarkable recovery began. |
|
One of the most remarkable achievements of capitalism is the drop in infant mortality. |
|
The figures say everything about the most remarkable bowling feat in cricket's history. |
|
Initially, there seems to be nothing remarkable about a group of investment bankers being mentors. |
|
And it was a fitting way to celebrate the start of what would become a remarkable reign. |
|
Adam says that the only thing remarkable about what he did was the speed at which he moved. |
|
There is a remarkable reluctance among mainstream scientists and doctors to challenge junk science and expose its dangers, which are substantial. |
|
Her achievements are even more remarkable for the fact that she only embarked on a university education in her fifties. |
|
Things came to a head within a week, which is quite remarkable by theatre standards. |
|
Some of these records are testaments to remarkable teamwork and the power of momentum. |
|
|
Except the tattooing both sexes are remarkable for their almost entire absence of any marked adornment or ornament of person. |
|
One of the most remarkable achievements of modern industrial capitalism is the increase in life expectancy. |
|
Travel millions of miles to space above the remarkable contours of Venus and Mars. |
|
In our three weeks in Cornwall, Wales and Ireland, we saw amazing sites and felt remarkable spirits abroad in the land. |
|
For the past two weeks, the Western world has seen something remarkable occur in Ukraine. |
|
It is also remarkable that he gave a function which is nowhere differentiable yet everywhere continuous. |
|
A powerful quantum computer that could realize the remarkable potential of quantum computing would need at least many thousands of qubits. |
|
Congratulations to the club's Katie Walsh, who has recorded the remarkable accomplishment of winning ten All Ireland junior titles. |
|
The question suggests a blindness to the fact that sportswomen around the world are accomplishing remarkable feats. |
|
Within three seasons, Mariucci had guided the 49ers to the playoffs, a remarkable accomplishment. |
|
It was a remarkable accomplishment, but it destroyed the brand's aura of exclusivity. |
|
Umberto D appears as a remarkable accomplishment today, a film that evokes our sympathy for its protagonist without sentimentality. |
|
This represents a remarkable accomplishment for one individual and his family. |
|
It is a remarkable accomplishment, relating in cartoon form a hymn to ordinary people. |
|
His fellow coaches recognized what a remarkable accomplishment it is to keep winning despite the loss of your team's most important player. |
|
This is a remarkable accomplishment, yet Cordes seems really modest and down-to-earth about it all. |
|
Dmitri Mendeleev's discovery of the periodic law in the late 1860s was a remarkable accomplishment. |
|
Certifying the Gordon Cosen's Forest, a five-million acre public land, is a remarkable accomplishment, but it is just the beginning. |
|
That said, Rowson's is a remarkable accomplishment, because the psychological causes are so numerous, varied, and subtle. |
|
Steve Davey returns to the bench after making a remarkable recovery from a broken jaw suffered just three weeks ago. |
|
|
Murray showed from early on a remarkable quickness to learn, especially languages. |
|
The texture and slight unevenness of the paint add a remarkable three-dimensional quality to these wallpapers. |
|
There has been no more remarkable government for a thousand-year-old kingdom since the first councils of the twelve tribes. |
|
Her prior medical history was otherwise only remarkable for a quiescent ulcerative colitis. |
|
Her grasp of scientific truth in all branches of knowledge, combined with an exceptional power of exposition, made her the most remarkable woman of her generation. |
|
What is remarkable in the cases of ransomware we've seen lately is the effort that the authors have put into creating different versions for every targeted country. |
|
Early in the book, this exchange takes place between the author and his guide to the ways of Australia's Aboriginals, the remarkable Arkady Volchok. |
|
The story is all the more remarkable when you take into account the size of Europe's wine lake and the stiff competition in today's crushingly crowded fine wine market. |
|
The surviving leaders of the Kabyle rebels were either executed or sent to New Caledonia along with 4,000 Parisian Communards, including the remarkable Louise Michel. |
|
Bit by bit the surfaces reappeared, cupboards and drawers refilled, and as the job got done the transformation from bombsite to spotless showroom was remarkable and rewarding. |
|
This new wrist positioner is remarkable because of its simplicity. |
|
The relative abundances are proven to be similar despite a remarkable difference in species composition between the northern and southern subregions. |
|
Given where his life appeared to be headed, Henderson isn't sure whether it's more remarkable that he stopped abusing alcohol and drugs or won the lottery. |
|
Spread out below the ridge is a remarkable expanse of woodlands, an acacia and eucalypt plain of shimmering leaf canopy that extends to the coast. |
|
The subsidiary opened a 30,000 square foot warehouse at Prestwick and takes in a remarkable 20 million square foot of warehousing capacity around the world. |
|
This will be an influential book, and is a remarkable achievement. |
|
In addition, northeast Indians show virtually no genetic admixture with other Indian groups, which has led to a remarkable genetic discontinuity between these groups. |
|
Her cakes are remarkable works of art, too bad they get eaten. |
|
The first two orchestral works are remarkable for their assurance. |
|
He gives a remarkable performance, which has been criticised for being too actorish, and yet manages to make a dull man interesting, without falling back on self pity. |
|
|
Over the last few generations, our cravings for comfort and physical pleasure have inspired many new, remarkable inventions. |
|
All investigated specimens show a remarkable affinity to D. tyrolensis. |
|
Neil Oliver, an archeologist working on the program, said this was one of the most remarkable findings in archeological history. |
|
Supporting the health and welfare of these remarkable children is our only priority. |
|
Schweitzer is a brash, outgoing politician who achieved remarkable success in the relatively red state of Montana. |
|
The rescue workers showed remarkable resilience in dealing with the difficult conditions. |
|
In five years flat, it has given the city a remarkable facelift. |
|
He displayed remarkable sangfroid when everyone else was panicking during the crisis. |
|
He does not seem to have anticipated that she could have maintained such remarkable presence of mind. |
|
That is a remarkable accomplishment for a volume this small. |
|
It is remarkable that this coupling between energy storage and dissipation has been observed not only in different adherent cells but also in many soft biological tissues. |
|
They were remarkable affairs, not in the scale of their pretensions, but in their all-inclusive nature. |
|
Against its own standards, it is a remarkable accomplishment. |
|
For years, the triennial confab has been remarkable mostly for airy oratory by national leaders playing to the crowd back home. |
|
This is a man of remarkable self-discipline to be sure, but self-discipline for what? |
|
But his remarkable combination of grandiosity, self-delusion, and brazen, utter, shameless chutzpah keeps him coming back. |
|
This is a remarkable and lamentable failure of modern scholarship, and it exposes some surprising and unacceptable things about modern academic practice. |
|
I did indeed see the remarkable resemblance, the fusion of nature and art. |
|
Roethlisberger has gone almost his entire rookie season without hearing a hint of criticism, a remarkable accomplishment for a starting quarterback. |
|
In some areas, the stromal cells appeared to reside within lacunae embedded in a hyalinized matrix, focally producing a remarkable similarity to chondroblastoma. |
|
|
That remarkable ear of his is attuned to the ultra-high frequencies of sinister voices. |
|
When you look at it like that, it's a truly remarkable feat. |
|
If an infamous rakehell like Lord Braunfield could undergo such a remarkable and genuine reformation, surely there was hope for the likes of Lord Ashbourne? |
|
Most remarkable of all, perhaps, is that Lennon arrived at Bermuda on a yacht, having sailed 700 miles from the United States. |
|
Their success is all the more remarkable in that supplement makers are the big guy. |
|
In the end, however, Tom made a remarkable comeback by defeating Michael. |
|
Capaldi said it was remarkable to discover the human frailties at the center of such a mind. |
|
Conserving rainwater to recharge the groundwater is a remarkable idea. |
|
It would be remarkable if there were no questionable deals in his past. |
|
On Nov. 1, when Brittany ends her short but productive life, I will be thanking God for her remarkable and courageous example. |
|
I have to say I find that fact as remarkable as it is humbling. |
|
In contrast to the centrality of the plan, the ceiling evokes the axiality of traditional church spaces and generates a remarkable degree of drama through acoustic devices. |
|
Meanwhile, down on the beaches and in the parks and gardens of the nation, there seems a remarkable readiness to accept the dictates of the safe sun crusaders. |
|
There is plenty of wacko UFO coverage, including remarkable photos of blurry lights that just have to be flying saucers, because it's not like they could be anything else. |
|
His past lives all display a remarkable bloodlust, one he continues to discard. |
|
In particular, the fruit has remarkable anaesthetic, antihelmintic, astringent, diuretic and vasodilatory property. |
|
Some flowers have evolved remarkable means of insect pollination. |
|
She received the news of his death with remarkable calmness. |
|
The company has achieved a remarkable turnaround in the past year. |
|
The aechmeas are remarkable for their long lasting flower and berry complexes, sometimes in large panicles. |
|
|
Garrett shows a remarkable ability to connect with the audience through anthemlike choruses. |
|
Bodacious living is evident everywhere, but it's easy not to notice the remarkable people and happenings that are present all around. |
|
The bumpers and front tyres were ruined, but the body of the car was in remarkable shape. |
|
Maybe the most remarkable early piece is an image of a bulgingly muscular Superman painted in a roiling Expressionist style. |
|
The interference of dill seed essential oil was remarkable at the highest concentration compared with carbendazol. |
|
Enzymes, the catalysts of biological systems, are remarkable molecular devices that determine the pattern of chemical transformations. |
|
This extreme cautiousness, which was, indeed, the most remarkable feature in his character, still made itself prominent after his elevation. |
|
This remarkable passion of the British nobility for editiones principes and Caxtons seems to have lasted but a couple of decades. |
|
Even a lifetime circusgoer is unlikely to have come across a troupe as remarkable as the Tadjibajev family circus. |
|
What appeals to one as most remarkable about the copihue flower is its substance. |
|
Students of cynology can trace in the dictionary the dog's remarkable rise in the public esteem in this century. |
|
It is well known that young gannets or gugas are not only highly edible but their fat has remarkable curative properties. |
|
By all odds the most remarkable westward migration before the California gold rush of 1849 was the Mormon hegira to the Great Salt Lake basin. |
|
For celestial navigation the Portuguese used the Ephemerides, which experienced a remarkable diffusion in the 15th century. |
|
Those exceptions were responsible for brief, but remarkable resurgences of Roman power. |
|
May Week.... As in every year, that infamous week was dragging its boorish heels with remarkable infestivity. |
|
A contemporary illustration of the 1523 State Opening shows a remarkable visual similarity between State Openings of the 16th and 21st centuries. |
|
His grave was discovered in 1653 and is remarkable for its grave goods, which included weapons and a large quantity of gold. |
|
None of this should distract from Hooke's inventiveness, his remarkable experimental facility, and his capacity for hard work. |
|
The Orb enables visitors to see the work of renowned medieval artist, John Thornton, up close, revealing the remarkable detail in each panel. |
|
|
Its most remarkable feature is the rare, exuberantly carved Norman portal, which has, unfortunately, suffered much damage. |
|
Fallingwater is a remarkable structure of concrete slabs suspended over a waterfall, perfectly uniting architecture and nature. |
|
The Lindisfarne Gospels are in remarkable condition and the text is complete and undamaged. |
|
In the Nowell Codex is the text of The Wonders of the East which includes a remarkable map of the world, and other illustrations. |
|
Donne's works are also witty, employing paradoxes, puns, and subtle yet remarkable analogies. |
|
The Staple of News, for example, offers a remarkable look at the earliest stage of English journalism. |
|
One of the most remarkable aspects of Behn's success in court poetry, however, is that Behn was herself a commoner. |
|
As a woman, a commoner, and Kentish, she is remarkable for her success in moving in the same circles as the King himself. |
|
The compression of his poetic apprenticeship and maturity in so short a time is just one remarkable aspect of Keats's work. |
|
On 4 June 2004, the project received the Europa Nostra Award for remarkable achievement. |
|
Loftus excavated in Nimrud between 1850 and 1855 and found a remarkable hoard of ivories in the Burnt Palace. |
|
Faldo's remarkable composure under pressure and intimidating presence were hallmarks of his game. |
|
The technical knockout was all the more remarkable after Haye was put on the canvas in the fourth round. |
|
In 1963 Clark drove the Lotus 25 to a remarkable seven wins in a season and won the World Championship. |
|
Such an act would explain his remarkable rise in fortune in the years that followed. |
|
What is remarkable about this whole process is that it was achieved with a minimum of legislative amendments. |
|
He also determined with remarkable precision how the boiling point of water varied as a function of atmospheric pressure. |
|
The two forms of government are distinctive and individually remarkable in conception. |
|
He here, with remarkable dexterity, shifts the question from the moral order of our world to the general order of the universe. |
|
Descriptions of Maxwell remark upon his remarkable intellectual qualities being matched by social awkwardness. |
|
|
I enjoyed my time there very much and I am delighted to become president of a remarkable institution. |
|
A remarkable number of these major artists worked on different portions of the Florence Cathedral. |
|
His talk indeed is wonderfully to the point and remarkable for clear good sense. |
|
The survival of this object is all the more remarkable as it includes a statuette of the Virgin Mary. |
|
There was once a remarkable Roman structure within sight of the Antonine Wall at Stenhousemuir. |
|
In either case, historians agree that the army enjoyed remarkable success during her brief time with it. |
|
His remarkable intellect, displayed in debates, attracted the attention of William Johnson Cory. |
|
A joint committee made up of men from both denominations noted remarkable agreement on doctrinal standards, rules and methods. |
|
With remarkable foresight, he ensured the equipment of his command with monoplane fighters, the Hurricane and the Spitfire. |
|
The chance of seeing remarkable wild animals while waiting quietly on the riverbank is a major part of why we do it. |
|
From the remarkable dynamic tensions of the compact body of the sculpture rise the figures of two athletes at the stirring moment of victory. |
|
I have seen the remarkable ways that untrained, nonhospice people invent just the right things to say and do. |
|
Merthyr Tydfil saw one of the most remarkable contests of the 1868 General Election. |
|
Inside the impressive church, one of the most remarkable finds was discovered in 1907 by workmen, the Gresford Stone. |
|
But there is no doubting the remarkable sense of the presence of God in his ministry. |
|
Some most remarkable miracles have been reported from the use of this method. |
|
One of the most remarkable sculptures is that of the Dean and poet, John Donne. |
|
Thus began a remarkable climb from the Fourth Division to the top of the entire league. |
|
His first goal came a week later on the 21st in a remarkable Merseyside derby at Anfield. |
|
His most remarkable record is that he knocked out 23 opponents in 27 title fights, including five world champions. |
|
|
Rings Around the World is also remarkable for being the world's first simultaneous release of an audio and DVD album. |
|
A characteristic of electricity is that it is not a primary energy freely present in nature in remarkable amounts and it must be produced. |
|
These dunes most often form as a continuous 'train' of dunes, showing remarkable similarity in wavelength and height. |
|
Cephalopods are remarkable for how quickly and diversely they can communicate visually. |
|
The Hawaiian subpopulation has made a remarkable comeback and is now one focus of ecotourism and has become something of a state mascot. |
|
The guttural sounds produced in this form make a remarkable sound, similar to Tuvan throat singing. |
|
This label is intended to protect and promote remarkable gardens and parks. |
|
It is remarkable that the four-dimensional orthoplex is the same polytope as the four-dimensional hemicube. |
|
This species' remarkable speed in digging can easily outstrip a human digger, making the clam difficult to catch. |
|
The grave was preserved however and when opened in 1827 yielded a number of remarkable artefacts dating back to Lindisfarne. |
|
These contain one very remarkable vault with curious painted reliefs, now artificially lit and open to visitors. |
|
This was a remarkable achievement considering they did not hold a port until Cherbourg fell. |
|
Permian fusulines also developed a remarkable provincialism by which fusulines can be grouped into six domains. |
|
A key foreign observer of the remarkable and rapid changes in Japanese society in this period was Ernest Mason Satow. |
|
The remarkable cooling period in the ocean is correlated with pronounced mammalian faunal replacement within continental Asia as well. |
|
In my last paper I dwelt chiefly on the remarkable phenomenon of pelorism and what can be learned from it as to the pace of organic change. |
|
A species of remarkable appearance with mature leaf laminae often so profoundly perforate as to resemble a fragile net of tissue. |
|
But it is very remarkable that in no case did they work the ideographic element out so as to reach pure phonetism. |
|
The skeleton shows a remarkable relative shortening of the legs, thus parallelling many extinct insular deer species. |
|
What is remarkable is the extent and increase in coin circulation after Roman withdrawal from Dacia, and as far north as Transcarpathia. |
|
|
The anaerobic environment and presence of tannic acids within bogs can result in the remarkable preservation of organic material. |
|
The statue depicts with remarkable realism a dying Celt warrior with a typically Celtic hairstyle and moustache. |
|
Rask was born two years later than Grimm, but his remarkable precocity set him beyond his years. |
|
The Chinese expeditions were a remarkable technical and logistical achievement. |
|
From the 16th to 18th centuries, Europeans made remarkable maritime innovations. |
|
After this battle and the loss of one of Portugal's most remarkable infantes, the Duke of Braganza became the de facto ruler of the country. |
|
The street and the nearby beach, famous tourist spots, are remarkable for their popularity in the LGBT community. |
|
From the thirteenth to the fifteenth centuries, however, a remarkable transformation took place in Thai rice cultivation. |
|
Critics considered this a remarkable event in the history of Iranian cinema. |
|
We can assure your Majesty that it is so beautiful and has such fine buildings that it would be remarkable even in Spain. |
|
During this time period, Europeans made remarkable inroads in maritime innovations. |
|
The Eendracht sailed on to Java and reached Batavia on 28 October with a remarkable 84 of the original 87 crew members of both ships on board. |
|
A number of remarkable Baroque churches throughout Russia were built by the Stroganov family in the late 17th and early 18th century. |
|
The town contains some remarkable baroque and Neoclassical churches from the 18th and 19th centuries. |
|
The most remarkable fact, in reality, in connexion with the address is this. |
|
As Frederick Copleston notes, Hooker's moderation and civil style of argument were remarkable in the religious atmosphere of his time. |
|
The shortest fibres are in the plantaris which has a remarkable quadripennate structure. |
|
The ancient Sinhalese managed to extract a ton of steel for every 2 tons of soil, a remarkable feat at the time. |
|
It was remarkable for its typographical perfection, and was adorned with many engravings and maps. |
|
Only during the last few decades has empirical testing provided a scientific understanding of its remarkable durability. |
|
|
In its current state, the Town Hall consists of a remarkable collection of various buildings housing a large proportion of municipal services. |
|
The financial system in most western countries has undergone a remarkable transformation. |
|
One of the most remarkable astronomical instruments invented in Mughal India is the seamless celestial globe. |
|
Just beyond the eastern end of the Terrace are some quite remarkable caves, caused by quarrying. |
|
Flat Crag includes the Great Slab, a remarkable tilted sheet of rock which looks exactly as it sounds. |
|
The mucilage produced by Drosera has remarkable elastic properties and has made this genus a very attractive subject in biomaterials research. |
|
The remarkable transformation was completed with abstract music, composed by Mark Reveley. |
|
And to be fair about it, that's not the only way that Jernstedt describes the remarkable Welwitschias of southwestern Africa. |
|
But her favourite image in the book is a remarkable shot of the park's pack of rare African Hunting Dogs. |
|
It will be the most remarkable British sporting achievement since Virginia Wade won Wimbledon without dropping an aitch. |
|
A remarkable snowstorm plowed through buffalo, New York on Tuesday. |
|
Keep that source of remarkable strength all quiet on the buffoon front. |
|
Watch 10 remarkable shark species including whale and angel sharks on their hunt for prey in various corners of the world. |
|
Key to its impact was Keeley Hawes' remarkable portrayal of the complex anti-heroine Det Insp Lindsay Denton. |
|
Churchill has performed a remarkable service himself in succinctly rebutting rhetoric with fact. |
|
He also led a remarkable life after boxing, which involved rugby league, arm-wrestling and therapeutic drumming. |
|
Among the other highlights of this remarkable series are Bengal tiger hunts and going inside army ant colonies. |
|
Now, a series of remarkable photographs by leading lensman Tim Cornbill has captured the transition of time. |
|
Her story and the photos by Steve Ringman really capture this remarkable undertaking. |
|
It is remarkable that persons who speculate the most boldly often conform with the most perfect quietude to the external regulations of society. |
|
|
It is remarkable because its three-dimensional world is even more stereoscopic than the real world. |
|
His remarkable memory has lost its acuity, and he tires easily. |
|
It would be remarkable that the supercoset construction works well, even if the resulting backgrounds are not maximally supersymmetric. |
|
One of the most remarkable features of cultivated beans is the enormous range of testa colours and patterns which can be found. |
|
It is remarkable that, in reviewing my collection, I found the word SEA unexemplified. |
|
Without any aggrandised doubling or trebling of instruments, they play with a remarkable discipline which liberates genuine expressiveness. |
|
The 45 pupils who man the AYS base have devoted a remarkable amount of time to create a culture of respect, ambition and achievement. |
|
Making Rosberg's lap even more remarkable was that he had a deflating rear tyre and the track was still slightly damp from the rain that hit the circuit during the day. |
|
The rate of stylistic development between about 750 and 300 BC was remarkable by ancient standards, and in surviving works is best seen in sculpture. |
|
It is however one of the most remarkable books of the century. |
|
The understanding between accordionist, John Hallam and pianist Vinny Parker was quite remarkable with ideas swapped or further developed during solos. |
|
Despite his political experience, this was a remarkable choice. |
|
Managed by Teddy Lewis, reserve captain of local rugby club, Pontypridd RFC, Wilde went undefeated in 103 bouts, all of which were held in Britain, a remarkable achievement. |
|
More often, badges commemorated some remarkable exploit, illustrated a family or feudal alliance, or indicated some territorial rights or pretensions. |
|
The remarkable feature here is that the lower storey of this portico extends to the full width of the aisles, while the upper section defines the nave that lies behind it. |
|
It is remarkable for the richness of her language and for her perception. |
|
The Mughal Empire was marked by a period of artistic exchanges and a Central Asian and South Asian architecture synthesis, with remarkable buildings such as the Taj Mahal. |
|
By the spring of 1915, the Russians had retreated to Galicia, and, in May, the Central Powers achieved a remarkable breakthrough on Poland's southern frontiers. |
|
This recent and significant increase in ranking and performance is mostly due to remarkable achievements in energy efficiency and reductions in CO2 emission levels. |
|
The Turkish hezel is one of the remarkable trees in the park. |
|