They fumble through their budding romances, discovering meaning as they go. |
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Thus, your adventures take on a mythical quality and your romances aren't just conquests, they're heart-touching encounters. |
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In this brave-new-world of e-mails and cheap telephone calls, holiday romances are much easier to prolong. |
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Harlequin romances idealize traditional male and female gender roles and always have a happy ending. |
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Her reading consisted of a staple diet of lurid romances and whodunits, and her thoughts tended towards the macabre. |
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The paradox of the season is also embodied in tragic romances like the one based on a play written by Tan Xianzu, a coeval of Shakespeare. |
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They were well-known silent film stars who were married and who often starred in adventure romances together. |
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Sure, you can see the conclusion coming, but most movie romances are predictable in that way. |
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The writers were sometimes aware of other romances on the subject and often indicate their dependence on Chretien or other sources. |
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Accordingly, she partied, had romances, travelled and otherwise enjoyed herself. |
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The plays are printed roughly in the Folio order, comedies first, followed by histories, tragedies, and the late romances. |
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After all the mix-ups, the disasters were averted and the romances were all sorted out. |
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The cacology, in fact, here belongs not to the low world of the Flemings but to the 'high' world of the English romances. |
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I hope that wasn't a spoiler for those who haven't seen any romances in the last 30 years. |
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The venerable Sir Walter Scott, who self-consciously wrote romances, criticized Jane Austen for not being romantic enough. |
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For some, the minute attention to nuances of bygone manners makes her simple romances vapidly parochial. |
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Some medieval romances were alive and well and selling briskly well into the 19th century. |
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Your romances, your breakups, your happy times, your good times are known by everyone. |
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These early books included histories, chronicles, romances, religious texts, and books of hours. |
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Second, slash fiction is so similar to mainstream genre romances that it could reasonably be classified as a species of that genus. |
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Many people have developed online friendships and romances that have blossomed into offline relationships. |
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Anne is unduly modest on her blog, but she is a long-standing author of Mills and Boon romances. |
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Some people think a meritocracy would reward literary novelists more than those who write formula romances. |
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Holiday romances will be particularly energetic, but even long-term partners will experience a lusty flush of new love. |
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When you look back on past romances, do you ever wonder what you saw in a former lover? |
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Tinseltown has usurped the kung fu genre, and even some Bollywood romances have a taste of the American romantic comedy. |
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It is eclectic, melodic, and ranges from imitations of Gregorian chants to mellifluous romances. |
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In most of these romances the grail is a cup used at the Last Supper and there are several actual vessels that claim to be the Holy Grail. |
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The prose romances are tentative, immature, with the gawkishness and lack of ease of immaturity. |
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The whole set consists of rather humorous songs based on folk rhythms, melancholic dumkas and lyrical or even dramatic romances. |
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This is because when singing romances, a singer must rely only on his or her voice and the accompaniment of the piano and not on stage props. |
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For decades, such films were low-grade romances with weak plots interfused with 20-odd musical outbursts. |
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But if any courtly romances were composed in eleventh-century Britain and Ireland, none survive. |
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Cervantes, in Don Quixote, parodies not just the chivalric romances of his day but also its literary structures through a new poetry of language. |
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Tim has a history of failed romances, generally because his meddling mom puts the kybosh on things. |
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In fact, I was pretty sure that the latest romances were the major topics of the staffroom at recesses and lunchtime breaks. |
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Her novels are generally escapist romances eloquent in their expression of the desires and anxieties of gender and race. |
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She's written six paranormal romances about love complicated by grimalkins, witches, Druids, mermaids, and even mad scientists. |
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Here was a movement whose ideal of collectivism frowned on individual romances. |
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What legends, what quaint stories, what seemingly extravagant romances, its ivied stones, had they but tongues, could tell! |
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Not even the ladies-in-waiting cared for much except when it had to do with castle romances or flirtations. |
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They disapproved of a lot of my sister's romances, and I was all prepared for them disapproving of Phil. |
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In the world of quickie romances and shotgun relationships, finding the perfect match is nothing short of an Olympian task. |
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Things certainly moved quickly with Felix, but summer romances tend to be that way. |
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Alora had had boyfriends before when she was a two or three years younger, but only childish romances, nothing serious. |
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The eight romances for saxophone and piano are indeed romantic. |
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In chick lit, women escape their failed romances and other troubles by traveling to exotic, beautiful places. |
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But while this is a satisfying central plot, the story is just as much about the accident-prone romances and intrigues of the rest of this likeable family. |
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Scorpio Rising by R.G. Vliet One of the most scorching, incandescent romances ever. |
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Instead of that film's repressed romances, Iron Monkey offers a gob of melodrama, slapstick comedy, cooking montages, and demonstrations of holistic medicine. |
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Prose romances were rewritten as plays, old plays were rewritten as new, classical texts were translated, adapted, and plundered for moral sententiae, apothegms, and imagery. |
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He still seemed to take these simple romances far too seriously. |
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I love to read romances the best but I appreciate classics too. |
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It may simply be a parody of chivalric romances, as it claims to be. |
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Deeper roots can be traced in medieval romances of chivalry. |
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It is one of the most admired of all Middle English romances nowadays, because of its narrative coherence and life and the sustained interest of its action. |
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More directly linked to our generic discussion, we should consider the role women have played in romances dating back to the medieval quest romances. |
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She has read some of the chivalric romances and says she can handle it. |
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In between, there are virtuoso showpieces, hilarious buffo send-ups, and elegiac romances, all enhanced by imaginative instrumental accompaniments. |
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He juices with vegetables, romances on tinder, and shops for rustic furniture built with reclaimed materials. |
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Women have traditionally bought and read more books than men and the mass market offered gold-spined bonkbusters, historical romances or Aga sagas. |
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Gawain responded that even if he taught her all he knew, and recited romances to her, she was already a hundred times more versed in love than he. |
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These were essentially romances, however handsomely photographed. |
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The tyranny associated by Renaissance humanists with the age of chivalric knights and with the knight figure caused romances that heroize the bygone age to fall into disfavor. |
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The folk epics and romances, Sikh sacred literature, and poetic compositions of the Sufis are all part of a literary tradition that continues today. |
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Annapurna takes the audience into a world of hopes, dreams and desires through dance stories of young girls and mothers and their romances with the Gods. |
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She has the elfin air of a creature from the romances of chivalry. |
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This is a compilation of some French and English Arthurian romances, and was among the earliest books printed in England. |
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The former choirgirl, who as a child sang in church and had little time for boys, has had a string of failed romances. |
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During the early 13th century, romances were increasingly written as prose. |
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Romeo and Juliet belongs to a tradition of tragic romances stretching back to antiquity. |
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Other transitional works were preserved as popular entertainment, including a variety of romances and lyrics. |
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In Shakespeare's late romances, he deliberately returned to a more artificial style, which emphasised the illusion of theatre. |
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Other transitional works were popular entertainment, including a variety of romances and lyrics. |
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In his last phase, he wrote tragicomedies, also known as romances, and collaborated with other playwrights. |
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Only a few lines of the poem have survived, but a prose retelling became popular and was later incorporated into two other romances. |
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The motif of the lost child evoked at the end of the text redisposes elements of Shakespeare's late romances, including A Winter's Tale. |
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These charged romances help you storywise because it enables you to not have to get them together so fast. |
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Many other places are listed as a location where Arthur holds court in the later romances, Carlisle and London perhaps being the most prominent. |
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After the cycle of Grail romances was well established, later writers used this alternative etymology. |
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In the early 19th century, medievalism, Romanticism, and the Gothic Revival reawakened interest in Arthur and the medieval romances. |
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Most Middle English rewritings of French romances have been undervalued as abridged versions adapted to less cultured audiences. |
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Medieval romances such as Amadis de Gaula feature giants as antagonists, or, rarely, as allies. |
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Many of Voltaire's prose works and romances, usually composed as pamphlets, were written as polemics. |
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During the early second millennium, Saint George became a model of chivalry in works of literature, including medieval romances. |
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Works such as these had not been read as novels or romances but as philosophical texts. |
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According to one theory, the eight romances were originally intended to be separate, but Caxton altered them to be more unified. |
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Shakespeare wrote plays in a variety of genres, including histories, tragedies, comedies and the late romances, or tragicomedies. |
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Today, the Sephardim have preserved the romances and the ancient melodies and songs of Spain and Portugal, as well as a large number of old Portuguese and Spanish proverbs. |
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Thus looks in Aylwin always carry within them and reduplicate the memories of other looks, carry the condensed histories of tangled family romances. |
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Occasionally a reader might find the political discourses with which she aligns the romances somewhat tangential to the urgencies of the poetry and the characters. |
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The interinfluence of French and English literature can be studied in the Breton romances and the romans d'aventure even better than in the epic poetry of the period. |
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Eddison and James Branch Cabell were familiar with Morris's romances. |
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His reading included chivalric romances, poems, history and travel books. |
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Female authors were published under their own names during Eliot's life, but she wanted to escape the stereotype of women writing only lighthearted romances. |
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Failing health prevented him from completing several more romances. |
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The orchestra's co-leader Peter Maslin played John Williams' Schindler's List peerlessly, showing it to be a major work in the tradition of Beethoven's violin romances. |
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In later romances, particularly those of French origin, there is a marked tendency to emphasize themes of courtly love, such as faithfulness in adversity. |
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One of the most popular novelist of the era was Sir Walter Scott, whose historical romances inspired a generation of painters, composers, and writers throughout Europe. |
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Romances and intrigues shouldn't matter to anyone but myself and those involved. |
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Schumann is represented by his Romances, originally for oboe, published also for clarinet, despite the composer's express countermand. |
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