At each stage of this third period, the collision between Hagiocracy and these messianic forces becomes more formidable. |
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He had told us he felt nervous about the performance, but he seemed perfectly composed when he walked onto the stage. |
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He collapsed on stage during the performance and had to be rushed to the hospital. |
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John has stated that his wild stage costumes and performances were his way of letting go after such a restrictive childhood. |
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I swapped seats with my sister so she could see the stage better. |
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The final stage in publication involves making the product available to the public, usually by offering it for sale. |
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The fourth stage is tertiary education, which includes both college and university education. |
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In other words, adults and older children are fast learners when it comes to the initial stage of foreign language education. |
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The beams were hidden by a false ceiling, installed below the lantern stage of the tower. |
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No further steps were taken at that stage, however, in part because of the belief of King George III that it would violate his Coronation Oath. |
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Observations by Ball and myself in Colorado show that in the case of magnetiferous granites, the magnetite was a mineral of the pegmatite stage. |
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Failures at this stage are rare because supervisors withhold inadequate work. |
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Students at this stage have the choice of taking 3 or four subjects and are also offered the opportunity to take an extended project. |
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They defined a space for the movement of people and denoted significant sites at which particular messages were conveyed at each stage. |
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As fine a gentleman of his inches as ever I saw trusted to the stage, or any where else. |
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The last stage of Curvilinear or Flowing Decorated Gothic, is expressed in tracery of very varied and highly complex forms. |
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The design of church interiors went through a final stage that lasted into the 16th century. |
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Because of the concrete construction, no columns blocked the spectator's view of the stage. |
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Stories about Turpin continued to be published well into the 20th century, and the legend was also transferred to the stage. |
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Teach had at some stage learnt of the offer of a royal pardon and probably confided in Bonnet his willingness to accept it. |
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At some stage in the nineteenth century, the rigid swords were replaced by flexible rappers. |
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Lacking funds, Morris had to cancel Moore's sculpture, which had not progressed beyond the maquette stage. |
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The Riverside edition constitutes 4,042 lines totaling 29,551 words, typically requiring over four hours to stage. |
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Romeo and Juliet has been adapted numerous times for stage, film, musical, and opera venues. |
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His efforts were a huge success at the box office, and set the stage for increased historical realism in later productions. |
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He would later drop the play from his repertoire upon her retirement from the stage. |
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Griffith produced a 1916 version in America featuring the noted stage actor Herbert Beerbohm Tree. |
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In Shakespeare's script, the actor playing Banquo must enter the stage as a ghost. |
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The play is one of Shakespeare's most popular works for the stage and is widely performed across the world. |
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She notes that prior to the 1840s, all stage productions of this play were adaptations unfaithful to the original text. |
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Like Hazlitt he felt that the work is best appreciated when read as a text, rather than acted on stage. |
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Like several of his predecessors, Gervinus thought that this work should be read as a text and not acted on stage. |
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They fear the audience reactions will be either excessive or inadequate, and say so on stage. |
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He incorporated the existing Overture into the incidental music, which was used in most stage versions through the 19th century. |
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Marlowe's plays were enormously successful, thanks in part, no doubt, to the imposing stage presence of Edward Alleyn. |
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It is not known whether this was a success on stage, but when published it proved popular and went through several editions. |
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The Staple of News, for example, offers a remarkable look at the earliest stage of English journalism. |
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Evidence from other scientists and experience are frequently incorporated at any stage in the process. |
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Other scientists may start their own research and enter the process at any stage. |
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As soon as the previous Puritan regime's ban on public stage representations was lifted, the drama recreated itself quickly and abundantly. |
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Today, the Restoration total theatre experience is again valued, both by postmodern literary critics and on the stage. |
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The first months of 1821 marked a slow and steady decline into the final stage of tuberculosis. |
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Many of his works were adapted for the stage during his own lifetime, and as early as 1913, a silent film of The Pickwick Papers was made. |
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When sharing a flat with Orwell, Heppenstall came home late one night in an advanced stage of loud inebriation. |
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It was adapted for the stage by Elizabeth Wright in 2010 and first performed by Moving Stories Theatre Company. |
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The books that make up The Chronicles of Narnia have sold the most and have been popularised on stage, TV, radio, and cinema. |
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These broadcasts were appreciated by civilians and servicemen at that stage. |
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It has been adapted several times, complete or in part, for radio, television, stage and cinema. |
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There have also been several adaptations of her books for stage, screen and television. |
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In 1954 Blyton adapted Noddy for the stage, producing the Noddy in Toyland pantomime in just two or three weeks. |
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Pratchett worked with Youth Music Theatre UK to bring adaptations of both Mort and Soul Music to the stage. |
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Elgar's Rondo, a 1993 stage play by David Pownall depicts the dead Jaeger offering ghostly advice on Elgar's musical development. |
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At an early stage in composition Britten was told by his doctors that a heart operation was essential if he was to live for more than two years. |
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His main influences at this stage were Mendelssohn, Chopin, Grieg and above all Sullivan. |
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His aunt Viola, an actress, took him to see many of her shows and through the stage door into the world of the theatre. |
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The Theatres Act 1968 finally abolished censorship of the stage in the United Kingdom. |
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These theatres stage a high proportion of straight drama, Shakespeare, other classic plays and premieres of new plays by leading playwrights. |
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White lights in front of the stage at the Pink Floyd concert in East Rutherford spelled out the words Enigma Publius. |
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The two comics spent the episode pointing him in the direction of everywhere except the stage to prevent him singing. |
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Queen rented Wimbledon Stadium for a day to shoot the video, with 65 female models hired to stage a nude bicycle race. |
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The tour featured stage props including a giant phallus and a rope on which Jagger swung out over the audience. |
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They were even gonna bring a choreographer to show us how to move on stage. |
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Many metal performers of the 1970s and 1980s used radically shaped and brightly colored instruments to enhance their stage appearance. |
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These bands also built audiences via constant touring and increasingly elaborate stage shows. |
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One major exception to this rule was Deicide's Glen Benton, who branded an inverted cross on his forehead and wore armor on stage. |
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Weather Report played the main stage, and Elvis Costello headlined the last night for almost three hours. |
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The full line up was released on 25 May 2009 and included headliners Blur, Bruce Springsteen and Neil Young on the Pyramid stage. |
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The Other stage was headlined by The Prodigy, Bloc Party and Franz Ferdinand. |
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The entire stage set from their Pandemonium Tour was brought in for the performance which was extremely well received. |
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The sound systems on site have a total power of 650,000 watts, with the main stage having 250 speakers. |
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Then came the idea of adding more bands to the bill, putting on a second stage and letting people camp for the weekend. |
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In 2012, during Cher Lloyd's performance, the crowd booed and a bottle filled with urine was thrown at her, causing Lloyd to walk off stage. |
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Notably, rap acts such as Ice Cube began to appear regularly on the main stage to mixed receptions. |
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On 25 March 1833 Edmund Kean collapsed on stage while playing Othello, and died two months later. |
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In 1817, bare flame gaslight had replaced the former candles and oil lamps that lighted the Covent Garden stage. |
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Five performances were given of the 'spectacular', including live horses on the stage and very loud music. |
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Unveiled in April 2014, it shows more than 400 famous figures who have appeared on the stage. |
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Baylis owned the Old Vic and Sadler's Wells theatres and in 1925 she engaged de Valois to stage dance performances at both venues. |
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He also brought in Antony Tudor, his English contemporary, better known in the US, to stage both new and old works. |
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He once said that he first made this remark as early as the late 1920s, in connection to stage actors who were snobbish about motion pictures. |
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Chaplin began performing at an early age, touring music halls and later working as a stage actor and comedian. |
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Between his time in the poor schools and his mother succumbing to mental illness, Chaplin began to perform on stage. |
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Limelight featured a cameo appearance from Buster Keaton, whom Chaplin cast as his stage partner in a pantomime scene. |
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Visually, his films are simple and economic, with scenes portrayed as if set on a stage. |
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He rejected a draft by Santha Rama Rau, responsible for the stage adaptation and Forster's preferred screenwriter, and wrote the script himself. |
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As a young man Gerard Olivier had considered a stage career and was a dramatic and effective preacher. |
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For the first time Olivier began to suffer from stage fright, which plagued him for several years. |
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Despite her fame as a screen actress, Leigh was primarily a stage performer. |
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Leigh and Olivier starred together in many stage productions, with Olivier often directing, and in three films. |
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Kazan had favoured Jessica Tandy and later, Olivia de Havilland over Leigh, but knew she had been a success on the London stage as Blanche. |
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With Ralph Richardson and Laurence Olivier, he was one of the trio of actors who dominated the British stage for much of the 20th century. |
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During the 1930s Gielgud was a stage star in the West End and on Broadway, appearing in new works and classics. |
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Following the example of several of his stage colleagues, Gielgud joined tours of military camps. |
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He was Raskolnikoff in a stage version of Crime and Punishment, in the West End in 1946 and on Broadway the following year. |
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Between December 1953 and June 1955 Gielgud concentrated on directing and did not appear on stage. |
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In the latter part of the decade Gielgud worked more for cinema and television than on stage. |
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Born in Portsmouth, Sellers made his stage debut at the Kings Theatre, Southsea, when he was two weeks old. |
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He was steadily promoted, becoming a box office clerk, usher, assistant stage manager and lighting operator. |
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In 2003, she revisited her first Broadway success, this time as a stage director, with a revival of The Boy Friend. |
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Beginning in 1945, and for the next two years, Julie Andrews performed spontaneously and unbilled on stage with her parents. |
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In 1956, she appeared on stage in My Fair Lady as Eliza Doolittle to Rex Harrison's Henry Higgins. |
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In December of that year construction began, with a new stage completed every three weeks. |
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Another fire on 30 July 2006 seriously damaged the stage, causing the roof to partly collapse. |
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Construction of a new stage began on 18 September and was completed in under six months. |
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The music stage was bought by the Rank Organisation for the production of documentary films. |
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By this stage the writers had already talked about a chase sequence along the Great Wall, as well as a fight scene amongst the Terracotta Army. |
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He took a deep breath to fortify himself before stepping onto the stage. |
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The magician asked for a volunteer from the audience to join him on stage. |
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She shifted her position slightly so she could see the stage better. |
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We'll assist you at every stage from inception to completion. |
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The embryonic stage, consisting of a small ellipsoid protoconch and ammonitella, ends at about 0.6 mm. |
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Around the vestry were tripods for anthracomancy, skulls for necromancy, mirrors for enoptromancy, or perhaps for putting on stage makeup. |
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In sheep and cattle, it takes about 40 days for an early antral follicle to reach the preovulary stage. |
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That was weak. As soon as the parents voiced their objection to seeing Cartman nude on stage I knew where they were heading... anvilicious. |
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As Lehman, Breuler is sluggish, coarse, and lumpy, huffing and puffing his way arthritically about the stage like some 1930s crime-movie heavy. |
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I have even read in a book of criminology that the tramp is an atavism, a throw-back to the nomadic stage of humanity. |
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The fourth wall is the imaginary barrier between the stage and the audience, and the phrase is a metaphor for the dramatic frame. |
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King Pyrrhus was at dinner at an ale-house bordering on the theatre, when he was summoned to go on the stage. |
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It sets the stage for cutting corners in our principles just so we can brandish a perceived badge of stature. |
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The woman had displayed a number of bulimic symptoms, prompting her family to stage an intervention. |
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Fishing for cat is probably, up to a certain stage, the least exciting of all similar sports. |
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The compere came onto the stage holding the gold envelope that contained the winner's name. |
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They joined Sunderland and Middlesbrough in crashing out of the competition at the third-round stage this season. |
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By twelve weeks puppies enter the juvenile stage, and it is at this stage that a negative experience can desocialize the pup. |
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The stage names of the Lower Devonian and of the Upper Devonian are all derived from localities in Shropshire or Breconshire. |
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He decided to stage a durbar on the plains outside the city, at which the Afghans would be able to express their loyalty to their new ruler. |
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Metaphors provide epistemic access to the world via the articulation of new ideas at a stage when literal language cannot cope. |
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Exit stage left 47 dead bodies of the 112 known people who suffered from the unexplained attacks. This is a mortality rate of 42 percent. |
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Every Greek drama ends with an exodos. It is obligatory that the stage be left empty. It is left by the actors and the chorus. |
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A more repellent personality would be hard to imagine, and yet Hedda Gabler is one of the eternal fascinators of the world stage. |
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And the permanent exhibit area offers a filk performance on a small stage so that neophytes can sample more esoteric interests. |
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Still, it is perhaps the most filmworthy stage musical in decades, combining great characters, a strong story and a flawless pop Broadway score. |
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The town flooded when the waters were just three feet over flood stage when the sandbags were washed away in three locations. |
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She danced flowingly across the stage, as though gravity and friction didn't apply to her. |
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In the middle stage, the Reges Gothorum saw themselves as something better than mere foederati. |
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The four-handed human form of gods and goddesses is the second stage of evolution in idolatry according to the need of devotees. |
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During stage one, which began on January 1 and is still underway, the bank has circulated 1 and 5 Manat notes and all the Gapik coins. |
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Synchronised parasites were harvested using gelafundin floatation at the trophozoite stage which was then cultured to ring stage. |
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But it was in the immediate numinous aftermath of that predawn visit that I first saw the next, final stage of our haplessly greenward collapse. |
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Men are led on from one stage of life to another in a condition of the utmost hazard. |
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He also married Henry's daughter, Margaret Tudor, setting the stage for the Union of the Crowns. |
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The Channel subsequently became the stage for an intensive coastal war, featuring submarines, minesweepers, and Fast Attack Craft. |
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This final stage, nevertheless, coincided with or resulted in the end of continental extension in Africa. |
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On 6 July 2005 London was awarded the 2012 Summer Olympics, making London the first city to stage the Olympic Games three times. |
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Players from some of the region's minor league teams have gone on to influence football on the world stage. |
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He was still in the intermediate stage between horse and donkey, a natural mule still struggling up aspiringly toward perfect horsehood. |
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The Formative stage is equivalent to the Neolithic Revolution period in Europe, Asia, and Africa. |
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This first stage is dated to around 3100 BC, after which the ditch began to silt up naturally. |
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Processes for the second stage include fining in a finery forge and, from the Industrial Revolution, puddling. |
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Dio tells us that, by this stage, Cunobelinus was dead, and Togodumnus and Caratacus led the initial resistance to the invasion in Kent. |
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The scaenae frons was a high back wall of the stage floor, supported by columns. |
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The proscaenium was a wall that supported the front edge of the stage with ornately decorated niches off to the sides. |
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During the full gasification stage, after piercing has been effected, the enlargement of the cracks requires a progressively increasing inblow. |
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Employees shall be familiarized with the use of a fire extinguisher in incipient stage fire fighting. |
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Norman architecture typically stands out as a new stage in the architectural history of the regions they subdued. |
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The infravisible stage is succeeded by other transition forms before the typical spirochetes develop. |
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At this stage, few of the nobles supported such drastic action, and York was forced to submit to superior force at Blackheath. |
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The plan was to stage uprisings within a short time in southern and western England, overwhelming Richard's forces. |
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Animals were staged according to accepted criteria and only adults in intermolt stage were used in the present study. |
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The difference in capability was at this stage not significant, however, and Henry's forces had new armour and weaponry. |
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In addition, women were allowed to perform on the commercial stage as professional actresses for the first time. |
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More commonly, Chartist candidates participated in the open meetings, called hustings, that were the first stage of an election. |
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The Soviet Union and the United States emerged as rival superpowers, setting the stage for the Cold War, which lasted for the next 46 years. |
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Ker-thump, shatter, shatter, Ker-thump, shatter, the sound of the round thermos rolling towards the stage. |
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In the early 1950s Britain was still attempting to remain a third major power on the world stage. |
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The traditional sequence of pre-treatment is shortened by single stage bleaching, where kiers are still in use. |
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A common market is usually referred to as the first stage towards the creation of a single market. |
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The UK economy was deep in recession by this stage and remained so until the end of the year. |
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The Conservative former Cabinet member Peter Brooke was put forward at a late stage as a candidate. |
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The next stage of the election process, between Davis and Cameron, was a vote open to the entire party membership. |
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The region has a higher influx of young people into the region at the university stage than out of the region into other regions' universities. |
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The dispute represents a significant stage in the creation of a papal monarchy separate from and equal to lay authorities. |
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Most of the nervous system that forms during larvogenesis in C. teleta persists into the juvenile stage. |
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The stage of textural maturity chart illustrates the different stages that a sandstone goes through. |
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The stage was won by the eventual overall winner, Vincenzo Nibali of Astana Pro Team. |
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The City Ground played host to group stage games in the 1996 European Football Championships. |
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Zoncolan is a fabled leg breaker of a 13.3km climb that is one of the toughest ascents ever included in a major stage race. |
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Each form reflects a different stage in a customer's cognitive ability to address the brand in a given circumstance. |
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It was at this stage of development the Eurofighter name was first attached to the aircraft. |
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Charles Dickens visited Preston in January 1854 during a strike by cotton workers that had by that stage lasted for 23 weeks. |
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It found that the incident was the result of a failure of the third stage rotor of the engine's fan module. |
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In 1857 the Great Northern Railway was constructed, and the era of the stage coach had ended. |
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On 5 February 2008 the company announced it had designed a passenger plane to the concept stage. |
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These cylinders are designed to divide the work into equal shares for each expansion stage. |
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The stator consists of a similar, but fixed, series of blades that serve to redirect the steam flow onto the next rotor stage. |
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Therefore, a reversing stage or gearbox is usually required where power is required in the opposite direction. |
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Current species are a stage in the process of evolution, with their diversity the product of a long series of speciation and extinction events. |
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I needed a few liveners if I was to face, in two hours time, a parade of my words and furtive people on a stage. I ordered a beer. |
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This would be another stage towards extending the line to Five Ways the original planned destination. |
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Chronic illnesses, such as diabetes and end stage renal disease requiring dialysis are also excluded from coverage. |
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In the late 4th and 5th centuries the Western Empire entered a critical stage which terminated with the fall of the Western Roman Empire. |
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By this stage the Vikings were assuming ever increasing importance as catalysts of social and political change. |
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This stage of the development of the English language roughly followed the High to the Late Middle Ages. |
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The sales and marketing stage is closely intertwined with the editorial process. |
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I began to know him, and by the time I walked on stage he was fully born. |
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In 1967 Olivier was caught in the middle of a confrontation between Chandos and Tynan over the latter's proposal to stage Rolf Hochhuth's Soldiers. |
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A unified market is the last stage and ultimate goal of a single market. |
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The stage play Being Sellers premiered in Australia in 1998, three years after the release of the biography by Roger Lewis, The Life and Death of Peter Sellers. |
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It is sometimes considered as the first stage of a single market. |
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The recusants had been removed from the centre of the stage. |
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Seldom was the missionary more agreeably surprised than when the mail stage which had picked him up from the train at Ajax, Utah, drew up at an old ranch. |
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The kindergarchy was alive and well in the Carlyle household, with Alice centre stage and Mum and Dad both fretting about being reduced to the role of indentured servants. |
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Apparently the journo was referring to the bank of effects pedals he had strewn across the stage that he had to keep staring at in order to operate. |
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With nothing to lose at this stage, Truss gave the patient a known anticandida medication, and almost miraculously the symptoms disappeared and the man quickly recovered. |
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Jack Harrison left the details at this stage to junior colleagues. |
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Even at this stage Arthur could not be tied to one location. |
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You can even stage a knitalong with friends, and swap colors for more fun! |
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At another former airfield at Tockwith, further south, Stage One built the Olympic Cauldron, the glowing Olympic Rings, and the aerial stage objects. |
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One of those studios, the T Stage, is a specialist stage for both television and film productions and the Studios second largest stage at 30,000 sq ft. |
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There is nothing unusual at first appearance of this man who Barnumized the Classics and shook them and modern stage production into a new vitality. |
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Who could not love the way the Lebanese bellydancer, sharing the stage after her solo with four young male hip-hoppers, did a little number with them waiting on her? |
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The Opko drug, called bevasiranib, is now in the final stage of clinical trials, so it could be the first RNA interference drug to reach the market. |
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An overfired glaze often blisters by the volatilization of part of its composition. It also reaches a stage where its viscosity is too low to keep it on the pot. |
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The gargantuan ape was bonded in iron chains and carted onto the stage. |
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The line-up, however, was not complete until the dynamic, energetic Ziggy Marley and the Melody Makers hit the stage, accompanied by Damian, Kymani and Julian Marley. |
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The Oliviers mounted a stage production of Romeo and Juliet for Broadway. |
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By that stage Sevilla were down to 10 men and Jorge Sampaoli, their manager, had been sent to the stands as a breathless encounter started to spiral out of control. |
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Before I can say Usher's name, the crowd catches sight of him coming out on stage behind me. The place goes bananas. Usher gives me a sideways bro hug. |
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England's World Cup dreams fell apart under a French onslaught on a night when their shortcomings were brutally exposed at the quarter-final stage. |
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Folkestone was at one stage a resort town with a developed shipping trade. |
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Chaplin directed his own films from an early stage and continued to hone his craft as he moved to the Essanay, Mutual, and First National corporations. |
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At this stage of the construction process the only people on the site would normally be groundworkers and the steel erectors, followed by the roof cladders. |
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The relatively plain Greek Revival house was built c. 1850 for Padilla Beard, the first coach driver on the stage line connecting Boston and Reading. |
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The persistence of the Past is one of those tragicomic blessings which each new age denies, coming cocksure on to the stage to mouth its claim to a perfect novelty. |
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Musician and lead singer of rock band the Police, Gordon Matthew Thomas Sumner, better known by his stage name Sting, grew up in the Newcastle area. |
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It refers particularly to a play in which a number of characters are called on stage, two of whom engage in a combat, the loser being revived by a Doctor character. |
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Eidetic reduction, the more subjective stage of eidetic analysis, operates without undisciplined subjectivism only through its criteriological principle. |
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The cultivated mushroom as well as the common field mushroom initially form a minute fruiting body, referred to as the pin stage because of their small size. |
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In Chapter IV we learned that every animal consists of a body, or soma, formed of cells that are differentiated from the germ cells usually at an early stage of development. |
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His return to the stage was in a production of King Lear, which was badly hampered by costumes and scenery by Isamu Noguchi that the critics found ludicrous. |
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A wide range of businesses including early stage, venture capital backed as well as more established companies join AIM seeking access to growth capital. |
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But when he is followed by the Miller, who represents a lower class, it sets the stage for the Tales to reflect both a respect for and a disregard for upper class rules. |
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We played until our fellow participants began to reenter the gym. Then we pulled on our shirts, left the ball for dead on the foul line, and made a quick exit stage left. |
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Around 1589, Robert Greene adapted the story for the stage as The Honorable Historie of Frier Bacon and Frier Bongay, one of the most successful Elizabethan comedies. |
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It is thought that this design of engine could permit sufficient performance for antipodal flight at Mach 5, or even permit a single stage to orbit vehicle to be practical. |
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It's always the way that somebody who's eyeworthy, who has stage presence, will go down better with the audience than someone who doesn't know how to sell themselves. |
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Her funeral was attended by the luminaries of British stage and screen. |
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In October 2016, BAE systems confirmed that the first phase of Project Centurion's package of enhancements had entered the operational evaluation stage. |
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In recent years the site has been organised around a restricted backstage compound, with the Pyramid stage on the north, and Other stage on the south of the compound. |
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Surrounded by a chorus of beautiful women, he jackhammered his way about the stage, rocking his pelvis and occasionally flourishing his hands in a vaguely flamencolike manner. |
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Corbould used the 007 stage at Pinewood for the sinking of the Venetian house at the climax of the film, which featured the largest rig ever built for a Bond film. |
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Sir William Davenant, founder of the Duke's Company, adapted Shakespeare's play to the tastes of the new era, and his version would dominate on stage for around eighty years. |
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While it's often not difficult to identify tokens while parsing, having a separate stage for lexical analysis simplifies the structure of your compiler. |
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In this stage, the country has very limited financial responsibilities. |
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Despite all of the rehearsals, I froze up as soon as I got on stage. |
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But men will chatter and you and I will still shout our futilities to each other across the stage until the last silly curtain falls plump! upon our bobbing heads. |
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The other main stage headliner was Kings Of Leon, with headliners on other stages including Jamie Cullum, Basement Jaxx and former Swedish House Mafia DJ Steve Angello. |
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Gaiety and an overflowing, outpouring love, warmth and clarity, a lighthanded ease, replaced the tormented tension of the will which had marked the outgrown stage. |
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At the flank of the main stage, I took root for an hour, until a female form ghosted in front of me that I recognised from university two years before. |
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But the fever pitch went nuclear when the Ramones took the stage. |
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While the play has been translated and performed in various languages in different parts of the world, Media Artists was the first to stage its Punjabi adaptation in India. |
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At that stage any fears among home fans of a possession monopoly by Laudrup's side were proving groundless, with Cardiff having their fair share of the ball and territory. |
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They take over the first two rows of seats in front of the stage, impatient and grumblesome and muttering about having done this too many times before. |
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The main stage headliners were Justin Timberlake and The Killers, as announced at 8pm on Monday 3 March 2014, with tickets on general release the following Friday morning. |
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Chaplin's life has also been the subject of several stage productions. |
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Originally, he planned to stage this production in London's West End with an eventual Broadway transfer, but when negotiations fell through, he brought it to New York. |
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Major opera houses throughout the world often have highly mechanized stages, with large stage elevators permitting heavy sets to be changed rapidly. |
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The last stage of a bill involves the granting of the Royal Assent. |
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Later, raising her arms overhead like a gymnast, Ms. Olson sprints across the stage, only to chicken out, performing a barely perceptible, hiccuplike jump. |
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Therefore, since the 1980s modern opera houses have assisted the audience by providing translated supertitles, projections of the words above or near to the stage. |
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Mike Whitby, leader of the council from 2004 at one stage spoke in favour of an underground railway, which he claimed would be faster and much cheaper to operate. |
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By this stage, the Western Empire was in intermittent decline. |
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The 18th century saw England, and after 1707 Great Britain, rise to become the world's dominant colonial power, with France its main rival on the imperial stage. |
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Historians see Chartism as both a continuation of the 18th century fight against corruption and as a new stage in demands for democracy in an industrial society. |
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At the planning stage it was projected that the line would carry 14 to 20 million passengers per year, but it has actually carried around five million. |
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Its deposits have been found overlying material from the preceding Ipswichian Stage and lying beneath those from the following Flandrian stage of the Holocene. |
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The passenger landing stage was reopened by the Port of Tilbury group as the London Cruise Terminal in 1995, though no longer served by the railway. |
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Born and raised in London, he excelled on stage at the National Youth Theatre, before being accepted at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School, which he attended for three years. |
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This was Olivier's last appearance on a London stage for six years. |
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In 1840, Madame Vestris at Covent Garden returned the play to the stage with a relatively full text, adding musical sequences and balletic dances. |
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Cultural shock and the lack of understanding a new language make the initial stage of moving to a different country be difficult but they are eventually bettered. |
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The shell was removed and replaced by a forest planted in tons of dirt hauled in especially for the event, and a trestle was constructed from the hills to the stage. |
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In 2015, the inaugural Tour de Yorkshire was held as a legacy event to build on the popularity of the previous year, with the Day 2 stage finishing in York. |
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Nicholas Brooks sees the role of the bishops as marking an important stage in the increasing involvement of the church in the making and enforcement of law. |
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Despite all of the rehearsals, as soon as I got on stage I froze up. |
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This allowed the use of spotlights to highlight performers on the stage. |
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If the entire process up to the stage of printing is handled by an outside company or individuals, and then sold to the publishing company, it is known as book packaging. |
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On stage, Olivier and Leigh starred in Romeo and Juliet on Broadway. |
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Stewart brought back the Faces on stage for an impromptu reunion. |
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It has retractable raked seating and a floor which can be raised or lowered to form a studio floor, a raised stage, or a stage with orchestra pit. |
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However, the most important defector to Henry in this early stage of the campaign was probably Rhys ap Thomas, who was the leading figure in West Wales. |
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At any stage it is possible to refine its accuracy and precision, so that some consideration will lead the scientist to repeat an earlier part of the process. |
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Vanaprastha is the retirement stage, where a person hands over household responsibilities to the next generation, took an advisory role, and gradually withdrew from the world. |
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For Barma, the close-up is an essential device to turn Macbeth into an intimist piece, but also to enhance realism and break away from the stage experience. |
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The indoor setting, combined with the Jacobean fashion for lavishly staged masques, allowed Shakespeare to introduce more elaborate stage devices. |
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Little evidence exists of Cromwell's religion at this stage. |
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After his turn with the baton he handed it over to conductor Hans Richter and sat in a large arm chair on the corner of the stage for the rest of each concert. |
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The Trout was horribly knackering to perform with its continuous high energy and light convulsive jitterings, which covered the entire stage space. |
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The streets of Birmingham's gay district pulsate with a carnival parade, live music, a dance arena with DJs, cabaret stage, women's arena and a community village. |
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Prospective students should check the RUCT Code awarded to the study programme of their interest at every stage of their enquiries concerning degrees in Spain. |
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Historians generally argue that the first stage of the militant suffragette movement under the Pankhursts in 1906 had a dramatic mobilising effect on the suffrage movement. |
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Science is like mathematics in that researchers in both disciplines can clearly distinguish what is known from what is unknown at each stage of discovery. |
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Each of these poets wrote for the stage as well as the page. |
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During this tour he played Hamlet on stage for the last time. |
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The latter, having several stages of rotating blades, each stage increasing the pressure, were potentially more efficient but were much more difficult to develop. |
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