You will therefore hear the cornet stop of the organ in Wie schön and a recorder in the chorale from the cantata Machet die Tore weit. |
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The £12m Advocaat spent on Tore André Flo was outshone by his nurturing the talent of Barry Ferguson. |
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More ephemeral is Bertrand Lamarche's Tore, a swirling galaxy of reflected light confected with the most modest of means. |
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Our three piece band consisted of Robyn on lagerphone, me on guitar and a Norwegian guitar player called Tore Nielsen. |
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Our Guest Writer Tore Knudsen demonstrates in stark terms the fundamental benefits of road planning, by commenting upon research carried out in Norway into the environmental consequences of better roads. |
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The menu at O'Toole's Tore harmoniously roams the world, with dishes like Indian sweet-potato pakora, Japanese hamachi crudo, and heritage porchetta with Mexican huitlacoche. |
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After gazing on the gobblers for a while, we tore ourselves away to pursue our quest. |
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Another professor, with whom the plaintiff had been feuding, allegedly tore down the notices. |
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He tore open the package and produced the inhaler, a device he would get very used to in the coming years. |
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He was crying into his lovely black feathers a piteous sound that tore at Star's heart. |
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It tore into the glass and metal, leaving a second gaping hole several storeys high from which a fireball of smoke and flame erupted. |
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Sizzling chunks of shrapnel tore through plaster facades, leaving pockmarks on the interior wall. |
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She was politicised in the mid-1980s when the miners' strike tore apart communities like the one in which she'd grown up. |
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It is thought faulty cordite caused the series of explosions which tore through the ship, raining debris down up to four miles away. |
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Two shots in quick succession tore the wood into flinders that she kicked away. |
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Desperate for more information, she nearly tore the brittle paper while flipping through it. |
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Kenji slowly tore his gaze away from them as he began his descent from his impressive leap, only to meet a body corkscrewing through the air. |
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Moments later Alan Gilger tore through on goal, he had only the keeper to beat but his shot for the top corner went the wrong side of the post. |
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In training two days later, her Achilles tore on the take-off for an Arabian double front on floor exercise. |
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The tank will no longer have thick foam insulation on the spot where it tore off Columbia at liftoff. |
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Demons, with their leathery wings spread wide, tore through the angelic ranks like heavy cavalry through green footmen. |
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It tore at his skin, ripping it raw and re-opening his chapped lips so they bled painfully. |
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Blowing him a kiss, I winked and tore away from him, making my way quickly home. |
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He said that then he tore my drawing up and threw it in the fire because he was angry with me. |
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Lowry tore a knee ligament in late August, but he recovered quickly from surgery. |
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Those needing pretexts could preach national necessity when they tore down bells or walked off with plate that could be recast into guns or coinage. |
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It was Aeschylus who recast him as suffering hero and enemy of divine tyranny, crucified on a crag in the Caucasus where Zeus's eagle tore at his vitals. |
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Herodotus found the practice among the Pontic Scythians, and, according to the Maccabees, the ancient Persians tore away the scalp of one of their prisoners. |
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I tore down the flowery wallpaper and painted the walls white. |
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This indicates an explosion inside the engine that spewed debris and tore away the cowling. |
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As they fought she grabbed hold of the mask and tore it off his face. |
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I walked away from the fire and tore up green bracken, caw-cannying not to slash my fingers on stalks. |
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Lest anyone find her treasure, she tore the map asunder and cast its pieces into the wind. |
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On March 16, 2006, angry Kurds in Halabja, Iraq, tore down a monument dedicated to the memory of the 1988 poison gas attacks by Saddam Hussein. |
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Williams tore his labrum during USC's first spring practice, after originally injuring the shoulder at Arkansas. |
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No sooner had I walked out of the court room when I tore open the letter and saw that it was addressed to the Kleagle of the Ku Klux Klan. |
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Steel tycoon Lakshmi Mittal tore down a house he bought for pounds 4million to build his pounds 15million hideaway. |
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He tore his clothing to pieces in a fit of madness brought on by a diet of nothing but raw turtles. |
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Outside, Billy broke the cellophane on a hardpack of Marlboro Reds, tore out the foil, and extracted a cigarette. |
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Then the piglet tore loose from the creepers and scurried into the undergrowth. |
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At first Maud, so afraid for her husband and baby, was unable to eat, but within a few days she tore into burnt cowflesh like any soldadera. |
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I gently tore the bloodied piece of paper out from her death grip. |
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Richard's men tore the flag down and threw it in the moat of Acre. |
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When Edward of Caernarfon demanded an earldom for his favourite Gaveston, the King erupted in anger and supposedly tore out handfuls of his son's hair. |
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He tore in for the ball, make a running jab for it and held it. |
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The sailors charged with folding the flag draping Nelson's coffin and placing it in the grave instead tore it into fragments, with each taking a piece as a memento. |
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He wrote it not as a quick pamphlet but as a long, abstract political tract of 90,000 words that tore apart monarchies and traditional social institutions. |
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In October 1965 he tore up his Labour Party card because he suspected Harold Wilson's Labour government was going to send troops to support the United States in Vietnam. |
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At the end of the album, the increasingly fascist audience would watch as Pink tore down the wall, once again becoming a regular and caring person. |
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It was their second attempt to win this prize after their first one in 1992 had to be aborted when their catamaran Enza hit an object which tore a hole in the starboard hull. |
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Sheridan managed to keep the graybacks at bay while he tore up the railroad, but he abandoned the plan to link up with Hunter, and the southerners soon repaired the railroad. |
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Earlier that day, seeking festoonery, she tore the trim from a dress. |
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