The Autobiography has by acclamation been pronounced the finest example of its genre in American theatrical annals. |
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Certainly, these two have to be considered among the best comedy duos in the annals of TV history. |
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From the annals of Indian history, it can be discerned that the role of women in the society is no less than men. |
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A cursory glance through the annals of history will prove this beyond doubt. |
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The astonishing success of four women singing plainsong has created yet another mystery in the annals of record sales. |
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Taking offence, making a show of it, is a peculiarly self-theatrical, melodramatic, histrionic gesture in the annals of criticism. |
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She fit a type easily recognized in the annals of hagiography, and it was on that basis that claims for sainthood were made. |
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It may be no stretch to say that the win could go down as a momentous one in the annals of United's history. |
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This episode, we can agree, adds a new chapter to the annals of bizarrerie. |
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Unfortunately for the field of 21 middleweights, their class had one of the strangest finishes in the annals of the NPC Nationals. |
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Mind you, the annals of British sportscasting contain many examples of superannuated pundits who soldier on well past their sell-by dates. |
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The final will be a huge undertaking for a team which could be etched in the annals of history. |
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I don't think I would have gone down in the annals of legendary avengers against evil. |
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These are not romantic, but sad stories in the annals of immigrant experiences. |
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Rickey made an art form of doing more with less money than any general manager in baseball annals. |
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This should go down in the annals of history, as I've never enjoyed doing a job before, managing at best antipathy. |
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More painful by far than reveries of the uncharted future is the thought of the shut and sealed annals of the past. |
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Next Sunday is another wonderful chapter in the historic annals of Carrick United Football club. |
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When the annals of the history of Irish Boxing will be written the name of Michael Mullaney from Balla will be up there with the all-time greats. |
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The name of Archbishop Croke will forever live in the annals of GAA history because of the remarkable footballing cathedral which bears his name. |
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That all changed when I saw an advertisement in the newspaper for a grand festivity sure to be remembered forever in the annals of history. |
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She first appeared in the historical annals in 1239 as a mamlukah inmate of Turkish or Armenian origins in the Caliph al-Musta'sim's harem. |
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The annals of the marine record no example of a shipwreck so terrible as that of the Medusa frigate. |
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The first documented mention of Boyan is in Byzantine annals by the historian Liutprandus. |
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Sunday, February 24th will be recorded in the annals of the Pattaya Sports Club history as the day it passed its 3rd milestone. |
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They have had the kind of season that is so rare it will go down in the annals of baseball lore. |
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It was, after all, the most ambitious amphibious operation in the annals of military history until the Normandy invasion. |
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Sunday, May 1, 1960, is a date that will not be soon forgotten in the annals of Canadian steam railroading. |
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Our bookstores would surely be more drab and austere in their absence or their relegation to the annals of world literature. |
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In the annals of 21st-century Latin American religion, it was a historic moment. |
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Nothing like it had ever been pulled off in the annals of New York City crime. |
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Filed away within the annals of the New York Historical Society, it escaped the notice of those who oversaw the archives. |
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This was an opportune moment to address the issue of the oppression of animals, until then catalogued in the annals of quixotry, as a serious moral problem. |
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And one finds both sorts of dystopian authors represented in the annals of Chinese sci-fi. |
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The latter part of the twentieth century is witnessing one of the greatest world wide religious resurgences ever recorded in the annals of human history. |
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He will give you quality over quantity, abundance over emptiness. 1,000 years from now my father will be remembered in the annals of history as one of the greats of our time. |
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Thank you Ivo, for your kind assistance in bringing back such fond memories of the great names and events that will be registered in the historic annals of Pattaya forever. |
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It was a day that would live in infamy in the annals of medical history. |
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The swiftness and high case-rate of Chikungunya is almost unprecedented in the annals of horrible viral outbreaks. |
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The county had waited 120 years for such an honour and this team of champions have already entered the annals of sporting history in this Midland county. |
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Some disputes are better left undecided in the annals of history. |
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Several hallowed records that stood for a generation and more, and long were regarded as unsurpassable, have diminished to footnotes in the annals of the game. |
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In all the annals of arrogance for which this Government and that Secretary of State have become notorious this utter display of contempt for Parliament bulks large. |
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It is hard to find, in the annals of American history, a public servant less competent and more harmful. |
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In the annals of oxymorons, this has to be among the most oxymoronic. |
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The Complete Prestige Recordings is a mammoth 11 CD set in tribute to a jazz giant that left behind an ineradicable mark in the annals of modern jazz music. |
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The city is home to many great works by Michelangelo, Botticelli and Giotto and Florentines are justifiably proud of their city's place in the annals of Italian art history. |
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His famous donkey jacket will now go down in the annals of history. |
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Daniels's coinage 'abjad' won't glister in the annals of euonymy, but I must use it here for clarity's sake. |
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Because of the immediacy of the information, historians tend to value live chronicles, such as annals, over dead ones. |
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Beyond Pictland, the principal sources are the Irish annals, of which the Annals of Ulster and the Annals of Tigernach are the most reliable. |
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The annals of American violence include countless workplace shootings. |
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The secret could not remain hidden forever, and it has meanwhile entered the annals of Hollywood anecdotage. |
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The forcible administration of poison is by no means a new thing in criminal annals. |
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It could also be that overly imaginative journalists have joined the dodo bird and passenger pigeon in the annals of history. |
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The Annales Maximi were a running set of annals kept by the Pontifex Maximus. |
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The word fasti thus came to be used in the general sense of annals or historical records. |
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Celtic scholar Whitley Stokes, in a philological study of the Irish annals, concluded that Pictish was closely related to Welsh. |
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Both the Parker Chronicle and Peterborough Chronicle annals of AD 793 record the Old English name, Lindisfarena. |
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If the chronicles deal with events year by year, they are often called annals. |
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Good Day to Die Hard,' the fifth entry in the annals of hard-to-kill New York cop John McClane, is not that explosively bad movie. |
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The annals copied down are therefore incorrect from 1045 to 1052, which has two entries. |
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It is only with the Peasants' Revolt that Richard starts to emerge clearly in the annals. |
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They were more likely added at some point in the 10th century and may never have existed in any earlier set of annals. |
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After 491 the written history of Sussex goes blank until 607, when the annals report that Ceolwulf of Wessex fought against the South Saxons. |
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The Chronicle is a collection of annals that were still being updated in some cases more than 600 years after the events they describe. |
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Other presumed early materials include the Irish annals, which contain records from the Chronicle of Ireland. |
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The annals of cynology make no further mention of the breed until 1901 when a combined Rottweiler and Leonberger Club was formed. |
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The Annales were not written in a continuous narrative, but in the style of earlier annals, giving the events of each year in a separate entry. |
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Daniel Boone's sharpshooting earned him a place in the annals of the American west. |
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Most available details of his life are from subsequent hagiographies and annals, and these are now not accepted without detailed criticism. |
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The Grammar stands alone in the annals of science for its comprehensiveness, method and fullness of detail. |
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Both of them were based upon earlier annals, yet those are now lost. |
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There are few definite reports of Alt Clut in the remainder of the 7th century, although it is possible that the Irish annals contain entries which may be related to Alt Clut. |
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However, very few contemporary accounts of the craft survive, and Evans's tendency to exaggerate its success in his own annals make verification of its performance difficult. |
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Tacitus uses Claudius' arguments for the orthographical innovations mentioned above and may have used him for some of the more antiquarian passages in his annals. |
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Additionally, the complex textual history of the Annales Cambriae precludes any certainty that the Arthurian annals were added to it even that early. |
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A vexillum beati Georgii is mentioned in the Genovese annals for the year 1198, referring to a red flag with a depiction of Saint George and the dragon. |
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Parliament reversed his attainder and recorded Richard's kingship as illegal, although the Yorkist king's reign remained officially in the annals of England history. |
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The combined army was described in the annals as the Great Heathen Army. |
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The annals record that only 30,000 of 200,000 inhabitants survived. |
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In Roman historiography, annals generally begin at the founding of Rome. |
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Contemporary annals began to be kept in Wessex during the 7th century. |
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