The end of the book includes a short glossary of terms to help readers with certain concepts such as bel canto, leitmotif and verismo. |
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These two chapters provide the basic building blocks for the rest of the book. |
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You know he doesn't want an answer that you've read in a book, or a quotation from the Creed used on Sundays. |
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As the author herself states, this book is decidedly not a study in nonconformity or rebellion. |
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By identifying with the characters in the book, children enjoy vicarious experiences without having to run any risk. |
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Every time Maxwell closed a deal he got a cut, and this book traces the money trail better than any previous efforts. |
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Surely the spelling of a name of a principal player in a book should be correct. |
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Far from being evasive, I think that Coetzee is passionately confessing, and that his entire book vibrates with confession. |
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Somerset's book provides the tools to push vernacularity studies to a higher level, to the kind of serious scholarship the topic still needs. |
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Chrissy picked the blue map book up from the floor by her feet and opened it at random. |
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Little letters spelt out his birth date and the whole book was decorated in blue and green pieces of paper and sparkly letters. |
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This series comes with a guide book for using the videos as course material. |
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Smiling sweetly, he restricted himself to one-word answers before picking up his book and strolling nonchalantly away. |
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The first twenty pages of my first book are filled with nothing but hundreds of attempts to learn to write and spell my name. |
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In his book, he draws on one novel or film to illuminate each article of the Apostle's Creed. |
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The Little Brown book provides a fascinating study of life in Victorian times, its attitudes, squalor and suffering. |
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He studied speleology and wrote a book on the work and life of Karel Absolon, discoverer of the Punkva caves near Brno. |
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Even if that sort of thing bugs you, though, I'd recommend pushing past it, because the meat of the book is well worth reading. |
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Another case study in the book is of a bulimarexic, a person who eats in binges, then forces himself to vomit or purges the food with laxatives. |
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He saw my Chinese language book and said that his aunt had travelled to China in 1903 to do Protestant missionary work. |
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Much of my book is speculative and meant to be suggestive rather than definitive. |
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Canada, Australia and New Zealand, he explained, have a culture still vestigially fascinated by the book. |
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Older readers of Cotswold history buff Dennis Hughes' latest book are guaranteed a musical trip down memory lane. |
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His is not a book about poetry, and yet a canonical poet is consulted for the distinction that structures the book. |
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The new edition also adds the important vesuvianite locality at Asbestos, Quebec, which was absent in the 1960 book. |
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You can learn the proper way to clip your dog's nails from a standard pet care book, or your veterinarian. |
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And through short-cuts you can speed-dial or dial names in your address book. |
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Integrating fiction with non-fiction is no easy feat, but these would be valuable additions to any school book collection. |
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It's not the moon-landing, a woman has written a book about a speccy wizard. |
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This is a fine book that speaks both to the general reader and the specialist historian. |
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The book is densely argued and requires more specialized expertise than a general reader is likely to have. |
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It is a book which will be of lasting value, I think, albeit on a highly specialised subject. |
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This is a book which is useful for those who work in the specialised area of women's studies. |
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Murphy has specialist knowledge of the historical period in which the book is set. |
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It recounts, in twelve expansive books, a story line that occupies only a few verses of the book of Genesis. |
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It is also our intention to include a section at the back of the book consisting of songs and choruses. |
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You should no more grieve for the rest than for a buckle lost from your first shoe, or for your lesson book which will be lost when you are old. |
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Translations are regarded by Muslims as new versions of the holy book, rather than as translations in the conventional sense. |
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Angie will be pleased to learn that the American version of the book comes with a cover that will not threaten her or us with exposure. |
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Since it was so discredited, I felt sure that Dembski would not use the quote in the published version of his book. |
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It is interesting to note that forthcoming international versions of the book foreground different generic features. |
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In the future, I'll be showcasing more obscure Gold Key comic book versions of great TV shows. |
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I miss in obvious ways the intensity and specificness a particular book can have at a particular time. |
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The book has been offset from the US edition but you wouldn't know this from the title verso. |
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Where Calvino's book explores the vertiginous possibilities of literature, Cloud Atlas is about humankind's possibilities. |
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The most valuable aspect of this section of the book is his exploration of other contemporary collections of music for vespers. |
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That book described a very bright, highly functional professional who suffered damage to his frontal lobes as the result of a noncancerous tumor. |
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What remains is not a live one, but a comic book video nasty, stretched across the wide screen. |
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The advance in the book is not noticeable until close to the end, but it's derivable from the title. |
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This book is primarily a descriptive work, seeking to provide detail about a specific historical missionary activity. |
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Most of the book is objectively descriptive, be the focus spiritual or scientific. |
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In the entryway they might notice a bulletin board advertising midwifery services, childcare, or book exchanges. |
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I leafed first through the book and stopped to learn how to customise bullet points. |
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Or book a table at Byzantium, a stylishly bohemian room with wood vigas overhead. |
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All the buildings in this book are merely reproduced in tiny vignettes, and many of the sketches are simply nasty. |
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As one review put it, reading this book is like spying on your friends when they didn't know you were there. |
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I strongly recommend you pick up the book next time you spy a copy on someone's bookshelf. |
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Finding a book these days with a non-emotional, level-headed theme is like trying to find a needle in a haystack. |
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You will get nothing but praise for your book, and I shall be vilipended for mine. |
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Ryan has an eye for detail and a knack for spinning a yarn from many loose threads, and these talents make the book highly readable. |
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Kimmage alleges in his book that testing procedures were inadequate or non-existent. |
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This book is readable as a scholarly work, but is readily comprehensible to a non-expert in the field as well. |
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This book is a transcription of four lectures given by Feynman at UCLA to a non-expert audience. |
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Another weakness of the book is the absence of a section to familiarize nonexpert readers with molecular terminology. |
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This more personal style improves the accessibility of the book to the non-expert reader. |
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The book is often mistaken in its views and incorrect in the supposedly factual information it contains. |
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It's quite depressing for the kind of writers who grind away at it for years sort of honing their craft and then do the book. |
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The TV cabinet was a curbside find that Nan disguised with old book covers and spines to make it look like a bookcase. |
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She'd run her fingers gently over the book spines and read the titles he kept on the shelf above his writing desk. |
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Although the line between fiction and non-fiction in this book is thin, there is nothing wrong with that. |
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That's one reason the book won both the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award for non-fiction. |
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What we have here is a stunning musical idea with superior vintage Sondheim songs, all in search of a book. |
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To me it also leaves open whether he actually did think it was a good book but didn't want to sound bumptious. |
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As history, the exhibition stands in contrast to the verbal narrative offered in the book published as a spin-off from the show. |
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A book publisher can believe in a writer, but no one believes in the product spin-offs of the film industry and this is the problem. |
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The book examines muscle control, nerve control, and hearing as issues all violinists need to be concerned about. |
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Can I take you then to the book of materials, the bundle of documents, page 58, and invite your attention to the accumulation of three sentences. |
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To complement such play, a simple recipe book with large numbers, words, and pictures can be made out of a spiral notebook with laminated pages. |
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This 136-page reproducible spiral-bound book is designed to be used without outside instruction. |
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He went to write a book, and dutifully kept a diary in spiral-bound notebooks that eventually formed Down to This. |
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I found her wonderful self-published, spiral-bound book of 75 recipes like a voyage through Kyrgyzstan in the Tien Shen mountains. |
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This oversized spiral-bound book of more than 200 pages includes all the phonics from grades K to 2 of the full McRuffy curriculum. |
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Another priceless treasure I inherited was a spiral-bound book called Grandmother Remembers. |
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The real substance in the book is found in her spirited emphasis on the importance of learning. |
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We can do this, says the book, since it has already been done to a fluffy bunny rabbit somewhere deep in a secret underground laboratory. |
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The book tells the story of non-identical twins kept apart for most of their lives. |
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The book is further hampered by noninclusive language, a bane of numerous books published in England even today. |
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You wonder why Sartre at the age of 50, when he wrote the book, must attack his childhood with such virulence. |
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What's more, he is a 53-year-old man who lives outside the city, throws three-day parties and whose ex-partner has written a book about bunyips. |
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Mr Harrison said the order book reflected the continuing buoyancy of the region's economy. |
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It is the burden of Steven Payne's enormously fascinating book to answer that question. |
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The book is put together like a conversation and moves through emotional responses to analysis, and hopeful visioning for the future. |
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She's written a book about space tourism, and talked to many of the visionaries behind the whole idea. |
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Both deeper and wider than a biography, the book documents and vivifies events that still affect us today. |
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Not only was the name an exact match-up, he also was the spitting image of the man in the courtroom sketch that had been provided in the book. |
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This book will be particularly useful to any committed person in a parish who is involved in hospital visitation. |
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I went back to reading my book until I was interrupted about ten minutes later by the sound of some enormous splashes. |
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He has been a visiting scholar at Stanford and Harvard and has literally written the book on being successful at academic legal writing. |
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So for his next book they decided to splash out some money, with displays in Waterstone's windows and stuff like that. |
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Dressed and duck walked back to the reception area, we had another refreshing drink and were given an invitation to write in the visitors' book. |
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Remarks in the visitors' book are complimentary and most of the people who have signed it seem impressed with what they saw and learned. |
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The drawings were made more than 30 years ago in the visitors' book of one of the artist's favourite restaurants, Lous Landes, in Paris. |
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After that it is customary that we write in the visitors' book in the originally arranged room of Yuri Gagarin in the museum in Star City. |
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What is more, Tolkien is said to have signed a visitors' book for Lochstack Lodge on the Duke of Westminster's estate at the foot of Ben Stack. |
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His first book on folklore, Custom and Myth, did not appear until 1884, but contained papers written and printed much earlier. |
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The book is pretty heavy on the visuals, with lots of posters and performance shots. |
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A splatter of blood streaked itself across several of the tomes and was only interrupted once where one book did not have any on it. |
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Maybe you just have to get a book on viticulture to keep your grapes from going bad. |
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He could then tell you that a couple of burly bobbies were hiding behind the hedge, stopwatch in hand, ready to bring you to book. |
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The prize goes to his splendidly illustrated book on the archaeology and aesthetics of the Renaissance culture. |
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A feud between academics over Robert Burns' politics has taken a vitriolic turn with a savage attack by one expert on his rival's book. |
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Good for very young readers, this book is about a vivacious mom in a wheelchair. |
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The question is whether the author can live up to the vivid characters and style of the first book. |
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The project was a herculean undertaking that is brought vividly to life in the book. |
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Here I believe history can be imagined more vividly than in any book or costume drama. |
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As a book about a nonoperational aircraft, Valkyrie will probably attract only a limited audience within the Air Force community. |
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Hooper declared at the outset of his book that optical toys could hone visual perception and, consequently, prime social vigilance. |
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I'd get lots of sheets of A4 paper, fold them over, staple them and make an instant book, write my story and draw covers. |
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The most readily available method for pressing paper sheets is in or under a large book. |
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Learning a vocabulary of dance steps has become as essential for the clued-up traveller as carrying the latest Rough Guide phrase book. |
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I am moved to write you about a book review in your last issue and a closely related subject that has long been a burr under my saddle. |
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The software does the hard work of burrowing into your contact book, minimizing the number of modal shifts. |
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We meet many wise patients in this book, because physicians learn medicine on and from their patients. |
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But then again, if you've never seen the original film or read the book, spoilers are the least of your problems. |
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Her valuable book offers the reader an acute insight into the origins of our present-day consumer culture. |
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But this is not a book of statistics, and it's not weighted down with moralizing and anger. |
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This is a book which confirms the adage that truth is stranger than fiction. |
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And it adds piquancy to the tale that many of these changes appear to be lifted straight out of her own book of cultural reform. |
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As the doors to the lift opened and we went in, I dug around for my black book. |
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She almost wasn't, forgetting to book holiday and all, but she's got a free ticket, a lift down there. |
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From now on, she will write the book first, then do an adaptation for film or television. |
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The show runs until January 25 and is adapted from the much loved classic book by Philippa Pearce. |
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As with any film that is adapted from a novel, the movie often does not do the book justice. |
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This section is little more than an addendum to the rest of the book and would not be missed. |
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When I get around to reading the book, perhaps I'll make a small addendum to this review. |
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Britain is full of telly addicts who spend little time curled up with a good book, a new survey confirms. |
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Each time he signs a book, Viselman gives out a bag of gourmet jelly beans and joshes with his new fans. |
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The key to planning a holiday for a large party is to book well in advance to ensure you all fly together and stay in the same hotel. |
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Aloof and academic, his book, The Hidden Plot, is essentially a collection of essays distilled from articles, notebooks and jottings. |
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For example, consider a computerized appointment calendar that we might want to build as an add-on module to our existing address book. |
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This book is made up of four addresses delivered in India between 1999 and last year, plus one other of uncertain date. |
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The phone book is alphabetized by first names, and a man named Sitha Sisana would be addressed as Mr. Sitha. |
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The second half of this book, once the history has been dealt with, addresses the problems of the present, issue by issue. |
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I just kept the wonderful black and gold address book in its pristine condition as a souvenir. |
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I looked up Cecilia's phone number in my red address book and dialed the number. |
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Nick has convinced Helena to go home with him to get her address book, which was somehow missing from her purse. |
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Dress up your mother's worn address book with a cover of synthetic leather or suede. |
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I grabbed the phone, flipped through the address book, and called the only person who could possibly help me. |
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Having left her address book at the office, Sue called next door to get my telephone number. |
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They searched her bag and found the names and phone numbers of former security chiefs in her address book. |
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When prompted, you either say the phone number or speak the name of someone in the phone's address book. |
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You can import all of your address book from Outlook with a couple of clicks and from other email programs as well. |
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The service lets you keep a complete address book online, and you can search your email by key phrase. |
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Many viruses propagate by using the e-mail addresses stored in a user's address book. |
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Finally, you can start typing a name, and matching address book entries pop up. |
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But there's also a free, Web-only package that includes an email account, an address book, a calendar, and more. |
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Back then I thought the notion was a good one, and I even uploaded my own address book to the Internet so I could surf my contacts from my phone. |
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If users run the attachment, it forwards the virus onto everyone in the Windows address book. |
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You cannot know what effect a book or a piece of journalism will have when it goes out into the world. |
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Collins has no truck with the notion that his fledging career has a rags to riches plotline beloved of comic book fantasy. |
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This book was written in 1935, and since then many have raged at the barbarity of their government's behaviour abroad. |
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A responsibly and well-written book is a gem, as is a responsible and well-spoken teacher. |
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Leaving his boyhood club was like closing the last page on a well-thumbed book. |
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Already, the book was filled with signatures and brief words of condolence from friends and well-wishers. |
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By organizing the book topically, Beaufort gives useful shape to the welter of details, in the aid of a larger argument. |
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Just east of the depot, two parked rail cars serve as a gift shop and a book store. |
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Adams' biography confesses to concentrating less on the later years and this deprives the book of a conclusive judgment about its subject. |
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The holy book was enjoined upon the Sikhs as the eternal and spiritual Guru by Guru Gobind Singh, the tenth and the last Sikh guru. |
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Co-opting him as a management guru is crass, yet if it opens more imaginations to the spell-binding it may be a useful book. |
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Indeed, the lack of judicious editing is the most obvious problem with this book. |
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The book then moves on to the law and paralegal adjudication of family matters. |
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The Cuban-born player then had the audacity to claim in a tell-all book that most professional baseballs players are on the juice. |
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This is the first book devoted fully to adjuncts telling their own stories in their own words. |
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The authors do not use a systems perspective and, hence, this book would best be used by a family therapist as an adjunct resource. |
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This book starts with a scintillating discussion of the difference between the Julian calendar and the Gregorian calendar. |
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In my book, a Sunday afternoon jaunt to report on a game at the westerly outpost could only ever be described as a treat, not a chore. |
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When I was a teenager I bought a book from a jumble sale called The Insult Dictionary which told you how to insult people in five languages. |
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Although the computer was used to raise invoices it did not print a sales day book. |
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I need you to recommend a beginners' poker book, one that explains checking, raises, and the different games. |
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The book jumps from story to story, with some anecdotes feeling over-explained and others seemingly incomplete. |
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I struggle with my memories as the vaguely familiar face jumps out from the front cover of the book. |
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After this admirable book, the reader can return to listening to Strauss with added enjoyment. |
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Since I finished the book I have watched with trepidation and wonder as Maisie has begun to attract male admirers. |
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In spite of that admonition, Fichman's book is not a conventional, chronological biography. |
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It's a book a lot of people read at school and strongly associate with their adolescence. |
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The natural materials discussed in this American book are mostly earth-based adobe, cob, rammed earth. |
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It helps to have lived in Tokyo for a year, as I did my junior year of college, to gain maximum enjoyment from this book. |
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In the beginning of that book he has offered his obeisances to his different gurus, and it is to be noted that he has adored them all equally. |
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No school gyms of adulating audiences on their feet to cheer the genius, no comic book figures dropping bon mots could press those keys. |
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And at the heart of the book lies one of the most marvellous depictions of an adulterous affair in fiction. |
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Keegan also does justice to the exceptional quality of coalition war planning and operations, though only a third of the book is devoted to them. |
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Thomas Frank has advanced this theory in a book entitled What's the Matter with Kansas? |
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In order to help him complete the book in a more relevant time frame, his advance has been increased. |
|
The advance on a book, except for a few hundred authors internationally, tends to be not very much. |
|
A man can lose a contract from publishers by spending their advance on finishing a book for another publisher. |
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I spent my book advance on a motorboat and about two months later it blew up. |
|
As I recall, he was in a similar situation and was forced, because of the House ethics rules, to not end up accepting the advance on the book. |
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I could send you an advance version of the book, and you could do a review or a related article. |
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So popular has it proved that you have to book days in advance to be sure of getting in. |
|
Those lucky enough to be able to book well in advance can dive at the Island of Cabrera. |
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The travel agent told me that there are only so many cheap seats, and you have to book well in advance to get one. |
|
Owners book their dogs into the hotel in advance for anything from half a day to full-time. |
|
You are advised to book in advance or turn up early because tickets sell-out quickly. |
|
That'll teach us to be the only people in Dallas who bothered to book a table in advance and order a meal. |
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By way of comparison, I went to the book shelf and picked out three Ian Fleming books at random. |
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This book popularized the ideas that the stock market is efficient and that its prices follow a random walk. |
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The book was well received and is a moving account of a man's struggle against adversity. |
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Now, that is a matter which was adverted to in this Court in a case referred to on page 72 of the application book. |
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Somewhere in the book I describe an event involving an infant who has been born to one of the lowest ranking females. |
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As our numbers are increasing it is advisable to book your time as early as possible during the week. |
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He's since gone on to chronicle his experiences in a book, and of course act as advisor in the movie. |
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The book is well written, carefully researched, and nicely organized, and its study of the early origins of rap is fascinating. |
|
Pearson's book reveals the unseemly tactics that accused women use to beat the rap. |
|
He seemed to have gained a greater self-confidence from the incredible and unexpected success of his book and he capitalized on it rapaciously. |
|
Thanks so much to my anon. reviewers for reminding me to mention Sophie Kinsella's book and I will try my hardest to steer clear of her ideas. |
|
I had read enough Indian book reviews to know that reviewers are ustads with blades sharpened on a cruelly efficient whetstone. |
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All you need do is open whichever book you choose, and it will speak to you and tell its stories. |
|
He also goes on to describe in many places in his book, the way in which a rapier was used in delivering multiple feints. |
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One especially valuable contribution of the book is its analysis of numerous small aerial battles. |
|
She organized the first American exhibition of kaleidoscopes at Strathmore Hall Art Center in Rockville, Md., the year her book came out. |
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This conclusion comes with a bang, not a whimper and is the only possible finale for such a sizzling firework display of a book. |
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They revel in observing rare plants and animals and some groups even book hunting trips. |
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The central character of the book is Bunny Maguire, who is launched into the Dublin social whirl and takes to it like a duck to water. |
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All clay types are equally effective, says an aesthetician and author of a book about skin care. |
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The Kebra Negast is a book of Rastafarian spirituality and religious interpretations. |
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Kantian moral philosophers will find much to disagree with, but the book raises important puzzles for Kantian moral theory. |
|
Salinger's book has powerfully affected, and still affects, so many generations of readers. |
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Although the author affects befuddlement, his book demonstrates an unfaltering sense of self. |
|
Woods has not written a bad book but, rather, it could have been a much better one. |
|
To book accommodation, you'll either need to be a member of the YHA, or belong to an organisation affiliated to Hostelling International. |
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My book argues for pluralism in which classical absolute claims are upheld but their limits are affirmed. |
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When I began this book I thought scientists had no emotional life, they were men and women in white coats. |
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She even squeezed out a slim book on the subject before the men in white coats came for her. |
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It is an unhappy book, and consequently I could not afford to submit to the temptation of the florid and extraneous. |
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She hesitated then sat down in the chair beside him, tucking an afghan over her legs and finding a book to read. |
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The third book in the treatise was a translation into Italian of one of Della Francesca's works. |
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The book lauds quartermaster-general Alexander Lawton's efforts to rationalize the procurement process. |
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The book includes information about more than 100 insects, spiders, mites, slugs and earthworms found in the Prairies, and encourages people to live with them in harmony. |
|
Similarly, Smith looks like he's ripped from the pages of a Mormon coloring book. |
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I left her with a juice box and an Elmo coloring book, gave the valet a twenty and the doorman another twenty to watch him. |
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In the fourteenth book he defended the emotions as good constituents of human nature by the creator's intention, and attacked the Stoic notion that emotion must be suppressed. |
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My book Losing the Race had a chapter about this, which predictably made a lot of people mad. |
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Lower bulk reduces opacity. Higher bulk will increase the overall thickness of a book. Therefore, it helps to know a paper's measure in pages per inch. |
|
Standard book papers vary in bulk from about 200 to 900 pages per inch. |
|
The book vibrates with Ehrenreich's rage toward middle-class Americans. |
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The book tells a spellbinding story of a man with eccentricities that went well beyond a fascination with rocketry and included a penchant for the occult. |
|
Cogswell's book most powerfully reminds you of the necessary mess of activism. |
|
Now ticket prices are dirt cheap, if you book carefully with budget airlines, and we're using aircraft like our cars, for quick trips away for the weekend. |
|
Well, the first version of the book got as far as page proofs. |
|
An expanded version of this essay will appear as a book chapter. |
|
If you're a no-name author and she decides that she loves your book and she puts it in her book club, you are going to be on the best sellers list. |
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The bulk of the book is spread over chapters seven to 11, which take almost 100 pages to describe medical privacy laws and issues in 51 countries. |
|
The bulk of the book deals with the development of the U.S. Naval pension fund, which is fascinating in part because it seems so unusual to the modern student of pensions. |
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Marguerite hoped it would be the prelude to a book she wanted to write, and asked if I could get it published somewhere. |
|
Lack of elaboration is a virus that continually infects the book, sometimes having a sickening effect on the reader. |
|
One of the strengths of this book lies in the descriptive passages. |
|
The book was written for practicing and teaching pathologists, but it should also be appealing to radiologists, medical and surgical oncologists, and radiotherapists. |
|
A silhouette portrait of Talbot as a boy of seven, drawn in 1807 by an unknown hand, opens this monumental book about the birth and juvenescence of a medium. |
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There was an audible reaction when a new picture slid next to the smiling little girl with a coloring book in front of her. |
|
This book, containing a large number of mostly short essays ranging over the entire breadth of the oeuvre, centers on the multiple roles of language within it. |
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The book is well worth reading and you can make up your own minds. |
|
What do you think prompted the change in comic book representation of LGBTQ characters? |
|
The sinister, murky world of espionage is laid bare in this revised and updated edition of Philip Knightley's powerful book about spies and spying in the 20th century. |
|
I must say though that WH's book on Pit The Younger is very spiffing. |
|
At times the book is overly laden with abstractions, but having squatted in refugee camps and watched Los Federales hunt down wetbacks, I felt it to be well anchored. |
|
Here is the best book I have read on the role of organized crime in southern Italy, John Dickie's Cosa Nostra. |
|
You may need to book the whole bumboat to get back to mainland Singapore. |
|
When Margaret's marriage to a rakish fashion photographer broke up, she took up with a cad who promptly published a kiss-and-tell book on their affair. |
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The central focus of the book relates to the author's work with motor vehicle accident victims suffering with whiplash and post-concussion syndrome. |
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This is a fun book for adults, and a perfect one for adolescent girls. |
|
Weston claims that his book is an introduction for the non-expert. |
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He put the phone down, sighed, and reached for his address book. |
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He wrote another book about the ways plants grow and climb, and he worked out that the tendril climbers, like the vine or the passionflower, are the most evolved. |
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A ramble through Waterford's scenic countryside, mountains and coastline will never be the same again once you have read a new book about 15 of the county's great walks. |
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Many people think that the book industry is just another racket out to make a quick buck by inflating prices and preying on readers' desire for good, cheap books. |
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Most packages contain two tapes within a box about the size of a book, arranged on bookstore shelves with the spine displaying the author and title. |
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Another strange detail in the image is revealed through a close examination of the book spines on a shelf in the room, among which a single title is reversed. |
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On the very first visit as I browsed the shelves, the name Miklos Szentkuthy on the spine of a book caught my eye and brought a flood of memories. |
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In his recent biggest-ever book, a whacking 500 pages long, entitled Dylan's Visions of Sin, he is making his case for Dylan as one of the great English-speaking poets. |
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After transferring your current address book to your new email client, remember to delete all the addresses from your Outlook address book as an extra precaution. |
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In the book you suggest that connoisseurship has become more egalitarian, how come? |
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Maybe traditional texts do sometimes get a bit bogged down in the details of how the spinning jenny worked, but the macroeconomic emphasis of this book also has its drawbacks. |
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In his book, Dennis argued that the turning point for Spears was when her father intervened and placed her in a conservatorship. |
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I never managed to get a copy of the book with the violet cover, though on one visit to the Soviet Union I did manage to find a collection of Nezhmetdinov's best games. |
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It was also her open sexual appetite, which Cooke brings up in section after section of the book. |
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You used to need a PC if you wanted to log your appointments, maintain an address book, track your stock portfolio and calculate your income taxes. |
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Ravitch, author of the new book Reign of Error, talks to Lauren Streib about how reform has become a cover for privatization. |
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In this book are contained all the songs, ballads, roundelays and virelays, which that gentle duke had composed, and of them I had made this collection. |
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Beside the descriptive grammar based on the inscriptions there are numerous historical and comparative sections in the book, tracing the history of Kanarese. |
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In the book, he adduced a wealth of evidence to support his thoughts. |
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My black spiral-bound book is a dead give away in this fishing village. |
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My grandfather wanted to look through the book and quickly became enthralled by its colorful plates of whistlers, honeyeaters, parrots, pigeons, and doves. |
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The Scottish Football Association confirmed that there was nothing in the international rule book to preclude non-human players from participating in top-level matches. |
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Today in Dublin, wandering Joyceans will roam the city visiting many of the places where the book is set and attempt to reconstruct the events of the novel. |
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Their findings offer scientists and herders a virtual history book describing how cattle, crucial to so many Africans, came to be so genetically diverse. |
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The book should be of great interest to readers concerned to understand the current reach of Joyce criticism, as well as to modernists and Joyceans. |
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If you come across a passage you like, copy it out into a commonplace book. |
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Michael Grant simply whistled some tunes from the SFA song book. |
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The library includes new technology which means children can borrow a book by putting their thumb on to a machine which recognises their individual thumbprints. |
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The first outcome of this is their book, Philosophy of Madness, where six of the club's poets-users talk about their visions, fears, dreams and life. |
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