Paramount has done the impossible and has restored this practically unknown cartoon to brilliant condition. |
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Out of 420 entries, 10 brilliant business ideas for expanding a current business or starting up a new company qualified for the final round. |
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My gaze traveled upwards, taking in a smooth, angular jaw, full lips, and brilliant emerald eyes. |
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He ran a brilliant 300 metres and was a well placed 4th in the long jump with a best leap of 3.36 metres. |
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City Hall is always a pleasure to visit and the re-enactment of the Victorian law court was brilliant. |
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Springer will star as the Producer's brilliant agent of questionable moral repute. |
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He was an incredibly engaging dancer and brilliant choreographer of abhinaya. |
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Some brilliant Latvian geeks made a sequence of images that, when viewed in stop-action animation, shows a robot-like man walking. |
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Her account of the siege, a condemnation of Luftwaffe bombing in Spain, is still a brilliant piece of reportage. |
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It was a brilliant night and I felt really lucky to be amongst friends who knew their way around. |
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By all accounts, my grandfather was a brilliant curler, as were his team mates. |
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The students had a brilliant time and the youth hostel has commented on their exemplary behaviour. |
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I just stumbled on a relatively brilliant, though non-period method for larding venison and other dry meat. |
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Given a brilliant translator and a minor text, couldn't a rendering actually exceed the original? |
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He is lanky and a brilliant artist as well as being excellent at crosswords. |
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The galaxy's hallmark is a brilliant white, bulbous core encircled by the thick dust lanes comprising the spiral structure of the galaxy. |
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In the branches of the papaw nestle amadavats, orioles, and brilliant palm-birds. |
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She gave us a brilliant, capricious Serse, always a King, always keeping his subjects on the hop. |
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Buildings painted brilliant yellow, ochre, red or green and not looking over the top. |
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It's a brilliant way to begin what could well be one of the teen publishing hits of the year. |
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Suddenly a brilliant glow filled the night, illuminating the snow-capped alps in the distance. |
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More than a mere note for note re-arrangement, this version is a brilliant, vital reinvention of a familiar work. |
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The gleam of an oil lamp cast a brilliant pool of light through the open door and they saw that a table had been laid for supper. |
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By the time I've yanked on my stockings and managed to rip a ladder in them, I know it's going to be a brilliant day. |
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Tiger Woods hits a brilliant wedge to within two feet of the pin at the 15th. |
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All the Australian lads are brilliant swimmers because they all live by the sea but, coming from Salford, I'm not really an expert! |
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The beams intercepted one another, forming a brilliant ball of white energy. |
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Copper mailboxes can be lacquered with non-tinted gloss to add to the brilliant shine and to protect the mailbox from smudges and smears. |
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He became a brilliant campaigner for his new party, far surpassing the lacklustre performance of his liberal and social democratic opponents. |
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The story is Kipling's brilliant refutation of the widely accepted saw that time heals all wounds. |
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He makes this point in his Clarkson style in a brilliant piece of writing for the Sunday Times. |
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The week saw some technical ballerinas, brilliant ballroom dancers, wacky contortionists and slow krumpers. |
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The wranglers were brilliant horsemen and treated their horses with respect and affection. |
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I hope some of you can make it to one of our performances and it would be brilliant to hear some feedback! |
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Handel's comparisons of the works of Clausewitz and Sun Tzu are nothing short of brilliant. |
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He loved women, especially brilliant women, and promoted them in word and deed. |
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My first pony, Pepe, was saved from the knacker's yard and he was brilliant. |
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Bill Nicholson was a brilliant manager and a cracking bloke and he was a North Yorkshireman. |
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The current method of digging pits for storing rainwater for recharging groundwater is hence a brilliant idea. |
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Clearly the recent rains had left their mark as fairways were still wet and greens very receptive and the scores were good, though not brilliant. |
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Having disposed of the tyrant, Heraclius recaptured Byzantium's lost eastern provinces in a brilliant military campaign against the Persians. |
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In a brilliant display of airmanship, the pilot managed to land the aircraft safely on an open space below the mountain. |
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She's a brilliant English horn and oboe player, and she can also handle the piano keyboard. |
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He didn't give her time to respond, only flashed her a brilliant, wicked smile. |
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I was paging through some Arthur Schopenhauer, a brilliant, cantankerous, whoring son of this city. |
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There is a plot, and it is brilliant, with the urgent melodrama that exercises the neglected readerly muscles. |
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Academically brilliant, she was due to go to Leeds University in September to read English and drama. |
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My thanks to my good friend Ken Hom who is a wonderful cook and a brilliant presenter. |
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Most of the people he used to work with have been made redundant, but David has been kept on because he's brilliant at his job. |
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The high ceiling and the upper walls were plastered and whitewashed, a brilliant white in the illumination from skylights. |
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Yet the image of the landscape lingered in his eyes, an after-image caused by the brilliant bolt of energy. |
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But it was too late, as candles lit up in the houses and a brilliant glow pervaded the city. |
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John Woodruff's brilliant victory in the 800 meters at the 1936 Olympic Games helped crush Hitler's ideals of white supremacy. |
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But he seemed to be slipping as he chased after it and it was brilliant to see the ball go in. |
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His hair was of a brilliant blond mingled with the rays of silver moonlight. |
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A brilliant cut diamond pendant, set in 18-carat white gold, is the elegant prize on offer for the best dressed woman on Thursday. |
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There are many brilliant Afghan women who were in the parliament, who were doctors, who were lawyers, who were the schoolteachers. |
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The citizens of York delighted in the brilliant weather, which was enjoyed for the Whit Monday holiday. |
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He was a brilliant attorney with a self-effacing kindness and affability unlike any I have ever seen. |
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The last movement is a brilliant virtuoso movement that uses the whole range of the keyboard. |
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Although Gavilan was a brilliant welterweight, he found the extra strength of the Hawaiian too tough a hurdle. |
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I sit next to the quickest, the brightest, most well-read, most entertaining, most brilliant man. |
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At the welcoming ceremony all the children lined up, looking like brilliant, unidentifiable flowers in their rags and robes of reds and maroons. |
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Ben yet again found a brilliant balance between instrument and voice, adding a truly professional contribution to the show. |
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Doyle's screenplays for the film adaptions of his Barrytown Trilogy novels were brilliant. |
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So the red army had won the cup and their third silver trophy gleamed amongst the iridescent confetti and brilliant white floodlights. |
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You come up with brilliant ideas and plans that are actualized without inviting opposition or competition. |
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This is a brilliant merging of mainstream film production and political activism. |
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The winning jockey has proved a controversial character, but is brilliant in the saddle. |
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He's got a bit of height about him and he's dasher who kicked a brilliant running goal in last quarter. |
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The dash layout is brilliant, with logically-placed controls and an uncluttered layout, but that's by-the-by. |
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The support band The Shins were very good, and the main act, Belle and Sebastian were just brilliant. |
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I have never come across a business so brilliant, nor one so destined for bankruptcy by 2002, so you must act now. |
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Gregor Jordan's Ned Kelly is a glorious film, beautifully photographed against the Australian landscape, a brilliant weave of fact and fantasy. |
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And there he was, long tail cocked, hooded with black, decorated with patches of deep and brilliant blue. |
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Despite returning from the States the previous day jet lag did not deter her scoring a brilliant goal playing at half forward. |
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Harry was small and skinny with brilliant green eyes and jet black hair that was always untidy. |
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I mean what's footie come to when a bloke can't make a brilliant save without some flag-waving jessie getting all official. |
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He is able to use his wit, he's able to use his quick thinking in very sharp and tactically, even brilliant, ways. |
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His brilliant blue eyes always twinkled brightly, he was smart and a quick thinker. |
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Keighley Town grasped victory from the jaws of defeat thanks to a brilliant last minute individual try from Man of the Match Neil Kennedy. |
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I also managed to connect the water butts together with this brilliant set of tube and washers that James' dad suggested we get. |
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It's a brilliant metallic green beetle, about one-half inch long and about a quarter of an inch wide, so it's pretty good-sized. |
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This sheep produces a brilliant big Mule lamb, a cross with a Blue-faced Leicester. |
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Now here is a brilliant group of musicians, each a virtuoso in his own right, with strings of academical achievement behind their music. |
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That gave Rovers renewed impetus and Baggio nearly scored a brilliant goal with a thunderous drive that bounced back off the crossbar. |
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At first, the idea was vague and formless, a brilliant abstraction about the surface area of a sphere, which is three times larger than the surface area of a flat chip. |
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Robin Williams, as I knew him, was warm, gentle, expressive, nurturing, and brilliant. |
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They forecast an endless and ashen winter for the country that began as a brilliant idea. |
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I awoke to the most glorious weather, that brilliant, white sun-filled light that has long drawn artists like Picasso here. |
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On the contrary, Barkley debunks his own presence in the spot, in a brilliant stroke of marketing self-abnegation. |
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I spent that time studying the text in hevruta, one-on-one, with a brilliant guy by the name of Baruch Thaler. |
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For proof of that, check out the epic faces pulled by bassist and guitarist Este Haim on this brilliant Tumblr. |
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One of my most important mentors was a brilliant and eccentric rabbi from Bethesda, Maryland. |
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This gallery of breakable brilliant people is now on show until December 23 at the Fine Art Society on Bond Street. |
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Sachin Tendulkar may be one of the most brilliant players in the sport, but he struggles to liven up his memoirs. |
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Both impart the experience of sitting with brilliant Cubans over a rum to debate the State of Cuban Intellectual Life. |
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Of course, you can read this just as a brilliant, subversive coda to a horror movie. |
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I also think we could have another talk with Fincher who may be difficult but is brilliant and already engaged. |
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It was the cataclysmic collision of spitfire upstart performer, brilliant pop song, and cheeky music video. |
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David Burke, a creator of animated whacko content for TV, has assembled a few brilliant scoundrels and put up a site filled with juvenile humor and neat animation. |
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An ode to Meryl Streep's brilliant selfie, taken at a Lakers game with 50 cent and Kobe Bryant. |
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Others project a brilliant vertical plumb line on walls and posts, or an exactly located spot on the ceiling, permitting perfectly aligned walls, wallboard, and plumbing. |
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When Gwenyth Paltrow perfected a flawless English accent to accompany her brilliant acting in Emma, eyes turned and casting began with absquatulation. |
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Many have abundant gardens, with brilliant red poppies, orange marigolds, blue flax, pink clematis and jacaranda, and large cypress and eucalyptus trees. |
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Many of my colleagues, truly brilliant accompanists, have a great sense for the singer and I have no idea whether any of them took formal singing lessons. |
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This is an opera where the orchestra can become a partner to the singers rather than just an accompanist and the Chelsea Opera Group orchestra was on brilliant form. |
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The leaves and stems of plants in brilliant primaries, created by the gradual accretion of six single-colour woodblocks, reach out across the space of the fabric. |
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He is a startlingly brilliant bassist, as accomplished in classical music as in jazz. |
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He was neither a wit nor a brilliant raconteur, neither well-read nor well-educated, and he made no great contribution to enlightened social converse. |
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A small, ragtag band of idealists facing overwhelming odds decides to gamble on a course of action judged either foolish or brilliant, depending on the outcome. |
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As we leave Pisac and roll down the side of the gorge, the sun suddenly emerges and a brilliant rainbow lights up the verdant green Sacred Valley of the Incas. |
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After five years of concerning levels of obsession, what are we going to do without the brilliant AMC drama? |
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Her adventures as a photographer were, she believed, an escape from huge, too-silent apartments, and teachers who thought her juvenilia brilliant. |
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Suddenly that brilliant white-hot coal turned completely black. |
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A glow of brilliant white light bloomed from the tips of his fingers. |
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When she blushed it gradually became more indistinct, and finally vanished amid the triumphant rush of blood that bathed the whole cheek with its brilliant glow. |
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As a result of the dusty conditions the flare set the entire night sky aglow in a wash of brilliant red which faded gradually to orange, then to black. |
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With a brilliant kick from the touchline Cooke ended the scoring. |
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Jesus' brilliant illustration of using new, unshrunk cloth to patch an old cloak and pouring new, fermenting wine in old wineskins illustrates the point well. |
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He is truly a brilliant man, and he is certainly one of a kind. |
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A brilliant Silicon Valley entrepreneur may have found a way to get dark money out of politics without changing any laws. |
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Like motmots and todies, kingfishers often have brilliant plumage, are largely insectivorous, and nest in cavities that are often excavated in earthen banks. |
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Pianist Kenny Werner, bassist Greg Cohen and drummer Joey Baron,are incredibly gifted jazz improvisers who are no less brilliant as klezmer musicians. |
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Danby had beaten the York-based side in the first match of the season but Rowntree made a brilliant start with Vanessa Walker hitting the woodwork with a blistering shot. |
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He is brilliant when he works the crowd with his radio mike. |
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It was a massive hit, and the safety-pin dress a brilliant cartoonish cherry on top of it. |
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These two works made brilliant use of technology, demonstrating digital art's potential to create all-encompassing environments, simultaneously visceral and conceptual. |
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Equally brilliant was his appearance in a yarmulke at the Wailing Wall. |
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Marty was cool because he took his hideousness and, with a brilliant wit and oodles of self-knowledge, he flaunted it. |
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While their lives overlapped for only one year, they were both masters of clear, witty insight, and they both wrote in a brilliant lapidary English. |
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Her Good Morning America mea culpa was a brilliant cocktail of self-deprecating, earnestly apologetic, and charming. |
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A brilliant look into the lives of the 1980s East German Stasi and the civilians they spy and eavesdrop on. |
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The Queen Anne's Act was a brilliant and amazingly durable piece of lawmaking, requiring a sophisticated conception of what constitutes creative work or product of the mind. |
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A brilliant new film presents Hannah Arendt in the midst of the Eichmann trial and the controversy around her reporting. |
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I worked with an English fellow a few years back who, in the midst of a Brisbane summer, told me he found the repeatedly brilliant blue skies and fine weather a real drag. |
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At the same time, it is the hallmark of brilliant people whatever their civilization, epoch, or area of expertise. |
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During the day, I had the brilliant idea that we should call everyone I could think of and leave darling little messages on their answering machines. |
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She was brilliant, there was no doubt about that, but when it came to escaping from awkward situations, coming up with valid excuses or witty retorts, she was useless. |
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But Emanuel, a brilliant tactician when it comes to the workings of government, erred. |
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An inefficiency tax on the generation of dirty energy would be a brilliant thing, along with tax credits for installation of solar panels and energy-efficient retrofits. |
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The combination of excess sugar sap and sunny days create an abundance of the pigment anthocyanin and the brilliant fall colors of crimson and purple. |
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Kids drawn from different schools enthralled viewers with their scintillating performance while lensmen had a field day capturing them in brilliant postures. |
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He has proved to be a brilliant raconteur able to reflect revealingly on his work of 20 years ago, but these are retrospective observations sharpened up in the telling. |
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In the evenings brilliant slashes of purple and pink distract the horizon as the sun makes its way towards the sea. |
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Jeff Perry and Bellamy Young are consistently brilliant and inspiring. |
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Colors applied to this yarn are noted for being more brilliant than colors applied to softer yarn. |
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The sea at Weymouth and Brighton stimulated Constable to develop new techniques of brilliant colour and vivacious brushwork. |
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Males develop hooked jaws known as kypes and take on a brilliant red colour. |
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In a brilliant Rube Goldberg design, this produces enough agitation to allow the active ingredients to dissolve slowly. |
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Bruno Berner and Darius Vassell scored first-half goals from corners either side of a brilliant Scott Sinclair equaliser. |
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Chris was brilliant, deferential, even demure, full of conviction. |
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He was gifted, brilliant, and one of the great controversial figures of our time in theatre, which is a virtue and not a vice at all. |
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Nevertheless, Blair and others spoke highly of his brilliant command of language. |
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He was mathematically gifted and won a double first degree, which could have been the prelude to a brilliant academic career. |
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A shutout performance calls for a brilliant display between the pipes and Bill was right on the job. |
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Another brilliant season on the badminton court this year has earned him one of the Special Recognition Awards donated by car giant Jaguar. |
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The brilliant Mary was being educated in Scotland when Shelley first became acquainted with the Godwin family. |
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In a brilliant figure that combines anthropopoeia and simile, the Lord is likened to a man who takes a lamp to make a diligent search. |
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Each decade has brilliant exceptions to every rule and entirely forgettable confirmations of it. |
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The style of the miniatures is characterized by brilliant colour and exuberant acanthus ornament. |
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I stomped back to the RV and the well house complaining about the ants, and my brilliant leban gotte said to try the massage oil. |
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Barbaro stretched his unbeaten record to six with a brilliant performance in the 132nd Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs. |
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Their Sea Life collection of outdoor pillows includes stylized starfish and sand dollars in brilliant hues. |
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Although his arrogance had slowed the campaign, he was a brilliant general in the field, and his loss was a major blow to the allied campaign. |
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I am sure I could not have found anywhere another companion so brilliant and yet so charming and unconceited. |
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The birthday girl had a brilliant time with friends and family and I for one would have a barn dance any day. |
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Here were the three tents overshadowed by the great lehuas, still brilliant with their cardinal blossoms. |
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Color change in New England is the tourist time, when people come to see the leafage turn brilliant colors. |
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Our brilliant collection consists of 10 gladioli mixed, 30 acidanthera, 30 anemone de caen, and 30 sparaxis mixed. |
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Newcastle also became a glass producer with a reputation for brilliant flint glass. |
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I KNOW a lot of the Kumars is scripted but how brilliant are Me era Syal and Sanje ev Bhaskar at ad-libbing. |
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He was bluff, inspirational to the men, a brilliant tactician. |
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Waqas, besides brilliant wicketkeeping, also score 21 with two boundaries to win the man of the match award. |
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These were brilliant writers who were really great at keeping it to jokes. |
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Brilliant mind, thought Geller. Absolutely brilliant. It's probably just as well. Imagine a countenance like that without a mind to offset it. |
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So, yes, in other words, selfie is both brilliant and terrible. |
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Excellent descriptive power and frequent brilliant lines in this adoxographic poem. |
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Baraka was part trickster and part provocateur, a brilliant juggler of genres, ideas, and identities, whose career spanned nearly six decades. |
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Hilary Mantel may be a brilliant writer of historical fiction, but she appears to have traded in her wordprocessor for a poison pen. |
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American hornbeam or musclewood presents an option for brilliant fall color on a smaller scale. |
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It was brilliant to see them totally out of their comfort zone as they Carried On Up The Amazon to meet the Yanomami tribe. |
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Bad Neighbours 97mins LAUGHS of the lowest common denominator abound in this bawdy but brilliant frat boy versus the neighbours comedy. |
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So, in Western Europe, two 'dark ages' can be identified, separated by the brilliant but brief Carolingian Renaissance. |
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She was the centre of a very brilliant group, a most beautiful woman holding court, as was only right and proper, among her admirers. |
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Ideal for the front of borders and rockeries, they also look brilliant in patio containers. |
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People like Bob Hope, Jack Benny, Milton Berle and in this country, the brilliant Max Wall and Max Miller. |
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Stop being such a Wintard and at least have the backbone required to acknowledge some brilliant engineering. |
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She had this brilliant idea that Steve should launch his much-anticipated, super-high-tech company by adopting a distinctly untechy look. |
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But in between lies a brilliant trio of titles bundled together into an updated HD offering on PS3, featuring the dynamic duo of Jak and Daxter. |
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Barry's fore-handed strokes were very effective, while Moon's back-handers were at times brilliant. |
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Banks of gorgeous flowers were on every hand, and birds with rare and brilliant plumage sang and fluttered in the trees and bushes. |
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Doesn't it kill you how somebody who looks so attractive can be so brilliant? God, there ought to be a law. She looks just like Julie Christie. |
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I hate to fault a play that so rumbustiously turns over so many brilliant ideas. |
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But his Magdalen days were not altogether happy, though he obtained a brilliant first class degree. |
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Gray was a brilliant bookworm, a quiet, abstracted, dreaming scholar, often afraid of the shadows of his own fame. |
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Hobsbawm was a brilliant historian in the great English tradition of narrative history. |
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And unlike his earlier contributions, Evans was just one of many brilliant minds in steam technology. |
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As a writer, he was noted for research, lucidity, occasional sallies of wit, brilliant passages and eloquence. |
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She had pulled more than one case out of the fire with a brilliant closing. |
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I remember at school when unspillable inkpots came in and were said to be a brilliant new idea. |
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Both come equipped with brilliant 1080p full HD touchscreen displays that are highly responsive as well as a clean system image free of junkware. |
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In spring, the brilliant Little Green Bee-eater graces the skies and perches on phone and electricity wires. |
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Next Monday the Canadian singer releases her brilliant new single, Ka-Ching. |
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Starting from the 10th, Luiten covered the back nine in 35 before coming home in 33 thanks largely to some brilliant approach shots. |
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Under the brilliant command of Totila, the Goths were able to reassert themselves to a degree. |
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There are many colors of eyeshade to choose from and many different brands that will help your eyes look brilliant. |
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Should we be a party of brilliant dogmatists, argufiers, and protesters, or are we meant to be trying to be a party of government? |
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Opinions of these poems vary between those who find them captivating and brilliant, to those who find them merely clever and contrived. |
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I saw crazy quilts of the most brilliant colors of silks, so arranged to look like some great paintery. |
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This pressed amber yields brilliant interference colors in polarized light. |
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If you can just ask questions about a person and nod sagely then they will leave thinking you are a brilliant conversationalist. |
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But she was not just a pretty face. She was brilliant, accomplished, powerful, and tough-minded, a woman of burning passions. |
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Iknowitallsounds abit arty-farty but trust a bit arty-farty but trust me, it's brilliant the way they work. |
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In the very noon of that brilliant life which was destined to be so soon, and so fatally, overshadowed. |
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In the House of Commons, Lloyd George gave a brilliant account of the budget, which was attacked by the Conservatives. |
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An example of a brilliant talent that exudes excellence and influence on everyone. |
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The strings, usually played with the fingernails, produced a brilliant ringing sound. |
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He was widely known as a brilliant orator, an outstanding sportsman and marksman, a writer and historian, connoisseur and collector. |
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On arrival in California, Hockney changed from oil to acrylic paint, applying it as smooth flat and brilliant colour. |
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Apelles is described as the greatest painter of Antiquity for perfect technique in drawing, brilliant color and modeling. |
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Ervine in The Observer thought the play brilliant but ponderously acted, except for Edith Evans as Lady Utterword. |
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Intensity was more usually reached by way of the solemn than by way of the brilliant. |
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The klieg light of legitimacy fell all around her shortly after an interview with the one of world's most brilliant men. |
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Perennial groundcover plant Lithospermum Heavenly Blue has brilliant royal blue flowers and is a lovely centrepiece. |
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With the capable administrations of Emperors Ming and Zhang, former glories of the dynasty was reclaimed, with brilliant military and cultural achievements. |
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Sicily's geographic situation at the centre of Mediterranean made it a brilliant location for trade with Europe, North Africa and the Middle East. |
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Much darker than the first film but JK Rowling's brilliant writing produces one magical scene after another, such as the flying car being attacked by the Whomping Willow. |
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The artist who created strong, passionate, brilliant heroines turns out to have disapproved of bluestockings and refused to educate his own intelligent daughters. |
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One such officer was Count Nikolai Ignatiev, a brilliant and ambitious political, who enjoyed the ear of the Tsar and burned to settle his country's scores with the British. |
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The diluent used to rehydrate the vaccine contains brilliant green, which makes the vaccine easier to visualize when administered with bifurcated needles. |
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Aquinas was the student of Albert the Great, a brilliant Dominican experimentalist, much like the Franciscan, Roger Bacon of Oxford in the 13th century. |
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He might have spent the hours camped under the trees of the more remote meadow, whence in the brilliant moonlight he could keep tabs on the trails. |
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In Dinder, I saw amazing things, including carmine bee-eaters, birds of such a brilliant redness that they looked like rubies flashing across the parched yellow landscape. |
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I seemed suddenly to see everything in a brilliant light. All was scintillating. I seemed to be enlightened and understood everything with which people were involved. |
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As curator of experiments for the Royal Society, he poured out a stream of brilliant concepts on universal gravity, evolution of the species and atomic theory. |
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The jingly jangly arpeggios of Gerry Leonard's guitar complement Vega's pitch-perfect voice in the brilliant Jacob and the Angel and Small Blue Thing. |
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We saw a goodly number of equestrians and equestrianesses as we passed along, the former accoutred in the brilliant and graceful Peruvian costume. |
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They would soon be confronted by an army of organized, highly trained, professional soldiers under the leadership of a brilliant and ruthless commander. |
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I've had a Chinky, a Chic Murray and, afore ye came tae collect me, I had some fancy Italian pasta dish. It was pure dead brilliant, by the way! |
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In the summer of 1816 he settled at the Villa Diodati by Lake Geneva, Switzerland, with his personal physician, the young, brilliant and handsome John William Polidori. |
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There are some brilliant new approaches being created at grass-roots level, but it is taking a long time for them to filter up to the larger institutions. |
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On stage they use guitars, a synthesiser, arpeggiator, drum machine and vocals which creates a brilliant camp 80s vibe crossed with synth pop sounds of today. |
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In middle age, and at his prime as a lecturer, Ruskin was described as slim, perhaps a little short, with an aquiline nose and brilliant, piercing blue eyes. |
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He wrote brilliant descriptions of people and their motives. |
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Even as a student, Augustus' brilliant draughtsmanship and personal glamour made him a celebrity, and stood in contrast to Gwen's quieter gifts and reticent demeanour. |
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He wrote several other brilliant works and was a fierce preacher again innovation and the cults, namely the Mu'tazila, the Shi'a, and the anthropomorphists. |
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Collins was a brilliant player with Celtic, Everton, Leeds United and Scotland and has been hailed as a major influence in the successful Don Revie era at Elland Road. |
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She is young, vibrant, brilliant and prepared to show the world soul. |
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Borini missed another glorious opportunity to give his side the lead after brilliant set-up play by Sterling, but with only the exposed keeper to beat, he struck the post. |
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Silver has a brilliant white metallic luster that can take a high polish, and which is so characteristic that the name of the metal itself has become a colour name. |
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Newsnight's Paul Mason sent a brilliant despatch from Athens, containing angry words from middle-aged furniture-maker Sakis Grasso, which had a universal resonance. |
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A loud button-down shirt with an eye-searing print of orange and red flowers would only be right for the brilliant, queeny comedian Paul Lynde if he were still alive. |
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Before he had met this one, Morgan had assumed that people called Chloe were either the neurotic brilliant daughters of Oxbridge dons or else silly screaming debutantes. |
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Such was the airy way with which, not an illiterate man on the street, but a brilliant woman of the world disposed of a tremendous historical fact. |
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They were also great connoisseurs of art and brilliant builders. |
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Wren was part of a brilliant group of experimental scientists at Oxford in the 1650s, the Oxford Philosophical Club, which included Robert Boyle and Robert Hooke. |
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Had he been more brilliant, he would not have been taken so seriously. |
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The quasi-death of insanity with its small periodic remissions, its deviations into good sense, even into brilliant insight, was almost more cruel really than outright death. |
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Subsequent writings by Greenberg analogize the 1947-50 drip paintings to high Analytical Cubist works by Picasso and Braque, in my view a brilliant but misleading comparison. |
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The Bee Gees were brilliant musicians and really nice people. |
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Clever touches like this are what make her such a brilliant writer. |
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Featuring Pacino at his most baroquely brilliant, tearing into the machismo of Oliver Stone's screenplay, De Palma's film has become a cultural touchstone. |
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The Duke of Marlborough won a series of brilliant victories over the French, England's first major battlefield successes on the Continent since the Hundred Years War. |
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The pseudojasper, gold, and brilliant colours dazzled the eye till they all seemed to be swimming round and round the dome like fishes in a glass bowl. |
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While not referring to Byron by name, it was clearly directed at him, and Byron retaliated with The Vision of Judgment, a brilliant parody of Southey's poem. |
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Another area visited by butterfly tours for its prolific blue morphos and other brilliant butterflies is Tingo Maria Parque Nacional and vicinity. |
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After a short pause, Napoleon carried out a brilliant flanking manoeuvre, and crossed the Po at Piacenza, nearly cutting the Austrian line of retreat. |
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This is a brilliant chocolate recipe, which looks like a gorgeous fat-studded salame, but is in fact choc-full of nuts, almond and a hint of spice. |
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Alex Gray Pitch Black, the fifth book in Alex Gray's brilliant DCI Bill Lorimer series, opens as Lorimer is about to board the ferry after a holiday on Mull. |
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At every one of these concerts brilliant performances were given, and the reputation of the organization as one of the finest of its kind in the world was made. |
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The thinking part of his command was provided by his brilliant chief of staff Gneisenau, a noted Anglophobe with a distinct antipathy towards Wellington. |
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Here and there the brilliant rays penetrated to earth, but for the most part they only served to accentuate the Stygian blackness of the jungle's depths. |
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The youngster is a full-brother to the high class Rumplestiltskin, a dual Group One winner in a brilliant juvenile campaign and seventh in Speciosa's 1000 Guineas. |
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In 2001's Enigma, Winslet played a young woman who finds herself falling for a brilliant young World War II code breaker, played by Dougray Scott. |
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The repainting, which has been done to preserve the fabric of the church, has upset many visitors and locals more accustomed to its customary brilliant white. |
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It was a full house and he made a brilliant quizmaster, really getting into the fun of the night and staying to spend time talking to customers once the quiz was over. |
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A superb banana bender from Frank Sauzee, darting wing play from Juanjo and some brilliant close ball play by the effervescent Russell Latapy all contributed to a great game. |
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