Some people just don't get this film and believe that the Coens are trotting out weak absurdism to disguise and buttress a genre storyline. |
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Rafters were cut into mortised joints at the ridge, and braces buttress the walls in every direction. |
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As a buttress of the ugly martial law regime, it wrecked many more lives than those of these two kidnappers. |
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Country Energy wants to put underground cables along the street and the buttress roots would be severely damaged. |
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A half-hour walk along the rough track on the right of the lochan takes you to the base of the buttress. |
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There was no documentation or further evidence to buttress his viva voce evidence. |
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The buttress surface is expanding with high areal strain rates and nearly isotropically. |
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Cable and satellite operators seldom disclose subscription numbers, but what numbers are available buttress Peck's point. |
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Property and financial prosperity were powerful testimonies to the strength of each of these categories and a buttress to weak claims to either. |
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The Church is called a pillar and buttress because there are many local churches throughout the world performing this function. |
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It means he can defend his own defence, with Nerlinger providing the buttress to protect the centre-backs. |
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For the first time in human history the inferior man has no ready buttress for his self-regard. |
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Remember, these thinly capitalized companies' insurance buttress truly enormous quantities of securities. |
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The main buttress of state security is the national defense capability and only after it comes the economic might. |
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It is more economical to buttress it at certain intervals than to make the entire wall thicker. |
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Above the buttress is the oculomotor myodome, with the foramen for the oculomotor nerve. |
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Meanwhile, 35-foot stone masts buttress the two-storey entry hall and living area, intersecting the main structure at 45 degrees. |
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Higher rates might buttress the greenback, but with a real possibility of inciting deleveraging, illiquidity, and market dislocation. |
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Whether in business or politics, partnerships are supposed to buttress the strengths of those involved. |
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The beauty of the southeast buttress of Cathedral Peak is that it's all on, and it's all beautiful, classic, and fun. |
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Nevertheless, many private landowners maintain feeders and dole out mineral supplements to retain the deer and buttress antler growth. |
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He had read a great deal of history, but he does not buttress his position by quoting from historical sources, as he was later to do. |
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Wenger noted that sustained workplace relationships and interaction buttress communities of practice. |
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A protective structure adapted to buttress opposed upright walls of an excavation. |
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They were a more effective buttress of the Crown than its own bureaucracy or civil service. |
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A grassy bay separates this buttress from the fine slabs on Cir Mhor's SW face. |
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A big drop followed, down over rough rock and scree to the Bealach an Fhuarian from where a great greyish-white buttress reared alarmingly. |
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The clergy did not do so because English kings were the protectors of the faith against heretics and a buttress against anticlerical attack. |
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Leonard combines these shapes with slim rectangles of varying sizes that seem to trim or buttress the larger shapes. |
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Beyond the media's tunnel vision lies the persistence of the habit of the rich world using the poor world to buttress its prejudices. |
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I was brought in to, essentially, write some voice-over dialogue and narrative for it, to buttress the story. |
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So, you bath under a banana or shower within the buttress roots of a banyan. |
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We ate dried peaches, swigged iodized alpine water, and stared up at the pyramid-shaped northwest buttress of Cloud Peak. |
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Hiking out, we talked about our ascent of the northwest buttress of Cloud Peak, trying to sound congratulatory. |
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One would assume that Mills, coming from the progressive, underground garage movement, would buttress his raps with arresting beats. |
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About five metres beyond the second, you'll see a shelf about head height on a buttress formed where a thin inlet enters. |
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Immediately anterior to this buttress, a small, deep concavity is located along the anterodorsal margin of the acetabulum. |
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In Sri Lanka, where the ruling class has resorted to communalism to buttress its rule for decades, nationalism takes particularly reactionary forms. |
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At every stage in a fairytale life, the stoic sensible lovely Lancashire lass has been Tom's buttress, giving unstinting support and keeping his feet firmly on the ground. |
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I know there are innumerably more adventurous routes that trace their way by gully and buttress, ridge and groove up the massive north-east face of the Ben. |
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After scaling a relatively easy 3,000-foot buttress and traversing a huge glacial plateau below the main face, the climbers will stash most of their gear. |
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It is as if their role in life is to appease, and even buttress, the white liberal conscience while naturally continuing to do all the dirty work. |
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It formed a dungeon with massive buttress and flying-buttresses pillaring a covered-way with crenels and machicolations. |
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When I find Matt, he's standing beside a buttress root taller than he is. |
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Mr Reagan supported his religious right wing, at least in theory, but as a buttress, from the outside. |
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Reserves are held to buttress confidence in a country's own currency, not as a float for global trading. |
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Our previous government did two things that would strongly support and buttress this act. |
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This dramatic action was taken to buttress confidence and to avoid a severe slowing of economic activity. |
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The NTEU presented details on how AWAs operated in practice to buttress its argument. |
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We must buttress faith in the free market throughout the region by setting an example. |
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In addition, we will use the human rights framework to buttress and solidify pledges made by the richer countries. |
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He added that to adequately address the crisis additional resources would be needed to buttress existing official development assistance. |
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The path goes up by the left side of the main buttress in front of you. |
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I leaned against the damp stone of the buttress, tilting my head to follow the line of the sheer wall up to where the ghosts of clouds raced before the moon. |
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Stallman thus launched his movement to build a buttress against this trend, by developing a free operating system within which the freedoms he had known could continue. |
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We should buttress cooperative tribes again, with names like Dulaim, Isawi, Al bu Issa, among others. |
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They build on their distinctive strengths, buttress and leverage their specific assets, attributes, and advantages. |
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Figures are often quoted to buttress preconceived and personal agendas. |
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Transmitted to Washington by the British, the Zimmermann telegram helped buttress President Woodrow Wilson's decision to call for a declaration of war against Germany. |
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By this reckoning, buoyant growth will boost wages and salaries, giving home buyers the extra money they need to cover their increased borrowing costs and so buttress housing. |
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Instead, rain forest trees are often supported by thick buttress roots. |
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At times, Rheingold tries a bit too hard to buttress his cogent observations with academic theories that draw parallels between smart mobs and swarms such as ant colonies. |
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The main body of the element comprises a longitudinal bony buttress that supports a very slight sigmoid row containing a minimum of five shallow tooth sockets. |
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The peristyle serves to buttress both the inner dome and the brick cone which rises internally to support the lantern. |
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Supporters and foes commend Pearson's deftness at getting things done, her ability to buttress her passions with an armload of facts. |
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Tokhta of the Golden Horde, also seeking a general peace, sent 20,000 men to buttress the Yuan frontier. |
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Sika stags have stout, upright antlers with an extra buttress up from the brow tine and a very thick wall. |
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Through its ongoing country presence, UNAIDS aims to buttress public sectors to enhance the effectiveness and sustainability of programmes supported by the Global Fund. |
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If nuclear weapons are perceived to buttress the sense of security and if countries appear to benefit from their possession, a rush for their acquisition will naturally occur. |
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While the authorities take advantage of the conflicts to consolidate their power, the organizations use them to strengthen their base of political support, and so to buttress their position vis-a-vis the governments. |
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Stephen's Vita is a hagiography, intended to show Wilfrid as a saintly man, and to buttress claims that he was a saint. |
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To buttress the viability of the field network and enhance delivery in the field, consideration will be given to strengthen the field establishment. |
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Brunelleschi's dome for the cathedral was one of the first truly revolutionary architectural innovations since the Gothic flying buttress. |
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Its concrete buttress dam is the tallest concrete dam in the UK, with a height of 72 metres and a length of 230 metres. |
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A buttress unconformity occurs when younger bedding is deposited against older strata thus influencing its bedding structure. |
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This is a most timely intervention, and I hope it will buttress the commitments made by the world's leading economies at the G-20 London Summit in April. |
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The rural communities of Keur Moussa are located between Dakar and Thiès, and comprise 37 villages, most of which are on the Ndiass single-wall buttress. |
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Some read Nyssa to buttress traditionally orthodox claims whereas others read him to challenge these claims. |
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We have an opportunity right now to buttress ourselves against the impacts of that recession and perhaps future economic challenges that will arise around the world. |
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Indeed, Sheila Bair, one of America's bank regulators, thinks that her foreign counterparts should adopt something like the American approach to buttress Basel 2. A number of European bank regulators and academics agree. |
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Thousands of pious, peaceful Muslims are also locked up. Yet the West is usually silent about Uzbekistan's abuses, seeing Mr Karimov as a useful buttress against Islamist terror on Afghanistan's northern border. |
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They are a buttress rather than a threat to financial stability. |
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The oldest and most artistically important monument comprises the murals in St. Catherine's rotunda in Znojmo, standing on a high buttress above the Dyje River. |
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Government policies and practices must recognize and buttress the groundswell of people who are acting on their determination to put food first at all levels of society. |
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It has also served, and continues to serve, to buttress the powers that be, to generate exclusion and violence, and sometimes, as we are bound to recognize, to fan the flames of conflict. |
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To buttress its designation, the SPLC's report lists a number of unsubstantiated statements about gays by current and former FRC staffers. |
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Two short pitches up a chimney-crack are followed by a traverse right to the centre of the buttress. |
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As such claims were designed to buttress Welsh genealogy and land claims, they should be viewed with some scepticism. |
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There is also a distinctive Winchester version of Fives, resembling Rugby Fives but with a buttress on the court. |
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Some discussion, moreover, of Eastwood's directorial evolution over the past decade from American mythmaker to myth-breaker could only buttress Burgoyne's case. |
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Members of the Merseyside Civic Society welcomed the news the church, with its octagonal flying buttress tower, will remain a feature of the Liverpool skyline. |
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In the 21st Century, one piece of the original oak will be used to construct an 'apron knee' for the Lower Gun Deck, a section which acts as a buttress to the deck above. |
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