For any two people with reasonably eventful lives it is possible to find coincidences between them. |
|
Although it is fairly contrived and full of coincidences, it never feels forced or silly. |
|
It had been obtained by one of those fortuitous coincidences that sometimes produce great journalism. |
|
It allows, even encourages, inventive guesses, strange coincidences, popular theories with or without evidence. |
|
It took a number of coincidences and lots of good luck to release this strong spirit of enterprise hidden in them. |
|
Lies, coincidences, plots, and schemes are everywhere, and no one can trust anyone. |
|
There were too many coincidences to take everything in stride as pure happenstance. |
|
There's also a mounting seriousness of tone that doesn't sit entirely well with the plot's concatenation of coincidences and unlikelihoods. |
|
Denis Beckett treks to the festival to reflect on the accidents, chances and coincidences that shape the world we know. |
|
It was only a series of coincidences that saw Gary enter the theatrical world, instead of the world of joinery. |
|
Slick dramatic lighting and a varied, enjoyable color design smooth out the film's disjointing plot jump-cuts and occasional coincidences. |
|
We liberals tend to get awfully paranoid about these coincidences, don't we? |
|
There are several coincidences in the story at present that hold it together flimsily. |
|
The film is full of chance meetings, coincidences, romance and confused hearts. |
|
Spacetime coincidences play this privileged ontic role because they are invariant and, thus, univocally determined. |
|
Again, this event intersected the larger chronology in a finely tuned set of near coincidences. |
|
It beggars belief to think that these concurrent developments are mere coincidences. |
|
Especially toward the end, these coincidences and connections between the characters become almost comical. |
|
Identical twins are about to marry a pair of lookalike sisters in a double ceremony next month to cap 25 years of remarkable coincidences. |
|
We would share stories of mistaken identity, confused publicists and editors, odd coincidences and connections. |
|
|
By one of the most remarkable coincidences in all sport, that very same year saw the publication for the first time of the laws of cricket. |
|
And the bizarre events and coincidences pile up more and more as the story proceeds. |
|
Several coincidences between genes encoding for enzymes of N metabolism and QTLs for the traits studied were observed. |
|
When the beams were in phase, they detected five times as many coincidences as when they were out of phase. |
|
In their estimation, nothing could explain the coincidences except the momentary passing of a gravitational wave. |
|
There is no wrong on the facts, circumstances, coincidences that make you get up on your own faults and get through it. |
|
There are fortunate coincidences and I will not miss this opportunity to underscore the one that we are living today. |
|
Whether there is a relationship between these events or if they are mere coincidences remains unclear. |
|
There are also many undesigned coincidences between Jeremiah and Kings. |
|
Each incident has a unique reference number, and it is possible to identify coincidences by comparing the information gathered. |
|
I know from Hafiz, the great Persian poet and muse, that coincidences have a deeper meaning and are always accompanied by wisdom. |
|
Yes is the answer, with a doubt, as the downsizing is not the result of coincidences but of well thought-out and long-planned measures. |
|
As we say in the face of some of life's ordinary coincidences, it's a small world. |
|
Only a remarkable chain of coincidences preserved their trail for our current inspection and wonder. |
|
Yet the coincidences that bring the show's six wayfarers together to form their own little island on the big island are vexingly hokey. |
|
At the same time, we should not be content simply to find foreshadowings, or coincidences, within the landscape of his films. |
|
Conway goes on to list a series of other coincidences that he suggests are not simply explained. |
|
Selby says he doubts there was any direct link with Notarbartolo, but he was disturbed by so many odd coincidences of timing. |
|
There is no other way to distinguish the effects of policy from good or bad coincidences. |
|
I do not think these coincidences were consciously contrived. |
|
|
Curiously enough, in one of the case's many odd connections and coincidences, Mr Lugovoi also once worked for Mr Berezovsky. |
|
Although the plot convolutions probably employ too many convenient coincidences, suspension of disbelief happens effortlessly thanks to superb acting and directing throughout. |
|
He delights in tracing similarities of metaphor, suggestive accidents of fate, portentous parallels, uncanny coincidences, and unexpected connections. |
|
Over these few days, there are two other curious coincidences taking place here in Strasbourg. |
|
It is full of moral speechifying and erudite detail and has a convoluted plot replete with melodramatic deaths and wonderful recoveries and coincidences. |
|
Are all these setups, coincidences, misunderstandings, a shabby mass tabloid conspiracy, people on the make? |
|
Topher is a spellbinding mystery, steeped in coincidences and accidents, convicts and turns of events. |
|
Older passengers can't believe the unhappy coincidences taking place. |
|
Investigators claim they do not believe in coincidences. |
|
In this case there has been a series of coincidences which have inspired an enthusiastic solidarity movement in our country in which the Government, all the political parties and the rest of society have taken part. |
|
And, since it is important to be weary of snapshots that only reflect the coincidences of a particular situation, we will look at both recent and long-term trends. |
|
The choice had nothing whatsoever to do with astronomical considerations, and must count as one of the more significant coincidences in astronomy. |
|
Can all these similarities be dismissed legitimately as mere coincidences? |
|
That return, and that acceleration, are not coincidences either. |
|
Spacetime events, individuated invariantly as spacetime coincidences, have as much or more right to be taken as real, precisely because of the univocal manner of their determination. |
|
There are strange coincidences in Le Clercq's story that suggest, to me, a Cronenbergian construct of body horror. |
|
Indeed, there can scarcely be another discipline in which oddities and coincidences are so often seen as portents of professional success or failure. |
|
Comparison of the sets of mutated genes from different examples of the same tumour will show which mutations are coincidences, and which are causes. |
|
A series of autosuggestive performance-tableaux, where contemplation makes room for surprise as well as for strange coincidences, incoherence and unexpected dramatic turns. |
|
A series of coincidences persuades one of the husbands and one of the wives that their spouses, continually away on business trips, are having an affair. |
|
|
While most reported problems may continue to be coincidences, at least biostatisticians will be able to compare reliable lists of who took a drug and who experienced unpleasant reactions. |
|
For the Union Carbide Company, the chemical industry, and other businesses, Bhopal is an unfortunate chain of coincidences, a freak accident, a regrettable loss of lives. |
|