However, it is by no means necessary to a theory of evolution that it embodies any presupposition of increasing or decreasing complexity. |
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Her attire embodies minimalism to the fullest, namely minimal G-strings, minimal halter-tops and minimal skirts that accentuate said G-string. |
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It embodies all my ideas of what such a gun should be for the cowpuncher, hunter, or old hillbilly. |
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There is a certain kind of joyless middle-aged woman, either single or unhappily married, who absolutely embodies this theory. |
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The Yale University Art Gallery embodies nearly every architectonic theme or device that Kahn returned to in his later architectural production. |
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Rotman textually embodies mathematical practice by delineating a triad of subject-positions. |
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It embodies an anxiety about the threat these women pose to male autonomy, subjectivity, and cultural authority. |
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He personifies superficiality and embodies the fact that they have nothing more to say politically. |
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The trip to Jupiter embodies our ability to overcome the technological impediment. |
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Alcatraz embodies a rigid and compassionless system that strips the humanity from all but the few who have the strength to resist. |
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Looking over the city which he somehow embodies, he simply churns out the words, cleanly, efficiently and quickly. |
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She embodies an unapologetic freedom and fearlessness that some of us can only aspire to. |
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We achieve indirection by exploring that topic metaphorically, via a poem, a story, a piece of music, or a work of art that embodies it. |
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The administrative district or commune embodies a sense of community and self-identification for its residents. |
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She seems to remember what it's like being 13, and she embodies all the awkward enthusiasm and self-consciousness of adolescence. |
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The addition of a simple grosgrain waistband or row of tiny buttons to a simple jersey skirt embodies the mood. |
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Betrayal of the figure who embodies loyalty to community and kinship can be read as a choice to follow a foreign set of values. |
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God's plan is revealed by faith and shows us that humans have an immortal soul, a soul that embodies the potential for good and evil. |
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This Agreement embodies the entire understanding of the Parties as it relates to the subject matter hereof. |
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On the one hand, the propeller embodies the no-nonsense industry and propulsive dynamism of the modern period. |
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The group's business operation embodies a merchandising interest that totally outsells the official club merchandise. |
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To anyone in bed with a bad cold, the knowledge that the rhinovirus embodies a remarkable geometry is probably of little comfort. |
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This alerts us to the idea that military drill embodies a number of values. |
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The figure of the clown, freighted with goo and ick, essentially embodies kitsch. |
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There may be no other director in Hollywood who embodies the clockwork reliability of a fine timepiece more than Ron Howard. |
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The writing embodies the literary skill of an author who has been publishing for over half a century. |
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The central anti-hero, Johnny, embodies all that is charming and despicable in a man. |
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Smooth infinitesimal analysis embodies a concept of intensive magnitude in the form of infinitesimal tangent vectors to curves. |
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This site-specific installation collectively and individually embodies a repellent familiarity. |
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It embodies a set of policies aimed at pushing back the frontiers of poverty, while supporting growth and creating opportunities. |
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Larry Yachimec, in a Sterling award nominated turn, embodies the odd, denaturalized gallic intensity of this play. |
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He has demonstrated quality leadership, and embodies both entrepreneurial spirit and business excellence. |
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Firstly, it consistently embodies both special relativity and quantum mechanics. |
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No other group so fully embodies the American spirit of bravery and rugged individualism. |
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She is simply asserting that she embodies a qualitatively better, more authentic way of being a person. |
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And they've taken as their own, as their representative American, someone who actually embodies all of those qualities. |
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The lobster bake, much more than a dish or even a feast, embodies a day filled with the wonders of water, fire, food, family and friends. |
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To me, Mx Bond embodies the very best kind of girl a boy could ever grow up to become. |
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The office of the Commissioner of Police embodies the principle of constabulary independence. |
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Firm but fair, educated but impulsive, he embodies the finer qualities of a paternalistic seafarer proud of his ability to serve his country. |
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To them, he is indicative of a crucial historical phase in Brazil's development and he embodies their country's unfulfilled promise and wasted potential. |
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The right loves to bash New York's Citi Bike system, but bike share embodies the privatized, self-reliant ideals they espouse. |
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Finally, Lee embodies a kind of nationalism in his own physical presence and allows his body to evolve as the filmic representation of nationalism. |
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His celebrity status rivals, if not far surpasses, the Warholian persona that Koons embodies and embeds within his own work. |
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It embodies in the most impressive form our belief that to act with enthusiasm and faith is the condition of acting greatly. |
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In each image, Sherman embodies a new role, with a wardrobe and makeup job to match every occasion. |
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Give him a Latin text, whether of the Mass or the Tenebrae responsories, and he seems at once able to tap a vein of profound yet simple music that embodies the words. |
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Nothing embodies the failures of the Italian state more neatly than the highway from Salerno to Reggio Calabria. |
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Where protest embodies an actual challenge to the stability of government power or ruling social elites, the contingent nature of that right emerges. |
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A deft combination of old and new materials as well as natural and artificial lighting juxtaposes chic modernity with a setting that embodies the spirit of the collection. |
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His wistful brand of traditional American roots music is deeply embedded in mysticism and keenly embodies the stature of the early 20th century's lonely, nomadic soul. |
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She, with her saffron robes and shaven head, embodies and personifies hard-core Hindutva without, at this late stage of her public career, having to make vitriolic speeches. |
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This work embodies the proceedings of a moot court that reviewed the case of Samuel A. Mudd, one of those convicted of participating in the Lincoln Assassination. |
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The artist capitalizes on the corrosive etching process in each successive state until the finished print embodies the scatological essence of its message. |
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With a squint of eye, a curl of lip, a twist of neck, and a body slanguage equally at home in boardrooms and barrooms, she embodies everyone she sees. |
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There's a vibrancy that embodies the best values of community and urban life. |
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His approach to food embodies a culinary ecology whereby nothing edible is wasted, which in part explains his fondness for the sausage-like scrapple. |
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That is, Levi's Auschwitz as unicum embodies the aporia of an example that can never be exemplary, because it cannot be subsumed into its exemplar. |
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The right hemisphere embodies those artistic and intuitive qualities of holistic and integral design that are are familiar in all great design, art and craft. |
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So in summary, a work is art as long as it has a theme that embodies a message or concept, with representational elements selected to portray that theme. |
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More than the sum of her swagger, drawl and thousand nervous gestures, she embodies her character so seamlessly that the film's artifice seems to disappear. |
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A new understanding of Anglican identity is needed if we are to remain in communion across the colors and cultures, nations and nationalities that Anglicanism now embodies. |
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The Mowachaht-Muchalaht believe Luna embodies the spirit of their late chief, Ambrose Maquinna, who said he would return to them in the form of a whale after he died. |
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The one assumption I hope to have unsettled in these pages is that any particular novelistic genre in itself embodies a metaphysical or transcendent approach to the real. |
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In her final departure from the stage, she exits in an almost imperceptible motion that embodies both the blinding and undetectable transition to another space. |
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The cosmopolite embodies the migratory subject position of those who do not fit neatly into racial categories prescribed by United States society and politics. |
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However that may be, his book embodies an energetic, sustained, and praiseworthy effort to tell a story that has not previously been told in the same detail. |
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This idea embodies low expectations about economic development. |
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Parliament is the institution that embodies society in the diversity of its composition and its opinions and which channels this diversity into the political process. |
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Cannes, it would seem, still embodies the free spirit that has long drawn artists to the south. |
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And Hill fully embodies Donnie, a morally bankrupt clown with shiny, capped teeth, suspenders, and a gravelly voice. |
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Sylvian embodies an energetic, hybridized spirituality, and the burden of this essay is to track and note some of the major signposts on his ongoing pilgrimage. |
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Global LoveFund is a new YouTube series that embodies the Nebraskan spirit of giving. |
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This group of individuals embodies the skill, athleticism and showmanship it takes to be a Harlem Globetrotter. |
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As an antimother, she embodies everything foresworn by Victorian domestic ideology and clearly spells danger to the unwary. |
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Finally, Fifty Shades of Grey aptly embodies our corporate culture, sadomasochism its organizing principle. |
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But Prey embodies all the contradictions of its playwright, Lovedog, who says she arrived in Los Angeles in 1978 determined to be a rock star. |
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A lot of women are drawn to him chiefly because he embodies a certain kind of danger and never sticks around for too long. |
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The Indian caste system embodies much of the social stratification and many of the social restrictions found in the Indian subcontinent. |
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A work like Yikes, 1982, embodies other transformative forces Murray was unleashing at the time. |
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As the reactor embodies astatic behaviour, it is not possible to compute the matrices in a chosen operating point. |
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The Government of New York embodies the governmental structure of the State of New York as established by the New York State Constitution. |
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Samuel Creations' fusional and multi-dimensional design fully embodies this year's theme of innovation. |
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On the one hand, the Virgin embodies the archetype of the great mother, fertile generatrix of life and bearer of the Savior-Logos. |
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First, it embodies a classic ascetical strategy for applying formulaic principles to intended actions. |
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Astana, like no other city, embodies dream and stive of the Kazakh people brightly. |
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The American icon Uncle Sam, who embodies the American spirit more than any other figure, was in fact based on a real man. |
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For each artifact embodies a single variant of a performance in a given time and space. |
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A buffer zone is intended to avert the effect of negative environmental or human influences, whether or not it embodies great natural or cultural value itself. |
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When I think of a Soldier who embodies the ethos and values of today's Noncommissioned Officer Corps, Staff Sergeant John Wade Russell's name comes to mind. |
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Monastic in its rigour and plainness, the new museum embodies a mastery of light and materials that seeks to reconnect with the elementality of art and nature. |
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As an approach to crime that tries to do justice while mending the damage to everyone involved, RSVP embodies the concept known as restorative justice. |
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Each year, Cold Stone Creamery recognizes a franchisee, area developer or Creamery headquarter employee who embodies the entrepreneurial spirit of Dan Farr. |
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This form of writing embodies freedom seeking, protest, salvific expressions as exemplified in religious literature, phantasmagoric as in fairy tales and science fiction. |
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This principle embodies the basic concept of impartiality, and applies to courts of law, tribunals, arbitrators and all those having the duty to act judicially. |
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