Brazilian singer Caetano Veloso delivers a mindblowingly evocative reinvention of a classic Mexican ranchera to an open-air, nighttime assembly. |
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Smell may be the most evocative of the five senses but I defy you to find any in news stories, even the food pages. |
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It is a wonderfully evocative burr, cultured throughout but with the faintest smidgens of rakish raspiness around the edges. |
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The book is an amusing and evocative portrayal of his journey and his encounters with Indian babudom and other normal Indians on the way. |
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The Tamil original is sprinkled with evocative and lovely terms like poongkuttigal for goat kids. |
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Other leading businesses were reconstituted and rechristened, their new names often evocative of revolutionary myths, personalities, or imagery. |
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It was a pagan myth, full of the evocative imagery of pagan myth that intuited something true and, in a curious way, helped me to seek heaven. |
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The evocative wail of the pipes is almost as familiar and dear to generations of New Zealanders as a rousing haka. |
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You mentioned language and its multiple meaning, metaphorical asides, its evocative transgressions and endearing intentionality. |
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In this well-written, lively, evocative memoir, she has produced a work that is as piquantly entertaining as her rasam recipe. |
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The song's evocative imagery and fetching arrangement deserve a better concept album than the jumbled pastiche of Control. |
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The collage elements intricately play off the metaphoric conceits or evocative turns of phrase of the elaborately lettered texts. |
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This comprehensive volume of nearly 600 poems, many accompanied by the Spanish original, bursts with evocative images. |
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One corner of the room contains tall curving birch staves that are evocative of a forest. |
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As she wanders through the village, we see the incredibly evocative faces of her fellow Gypsy brethren. |
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The pages turn right on cue and the pictures are evocative enough that the story tells itself just by listening. |
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Partly because this is Found Music from adulthood, not evocative Music osmosed from childhood. |
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The novel is studded with gems of images, brief and evocative, describing her mother's interjections into her thoughts. |
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The subdued lighting and highly evocative performances created a powerful and moving atmosphere that was sustained throughout the evening. |
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It's a beautifully evocative piece and it is one of the high points of the book. |
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Her recollections are intercut with her own evocative photographs and films. |
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It was a conviction that fuelled Mahatma Gandhi's espousal of the evocative emblem of the charkha. |
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These tubes and shapes are redolent of the exterior world, yet they are also evocative of our skin, our interior bodies, our senses. |
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The Doric is a beautiful, cheeky, evocative language that sums up so much of the Scottish character. |
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The title track is even an evocative melody reminiscent of early Portishead. |
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Elsewhere, sober stone houses peek coyly at one and other across cobbled streets and evocative old closes. |
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The three properties are maintained in perpetuity, places of pilgrimage, evocative of history. |
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I thought it made an evocative image and leaned into the open with my camera. |
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It projects the densely built cityscape amidst a set of evocative photographs of the city. |
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The show is replete with simple, haunting images, and an evocative score pervades the physical action. |
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Sarah, 23, aims to bring back evocative memories for anyone with a passion for musicals. |
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The opinions expressed in these evocative epistles were remarkably forthright and revealing. |
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Schad's graphic work, often anecdotal and illustrational, is evocative of George Grosz but without the muscle. |
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Expect an evocative journey into the heart of darkness where the sins of the past are revisited in the present. |
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This imaginative play is utter enchantment in the best of Russian theatrical evocative tradition. |
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It is a response that is highly charged, evocative and expressed with an obvious degree of emotional insight. |
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What sounds like a didgeridoo and a flute weave a stunning and evocative duet. |
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Guests enjoy a wealth of amenities, and the hotel features an on-site spa, evocative of a contemporary Roman bath. |
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Krishna devotees ardently look upon him as the Godhead, more emotively evocative than most of the other avatars. |
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This image is perhaps the most detailed and least evocative of those on show. |
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The locale is timeless, exotic and mysterious, and the light moody and evocative. |
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For him, this odd little satellite traveling around an evocative solar star represents promise and potential. |
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I certainly feel he has a way with words and was able to paint some very evocative images, as well explain some dense concepts. |
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Her solipsistic ruminations signal a true diva's self-absorption, yet they also have a sneaky evocative power. |
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Evans's writing is evocative and full of atmosphere, her plotting compelling and convincing. |
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As death draws near, evocative, atmospheric images are offered up to the reader. |
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Subtle interplay with available light in the building makes the piece both evocative and atmospheric. |
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Now new generations can become acquainted with this powerful, evocative and moving story. |
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Despite these small details the beautiful prose blending modernist lyricism with fable, music and motion is highly evocative. |
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This particular feast is unobtainable here, but there are plenty of other good things authentically evocative of Turkey. |
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Jonathan Richman, among others, spent his prime writing this kind of slyly humorous yet evocative music. |
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But as Marcel Proust made clear with his madeleine, the visual is not always the most evocative of the senses. |
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He gathered the dust near the site, and used it to create a hauntingly evocative piece. |
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Though there's plenty of brutal, taut music to be found on the record, more often than not, it's filmic, evocative, and remarkably organic. |
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The traditional Chinese nets, landscapes and huts by the river or backwaters are evocative of a child's fascination with the wonders around her. |
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There are two evocative groups of surviving mansions and period houses on Fifth Avenue, each worth a fresh look on summer stroll. |
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They are playing some evocative mariachi but I can't quite hear it clearly enough. |
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The scent was evocative of geranium, industrial grade balsam resin and several noxious petrochemicals, one being naphtha. |
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The marquetry tops contain an evocative song sheet of the period and the doors open to reveal drawers. |
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The image is clear and detailed, the sheets of water and sky flawless, the poised moment evocative but unemotional. |
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There can be few more evocative sites in the British landscape than ancient barrows of the Neolithic and Bronze Ages. |
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Alongside the tiered gypsy skirt, the kaftan is running neck-and-neck as the most evocative and most available fashion item of the year. |
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Having said that, there is some evocative background to most of the mixes and they do show the plain gift for melody that Reich has. |
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Howard Shore creates a score that's wonderfully evocative of the 1950s, part sci-fi drive-in, part tiki lounge. |
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Voss played me an interview with a hunter that included the man's evocative imitations of the calls of titi monkeys. |
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Eventually, I do find an older building in the shape of the excellent Dubai Museum, with its evocative waxworks of souk and Bedouin life. |
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I thought at the time that this was merely a moving and evocative metaphor for the loss of love. |
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Few symbols are as evocative or as powerful as those that remind us of our childhood. |
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I don't even know the tune, but those lyrics are so evocative I've still got an earworm. |
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It is unfashionable to say so, but there is something powerfully evocative about this block of stone. |
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This is fabulous stuff, evocative and ethereal while also being playful and fun. |
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Everywhere you turn in Glasgow it seems another new development with an evocative name is springing up. |
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While the book uses mostly evocative narrative images as its illustrations, it also includes a handful of full-length portraits. |
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The remixes here sample the evocative hooks and then simply loop them without the progression that is so much a part of most of his output. |
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And by the sound of it, he wants the music to stay minimal, yet supremely intense and evocative. |
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By night the city becomes a lavishly evocative backdrop to leisurely trawls round its restaurants, clubs and bars. |
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Being the best, the stories are in the most vivid and evocative style of narration. |
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His popularity sprang from his simple, evocative verse, augmented by the appeal of a noble birth, romantic youth, and tragic end. |
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The image becomes abstract, but is evocative of specific styles of modernist painting. |
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They form a perfect setting for some of Rodgers and Hammerstein's most tuneful and evocative songs. |
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In my view they are what can properly be meant, by the way, by evocative talk of the subconscious or the unconscious mind. |
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Her singing voice, in contrast, is strong and helps create a striking and evocative work. |
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She selects rich, evocative fabrics like rayon satin, silk and rayon blend velvet, Merino wool and the delicate veil-like textile bobbinet. |
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But as soon as you put on the headphones and start the audio tour, it becomes a powerfully evocative place. |
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Excellently packaged and with informative and evocative sleeve notes, this just might be the best reissue of the year. |
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His powerful and evocative voice and his memory will live on in our hearts. |
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It offers an evocative mystagogy that seeks nothing less than to lead the attentive reader deeper into the mystery of God. |
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The study has that evocative smell of newly cut timber and wood glue about it as the components are brought in and leant against the wall. |
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With little traffic on the roads, travelling by bike remains one of the most evocative ways to explore South America. |
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His fifty five evocative studies on paper in charcoal, ink and watercolor show the artist's process leading to the completed 7 by 9 foot screen. |
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This CD manages to be fun, frisky, soulful and evocative, old-world and contemporary, all at the same time. |
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Carols played by a brass band always provide a popular and evocative prelude to Christmas. |
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The man, whose name is evocative of fear and hatred in films, stands upright without even a stoop to suggest his 71 years. |
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Carving evocative melodies within dreamy sound structures, he seems to work on a recurring theme all the way through. |
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Such is the premise for Creative Director Bob Carney's evocative tale of taking golf vacations in foursomes and eightsomes. |
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The interiors of the units are likewise spare, but evocative at the same time. |
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Equally evocative was a work consisting of three white-enamel bathtubs absurdly linked with the same unfired clay to plumbing pipes passing through the gallery space. |
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But perhaps the truest joy of Fire Season is the evocative language Connors uses to capture the natural world. |
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Wizon's titles are evocative and allusive, and it is only via their suggestions that one can begin to read the touches of color in terms of imagery. |
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It is highly evocative, both in violent action and in repose. |
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Both are literally depictions of magical air, evocative of movement and potency stirring inside a writhing cloud. |
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Wells has written some lovely, thoughtful, and evocative reviews over the past year. |
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Now, I'm all for livening up political debate with evocative language and different means of expression, but I did find this one a bit too cryptic. |
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Gary Anderson's essay on original sin is penetrating and evocative. |
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It's incredibly evocative, atmospheric and mournful yet never depressing. |
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Also for sale are evocative photographs of the Queen's Park works which was switched from making steam locomotives to producing tanks during the Second World War. |
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To create his strangely evocative forms, he poured a small amount of the liquid onto paper, which he then swirled across the surface by tipping the sheet to and fro. |
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Gideon Gaye's follow-up, Hawaii, confounded all those expectations but still managed to serve up a generous dose of thoughtful, evocative tunes, done to a turn. |
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Hazy, speculative figures wander through the evocative landscapes and buildings he creates using miniatures, models, televisions, glass and mirrors. |
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The film is fairly conventional in its execution, harking back to the westerns of everyone's youth with its evocative sunsets, campfire conversations and shoot-outs. |
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After Hurricane Sandy, the NWS concluded that it should use similarly evocative language for storm-surge warnings. |
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Or try hemp, orange or patchouli candles for their evocative muskiness. |
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This monumental picture, the work of an unknown artist, painted on a hot, Italian summer day in July 1747, is much more than the evocative period piece it first appears to be. |
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The stories, most of them very short, have the blunt, evocative effect of parables or campfire tales. |
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Where others in this vein opt for a hazy, nebulous cloud of half-remembered dreams, Manitoba's music is direct and unassuming while still remaining evocative. |
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There is almost no trace of the bustling mining town in which there were countless brawls and shootouts at bars with such evocative names as The Bucket of Blood Saloon. |
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Robert Brill's sliding black panels, eliminating all frills, sparely reveal the few evocative necessaries, concentrating on framing the two human figures. |
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This highly evocative work had a real African feel, conjuring up the jungle sounds of insects and birds on the flute with a tropical hum from the violin, viola and cello. |
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By glazing and layering burnt sienna and ochers, Hansen creates a rich depth and earthly warmth that keep her paintings evocative without crossing the line to the ethereal. |
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Although Stein's arguments are nuanced and complex, the liveliness of his transparent and often evocative prose makes the book accessible to the non-specialist reader as well. |
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The images range from the evocative to the harshly realistic. |
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Perfect use of lighting, scenography and projections emphasised slick performances by a formidable cast and an evocative musical score was the cherry on the cake. |
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From the outside, it seems a rootless, ephemeral sort of existence, evocative of the chummy, locker-room familiarity that was a hangover from playing days. |
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I can still hear the clang of the milk churns as they were dropped at the back door and smell the scent of sweet, evocative vanilla and hot milk that wafted up to my room. |
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The piece is bemused, tender and funny, the dancing evocative not only of the disgraced president's choppy gestures but also of the coltishness of adolescent girls. |
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This major emotional downer is as raw as it gets, and while it doesn't quite chime with the flip ending, it helps cement this as a powerful and evocative piece of work. |
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It certainly is an evocative month for visiting Flanders, where the flower of European youth died in a morass of mud and blood in the First World War. |
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The backdrop is a seedy, exciting and evocative Auckland, with characters ranging from gang members, wealthy and elite crims, concert pianists, farmers, hippies and neo-Nazis. |
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I think it was rosemary and frankincense in it perhaps, that the swinging censor of incense, and I just found it all so beautiful and evocative, that ritual going on. |
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I think on a desert island the river journey would be even more evocative. |
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On one hand, the magnificent building, evocative organ music, and procession of staff and students in their gowns gave the ceremony a certain meaning and significance. |
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The English dub is passable and at times more evocative than the subtitled translations, but overall the subtitles seemed more faithful to the tone and spirit of the story. |
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Much has been made of the evocative power of this Icelandic quartet. |
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They are evocative poetic descriptions of everyday things, often created to fill the alliterative requirements of the metre. |
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The evocative images of their embarcation and installation by Erika Barahona Ede recall Bilbao's heroic shipbuilding and industrial past. |
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The tanka poems are brief, descriptive, and evocative, compressed verse in five lines, varying between five and seven syllables each. |
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The wonders of the Internet carry us straight to the ancient megaliths, which were lit by candles and flaming pots for three evocative evenings. |
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Add his evocative, unsentimental new memoir, Elsewhere, to the list. |
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Emotive words and evocative phrases give language its power. |
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Despite many shots of the natural world, the film's woozily evocative tone is trampled by the sluggish plot. |
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Amazonian Field, by Antony Gormley, is one particularly evocative example. |
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Her art semiurgically alloys emblematic Western artifacts with evocative settings, resonating the dominant commercial aesthetic of the age. |
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Such a notion is evocative of the biblical seraphim, a rank of angels looking like burning fire. |
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From the evocative sounds of the bagpipes to the great sport of golf, the Scots have also left an indelible mark on American culture. |
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The use of red wax is also part of his repertoire, evocative of flesh, blood, and transfiguration. |
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No less evocative is Nelson's gold pocketwatch, consigned by the heirs of his brother. |
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Ridley Scott's evocative 1973 Hovis bread television commercial captured the public imagination. |
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Because Why is an engaging collection of evocative and original poetry drawn from the work of teacher, creative writer, and poet Sarah Fox. |
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Katheryn Russell-Brown takes an evocative look at the role and function of race in the criminal justice system. |
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His choreography, though non-narrative, is deeply evocative and utterly spellbinding. |
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And for once I welcomed the encore, Gluck's Dance of the Blessed Spirits from Orpheus and Euridice, otherworldly and evocative. |
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He justified his view on the basis of these composers' depth of evocative expression and their marked individuality. |
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There are certain harsh, knife-coloured mornings in springtime that are more plangently evocative than any leaf-blown autumn day. |
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We wanted a building that was the opposite of cookie cutter and offered something evocative and important. |
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The muted colours of early Cubist paintings are used for the costumes echoing a Picasso harlequinade and wistfully evocative of the age of Diaghalev. |
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Shadowplay is another of the master locksmith's nested boxes whose evocative, ensorcelling prose will withstand multiple readings, especially if read aloud. |
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This well-researched book makes evocative reference to the sights and smells of Ancient Egypt, even describing the lavatorial arrangements discovered at Tell el Amarna. |
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The region's leading documentary platform, 'Documentary Voices' discusses socially relevant themes by screening evocative documentaries from around the world. |
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In this satirical detonation of neo-con ideology, rendered in Behrman's trademark austere and evocative style, a teenager named Ernest tries to survive that very predicament. |
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Her gilded sculpture is a winged palm figure, based conceptually on The Winged Victory of Samothrace, and is intended to be evocative of the Biblical Tree of Life. |
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The unique, abstract Coloratura is evocative of a watercolor painting and uses a tapestry construction to feature four yarn colors that create distinctive areas. |
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He was particularly noted for his vivid and evocative style. |
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The first half of the book documents his social investigations of Lancashire and Yorkshire, including an evocative description of working life in the coal mines. |
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It is the white Martagon lily and it makes a stunning picture set against the dark greens of a shady garden or an evocative pastoral scene in a more open setting. |
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The anthem's evocative melody and lyrics have led to its widespread use as a song of revolution and its incorporation into many pieces of classical and popular music. |
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The comic-book artist was renowned for his sparse yet evocative inkwork. |
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Characterised by an expressive freeness of form and evocative use of natural colours, these paintings speak of Kerr's deep engagement with the surrounding landscape. |
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Internationally laureate sculptors Erminio Blotta, Lola Mora and Rogelio Yrurtia authored many of the classical evocative monuments of the Argentine cityscape. |
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The incidental music helped give the programme its evocative atmosphere. |
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I have an evocative Simon Manby linocut hanging in our kitchen. |
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