Vanguard's recording preserves most of the piano's dynamic range, betrayed only by some fuzziness in the treble. |
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The very small image isn't sharp either, with no real details in the shadows and a general fuzziness, despite noticeable edge enhancement. |
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It's a story that needs to be told more often, rather than the warm, pink fuzziness we get from books on the best-seller lists. |
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Error, obscurity, conceptual fuzziness, and sheer ignorance are part of science, just as they are in any other human activity. |
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The question is, however, whether the traditional concept of a rule can be maintained if allowance is made for vagueness or fuzziness. |
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Even if there is a faint fuzziness about the conclusion, there is none about the depiction of the unappeased ache of joblessness. |
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The artist has so manipulated his camera that, within the blacked-out edges of the white plastic house framed in the shot, there appears a fuzziness akin to television static. |
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Such remarks are not inaccurate or misleading, because the intelligence business does often deal with fuzziness and frequently relies on informed guesswork. |
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Among pure-blooded logicians, however, there is still uncertainty as to the merits of fuzziness. |
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I resent the fuzziness and perpetual cheeriness that has become a predominant theme of this movement. |
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It may be that that the main risk with the concept of accountability lies in its fuzziness and polysemy. |
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And Mr Sharon seems sure that Mr Bush will finesse any difference in views. The plan's time sequence allows for a certain fuzziness. |
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The initial data shows treatment relieves brain fuzziness and improves quality of life. |
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And yet there is a clear feeling that the virtues of this creative fuzziness are beginning to fade. |
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Often, one of the best aspects of working together is the dawning awareness of the mutability and fuzziness of disciplinary boundaries. |
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But the fuzziness and hesitation also reflect the continuing weakness of our understanding about how it all works. |
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The Sharpen command reduces the amount of blur or fuzziness around the edge of a selection. |
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However, an ethical person does not need to seek refuge in grey areas and fuzziness. |
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The fuzziness was from the beer we drank after building bonfires in the dunes in the middle of the night. |
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Mr Cameron is said to be disappointed at the number of cabinet-worthy MPs at his disposal. Another factor is the Tories' perceived fuzziness on policy. |
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I was concerned that this bill had some fuzziness to it. |
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First, there is often fuzziness in the formulation of policy objectives. |
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The need for a conceptual framework that minimises the danger of fuzziness and lack of focus, and would guarantee some degree of comparability of results cannot be eluded. |
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They perceive that there is a lack of knowledge about PS 2000, partially due to the fuzziness of the message, conflicting signals and general mistrust. |
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Asked what qualities they would look for in a companion, most New Yorkers until recently would have chosen smarts and successfulness over warmth and fuzziness. |
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An engaging indie rom-com released to exploit pre-Valentine's Day romantic fuzziness and Miles Teller's rising profile. |
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This fuzziness is a little disturbing, since it is easy to imagine intelligence testing being abused to create a society of alphas and betas like that of Huxley's Brave New World. |
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The concern voiced abroad, registering even the slightest manifestation of xenophobia, intolerance or political fuzziness about the past with seismographic accuracy, is received here with both amazement and indignation. |
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The fuzziness in this piece of legislation with regard to the whole area of just cloning itself, in this group, is something that should ring all sorts of alarms in our minds and in the minds of Canadians. |
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The term is representative of the touchy-feely psychobabble of the nineties only insofar as it has taken on a certain fuzziness as to its... like... meaning. |
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Instead they have focused on the alleged fuzziness of the rules. |
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Holography and optical correlation are both inherently analogue processes that can degrade the clean 1s and 0s required in a digital system. The IBM team makes a virtue of this fuzziness. |
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Yes, it is, but it is my conviction is that its limitedness is its strength and that were it to be expanded the only gain would be the pious fuzziness you can get from a thousand other commentators. |
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Yet they make exceptions: they invest in BP Amoco, for instance, even though fossil fuels are seen as dodgy. The fuzziness also explains the uncertainty about quite how much money is parked in ethical funds. |
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Despite the fuzziness of some details, however, the intelligence officials said the case that the separatists were responsible for shooting down the plane was solid. |
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Weekend mornings are the normal time that football fans nurse their hangovers, but the fuzziness was evident on the pitch from Wolves who looked like they were suffering. |
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In particular, his discussion indicates the fuzziness of all terminology, and, thus, Klein is too sure about the undesirability or desirability of different concepts. |
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The haze makes the reader ponder whether this could be from the smoke left behind after bombs or to give the impression of the fuzziness of dreams and memories. |
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