Her body twisted and moved with such agility and grace that she managed to avoid most of the attacks that were issued her way. |
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His dignity and refinement and focus and calm manner add up to a state of grace worthy of a man. |
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Tribesmen whose skill lies more in the blade than the bow become bladesmen, wielding the tulwar with grace and speed. |
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They concluded the set properly by inviting two audience members to grace the stage to shake a pair of tambourines and their booties as well. |
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That the musician manages one grace note makes the piece almost redeemable. |
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He is quite possibly the most famous leading man to ever grace the silver screen. |
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He was a legend, arguably the most beloved actor to grace the silver screen. |
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Kasper argues that the salvific nature of the Old Covenant follows from the fact that God's grace is available to all! |
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The majolica could, perhaps, have been intended to grace a Spanish grandee's table in a conquered England. |
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I am grateful to my parents in a way as I have never been forced to go to church or to say grace before meals. |
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The saving grace of the cavernous Innis Town Hall, however, is it allows musicians to accompany a film live. |
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We are called to be salt and light, preserving and irradiating this dark, decaying world with the grace of God in our Lord Jesus Christ. |
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Since thou hast spurned the grace of God and made thyself unworthy of the office of preaching, we rightly deprive you of this office. |
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Their fall from grace appears to have levelled off and they are now pushing for promotion and ultimately a return to the top. |
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With grace and ease that he had entirely lacked, she executed a perfect backcast. |
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Through rigid Yogic discipline, he seeks divine grace for the purification of his mind and soul. |
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Now if I walk to the other side of the office, the broadcast tower would grace that northerly skyline. |
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I am delighted to learn an image of the sculpture will grace the new twenty-dollar bill. |
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Because grace could not bind itself to matter, Bogomils believe that Christ had only the semblance of a human body. |
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Not surprisingly, management are scornful of such talk and refused to even grace such allegations with a comment. |
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The colours, like delicately tinted porcelain, of the gods, figurines rather than figures, accord with the unemphatic grace of the composition. |
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Huge oaks, cedars and wisteria grace the 1,300 acre stretch of rambling greens known as Deer Park. |
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Rev Armstrong said the grace before meal and Fr Maginn said the thanksgiving afterwards. |
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For that average believer did not doubt that God's grace had been spectacularly displayed in the courage of the martyrs. |
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Huntington welterweight Glenn Banks is set to grace the international stage when he flies to Copenhagen at the end of the month. |
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It is possible to admire her amazing grace and athleticism, yet still be somewhat unnerved by the slightness of her frame. |
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Branches of viburnum, holly, and barberry offer architectural grace notes and still other means for signaling the season. |
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Thirty years of relentless training and performance have given him total grace and fluidity of movement. |
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She was 5'7, slim and wiry, with a dancer's slow, precise grace in her movements. |
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Because of the lightness and grace of the movements, the martial art is cunningly disguised as dance. |
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While it is true that some of us are with blessed with natural grace of movement, this doesn't necessarily translate to dance movement. |
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And he did so in some of the most powerful images ever to grace a billboard. |
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Training imparts a sort of grace to their movements and timbre in their voice. |
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As we gather in our houses of worship, let us begin a process of seeking the healing and grace of God. |
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These signs grace the three nearest places I can get food, as well as the nearest computer store, and the yards of three of my nearby neighbors. |
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Adie's fall from grace was not the result of sexism, ageism or an obsession with celebrity-led reporting. |
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Sweat was dripping down our faces by this time, but we had to keep our smiles planted on our face and an ease and grace in our movements. |
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Enacted at Paris, in the year of grace 1221, in the month of February, on the sabbath after the feast of St. Matthew the apostle. |
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Ultimate grace and effortless precision combine into a vision of someone floating on a cloud. |
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They've tolerated our haphazard approach to marriage with grace and humour. |
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Peck's craggy good looks, grace and measured speech contributed to his screen image as the decent, courageous man of action. |
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And to give him his due, Monty had the good grace to admit the article had spurred him on to prove he could still win at the highest level. |
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All the guests were models of decorum, grace and manners and I didn't know if I would get used to such good behaviour. |
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And they are familiar with every principal difference between UK and US culture and deal with them with grace and good humour. |
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All these visitors to our realm should be greeted with the same grace and courtesy. |
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At least he has the good grace to admit that the professional relationship he has with his deputy is different these days. |
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His love and his grace will move you to echo the words of John the Baptist. |
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To be an encourager, is to be the Holy Spirit's chosen instrument to minister God's grace to his often beleaguered saints. |
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He gave away much that others might enjoy the treasure of God's grace in Jesus Christ. |
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Paul's gospel is that salvation comes by grace through faith, to Jew and Gentile alike. |
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The truth was that they were saved by grace and that all spiritual blessings were theirs in Christ. |
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Even at our best, we are pretty ambiguous characters, and it is only by God's grace in Christ that we have hope of salvation. |
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He is worthy of worship and calls sinners saved by grace to this great endeavour. |
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It is faith in Jesus Christ, whose righteousness has been imputed to us by the free grace of God. |
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Our main message is salvation through grace alone, by faith alone, through Christ alone. |
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In a general sense this miracle speaks to us about the dawn of the gospel of grace through Jesus Christ. |
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In fact, her perfect fall from grace earns nothing but fresh punishment for her lack of attention to detail. |
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Expect her to win countless industry awards over the coming months and to accept them with the benevolent grace of a laureled goddess. |
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Ironically, the unchallenged primacy of the supreme leader is also the saving grace of communist ideology. |
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In its infancy, the process fell from grace because of production problems. |
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He had two Oscar nominations, before falling from grace and into an ugly drug habit. |
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Her line deliveries crackle with a wit and grace all but absent in today's market. |
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The loan should be repaid within 10 years and has a 5-year grace period and preferential interest. |
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However, to avoid a potentially chaotic situation, a 6-month grace period is provided before any regulations may be made invalid. |
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Effectively, the family can be given a year's grace before the court grants possession. |
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However the local policy of 3 months grace is not a rule of law, and the overall conduct needs to be looked at. |
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There's a swath of middle ground to consider, and given reasonable tact and grace you can probably find a spot there. |
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If they are initially below 30 per cent, but then rise to above 35 per cent, the period of grace shall be limited to one year. |
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Another entertaining Kevin Feather production is soon to grace the boards of the Alexander Playhouse. |
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Its purpose was to give borrowers a period of grace before repayments of principal become due. |
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The company has a 30-day grace period to decide whether to make the payments. |
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If the patient cannot pay immediately, a period of grace is allowed, but he maintained that this is not the norm. |
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Legislation regarding the taxing of bookmakers was going to be amended and they would be given six months' grace under the old payment system. |
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Both actors perform well above the average, with Faulkner having the added benefit of physical grace and a radiantly expressive face. |
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Quick work was necessary to allow adequate time for the implementation of the legislation within the year's grace allowed by the court, he said. |
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The offer of a period of grace is a critical factor in the underwriting of this form of business. |
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Just before you know you may miss a payment, ask for a cure, which is a 30-day grace from your mortgage payment. |
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The loans are extended for up to 12 years with three-year grace period and are available for almost all sectors of the economy. |
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The boys eat dinner together with each set of grandparents, say grace before meals, and read or share stories at night. |
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They don't leave their rooms until everything is tidy and say grace before every meal. |
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Situations which seem to be overwhelming provide an opportunity for God to display His grace and miraculous power on our behalf. |
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Some of his mural paintings grace the Synod Palace in Sofia and Varna Cathedral. |
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The work will also grace the cover of the 45,000 programs distributed all across the state. |
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Her images grace everything from linens and bedding to stationery products and floor coverings. |
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But I have certainly benefited from daily readings by different men of God over the years, reflecting the grace of God in their experience. |
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What a contrast that would be from the spoiled, overpaid and selfish athletes who normally grace the covers of sports magazines. |
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Seconds turned to minutes, and minutes turned into hours with equal grace and ease. |
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Greaves, a goal-scorer of legendary prowess, is one of the greatest footballers ever to grace the English game. |
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The film's ending is both justified and satisfying, a moment of grace in a cauldron of anger and hopelessness. |
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As a girl quietly in love, there is mischief in her graces, grace in her mischief. |
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She probably had a pretty face to start with, but her manner and grace was quite a study in femininity. |
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Picture the kind of sandwich that is so large you have to cut it in half to maneuver it with any amount of grace and good manners. |
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Even the TV had the grace to allow a bad weather news day to take precedence. |
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We have not fallen from grace or lost all sense of decency, as some disgruntled tribunes of the people would have you believe. |
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He is perhaps one of the most honest and caring people to ever grace our screens. |
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Sam, in fact, was short for Sambo, a nickname he accepted with the grace and good humour that characterised the man. |
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The Glasgow speedster has fallen from grace almost as fast as the winger scorches down the sidelines. |
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Last year's winner didn't even turn up for the ceremony so at least our Norn Iron chum and Swiss-based hero have had the grace to attend. |
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Both reflect the traditional meanings of acciaccatura and appogiatura, and both insert insert a slur from the first grace note to the main note. |
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After several successful repetitions, the louder note may be played ever closer in time to the others, eventually approximating a grace note. |
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All the grace and beauty of classical ballet comes to Evesham next week when the Vienna Festival Ballet takes the Arts Centre stage. |
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It was an extension of the basic Thomist understanding of the relation between nature and grace to the realm of the social and historical. |
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It combines bewitching dancing and gorgeous music with a timeless story and what must be the best flying ever to grace a stage. |
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The arrows indicate the beginning of the grace note figure and the placement of each note in the triplet figure for the left hand. |
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The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God the Father, and the communion of the Holy Spirit, be with you all. |
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In the most profound display of mercy and grace imaginable, He stepped into our shoes as a man, God the Son. |
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He talks with a grace and poise that is typically German, weighing his words carefully as we discuss the band's new release. |
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To many, she was considered to be a modern Audrey Hepburn with her impeccable style, grace and elegance. |
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The alignment of grace and truth is what we see at the end of the Prologue of the Fourth Gospel, and that, itself, I take as a Hebrew hendiadys. |
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Mahashivarathri celebrates the grace of Shiva, considered the guru in the yogic tradition. |
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Although not pure art deco, its houses incorporated many of the elements of the style and large whitewashed villas now grace the south side. |
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In worship we adore the Triune God of creation and redemption and He gives Himself in the fullness of grace to His people. |
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But now those who have faith and who are justified by grace are freed from these requirements for justification. |
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She brings strength and warmth and grace to what could have been a treacly, self-aware, melancholy role. |
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He was a long and slimly built man with the grace and appearance of an undertaker. |
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They are without doubt one of the most entertaining live rock shows to ever grace the stage. |
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After bringing the railways to the city, he fell from grace over dodgy financial dealings. |
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Their own need for healing is part of what allows them to become agents of grace to others. |
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The only saving grace for the animal, say zoo officials, is that there appears to be no fracture in the injured leg. |
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The saving grace of the past few days has been my preoccupation with a new geeky toy, a DVD recorder. |
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Botham, 48, is widely considered to be one of the greatest all-rounders ever to grace the game. |
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Sibyl glanced back at the rising and falling tides of the English Channel, and sighed with the grace of a heavy heart. |
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St. Thomas Aquinas taught that a person who is in a state of grace is open to the virtues and gifts that God has poured out. |
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But one thing that has disturbed me has been the number of people who, at bottom, don't seem to really believe in grace or mercy. |
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The one baptized is in a state of grace and must assent to, and cooperate with, this infusion in order to become inherently righteous. |
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Lilith walked with grace and ease down the short corridor, looking around in revulsion at the peeling mauve wallpaper and creaking old floor. |
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One in a state of grace is a master of demons, as divine energy flows freely from above overcoming all. |
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The people looked in wonder at the sight of these elegant ladies walking with such stately grace out of the town gate. |
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It's rather a thrill to see the paintings which grace all of the history textbooks in reality. |
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We all know that Paul's letters emphasise salvation by grace through faith. |
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The tunes are a better blend of melodic grace supported by delicious twists of harmonic subtlety. |
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Ergal the pointer was only a year old and he moved with a stylish grace that heralds the beginning of a great bird dog. |
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There was a grace and an elegance she carried with her, and it went further than the sleek curves of her figure. |
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However, I'm pretty sure that his biggest claim to fame is that of being one of the best live performers ever to grace a concert hall or stadium. |
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If I were able to play any instrument with masterful skill and grace it would be the cello. |
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Big Seamus and his charges pulled out all the stops when it really mattered, and they will worthily grace the 2004 senior championship. |
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But listen hard and you'll hear an attention to detail belied by the languid grace of Le Fumeur de Ciel. |
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You can be a yogi or a monk or a nun, but without God's grace you still can't make it. |
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He did so with a tirelessness and grace which he regularly shows on the pitch. |
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The flashbacks to the uncles' escapades in Africa ought to have been the saving grace of a rather uninteresting slow plot. |
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And residents and community leaders are now calling for developers to accept the decision with good grace and abandon the entire scheme. |
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French and English furniture and Japanese lacquered cabinets grace the room. |
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Even if I had not been able to spot Gerald in the throng of gentlemen, his languid grace on the ballroom floor revealed his identity. |
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We give thanks and bless God for the ever-surprising grace that blesses us with gifts. |
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No longer will he grace our courts with superb advocacy and inspired legal reasoning. |
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For the scholastic this is of course a supernatural end, a life of grace in this world and beatitude in the next. |
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Jeanette was moved by the grace and dignity of the Brazilian caboclos who live along the river. |
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Why they didn't burn the home down can only be explained by the grace of the Almighty. |
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There was one of those pregnant silences that always grace a table without fail. |
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Given at Paderborn in the year of grace 1241, on August the ninth, in the twelfth year of our pontificate. |
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What stays with you is the spaciousness and grace of these songs, not necessarily the individual sounds. |
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Proprietors themselves, perhaps feeling that there but for the grace of God go they, discourage serious criticism of their rivals. |
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And on his own steam, Jackson continues his good work with grace and relish. |
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The kitten heel offers both feminine grace and womanly comfort, as do ballet flats. |
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It is fitting that the second half of the top ten best performances of 2003 should include one of the finest Sligo bands ever to grace a stage. |
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The wonder was that they did it with such blithe, unflappable grace and good humor. |
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The birds grace kiwiana souvenirs from luggage tags and passport holders to ceramic dinner plates and hand-painted wine glasses. |
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We will always love you, and revere your amazing grace in that wonderful season. |
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While in Boston he teamed up with Johnny Sain, another pitcher, and the two became one of the greatest duos ever to grace a baseball diamond. |
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If you have followed my guidelines, you will have undoubtedly created the most perfect email to ever grace the Internet! |
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Whether it is a working class woman or someone who is very rich, they all have grace and confidence. |
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And we know at one level that there but for the grace of God, or fate, or elementary physics, we could all have been victims. |
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Once the symbol of a rich legacy, they used to grace the opulent confines of sprawling traditional houses belonging to the aristocratic class. |
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Flex congratulates Don, one of the nicest guys to ever grace the sport, on his successful surgery. |
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He has no hang-ups in bringing a free gospel of grace to all men saying he has no pleasure in the judgment that comes upon sinners. |
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Those that succeed do so with grace and with what seems to be a natural propensity to invent. |
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All had appeared in readiness for Harris to deliver the coup de grace to Gore on Saturday, once the absentee ballot returns were completed. |
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Yimou has the eye of a painter, the grace of a dancer and the flamboyance of a circus showman. |
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She surmounted the role's many difficulties with ease and grace and imbued the Czech language with particular bite. |
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Sampras refused to be drawn on the question of whether he was the greatest player ever to grace the game. |
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Neither of my parents had been overly religious although Da had insisted on saying grace before meals and he refused to do any work on a Sunday. |
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Garbed in the traditional ao dai, young Vietnamese women seem to epitomise the charm and grace of Hue. |
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Hyper-detailed textures and some of the most amazing lighting effects you've ever seen grace the hard-hitting action. |
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Her body was limber, lithe with the grace of a cat or that of a ballet dancer, hinting at carefully controlled strength. |
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There was, if such a thing is possible, a kind of awkward grace that he exhibited that was perfect for the moment. |
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It was April 10, 1912, and in less than an hour the most majestic ship to ever grace the seas would begin her historical maiden voyage. |
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Having simple luxuries on hand for hungry loved ones is a saving grace when friends drop by or for when holiday houseguests search for snacks. |
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I employ much less grace than those women did when as single mothers they worked for minimal wages. |
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Indeed if we are vigilant we can see that this world is made up of the natural laws of grace and fluidity, the essence of Mother Earth. |
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They have an airy grace and elegance that, to me, symbolises all that is beautiful about oriental gardens. |
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He moves around opponents with a litheness and grace unexpected in most prizefighters, let alone movie stars. |
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The term of the loan is ten years, with a two-year grace period starting from the date of utilisation of each tranche. |
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I am here as the chief of sinners saved by grace and to tell you that the grace which has saved me can surely save you. |
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He helped me to see that I was a sinner who needed the saving grace of Almighty God. |
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We must preach to sinners the good news of salvation through the grace of a sovereign God. |
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The only saving grace is the director's commentary, which, as I mentioned earlier, provides amazing insight into the film. |
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Their attackers would grace any side in the world, but they will miss Stam's aggression. |
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Her sinuous grace makes even the most complicated manoeuvre look not just effortless but perfectly natural. |
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Its design studio has to style cars with the sinuous, feline grace that defines the brand, while making sure new offerings look fresh. |
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Note that Paul spoke to these unbelieving Gentiles about judgement, not the gospel of the grace of God. |
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Lashed to the end of the blowpipe is a sharp bayonet with which they administer the coup de grace once the pig is cornered. |
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Why not unburden yourself in Confession and let his grace flow in your life? |
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In the whole of my life I have only ever seen three people who, to my mind, moved with true freedom and grace on stage. |
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The feckless teenagers of Fraserburgh are to be rewarded by the boys in blue for their good grace in actually obeying the law of the land? |
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The Four Stroke Ruff is a wonderful embellishment that has three grace notes and a prime note. |
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A special table will grace the Great Chamber of a historic house in York in memory of one of its volunteers. |
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There are grace notes and syncopations aplenty, with swing rhythms supplying the underlying pulse. |
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You two don't say grace at meals, or kiss each other good morning, good night or good-bye. |
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This in turn span the phone up into an arc whereupon I went to grab it with all the grace of an England fielder. |
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God grant them the grace of the sacrament of Holy Orders to do the former and shun the latter course. |
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In other words, the world, the flesh, and the devil are formidable obstacles to responding to the light and grace that God gives. |
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The key to your personal success in this effort is to use poise, grace and tact. |
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Myrc and others viewed the Augustinian doctrine of salvation by grace as a deception of the devil and a heresy. |
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He turns his lens time and again to the majesty and grace of the tahr, the endangered mountain goat found in the Western Ghats. |
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Mind you, how could a woman of such refinement and grace be expected to slop out or even be put into daily contact with all those other real criminals in Mountjoy? |
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There is a disquieting aesthetic beauty and grace found in the war dead. |
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It is a wonderful thing that the conflict in Iraq can end of something of a grace note for our country. |
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Glitches provide a grace period for you to strengthen statements, missions, arguments and other words-worthy endeavors. |
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Will she stay on for a grace period and then be reassigned as ambassador to some neutral country like Switzerland or Luxembourg? |
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Her delicate bone structure and elegant grace would always turn heads. |
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She tolerated her more sociable brother with a grace that alternated between good and ill, occasionally battering him with an outstretched paw to keep him in his place. |
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The children of various age groups presented a colourful mosaic of music and dance and tiny tots danced to the beats of the songs with perfect grace and style. |
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Nonetheless, Martha, I feel that the grace with which you have acquitted yourself throughout this entire situation demonstrates the ample strength of your character. |
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We crossed over onto the prom, squeezing between the bumpers and tailgates of near stationary cars with less grace and confidence than the mocking seagulls. |
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The way I figure it, all I have to do is get my big daddy gut down to a manageable size, and I'll be the best exotic dancer ever to grace a gas station. |
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To glorify God or praise Him is to put one's request to Him, because He is aware of our needs and He responds to our glorification with grace and compassion. |
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He may be an exception, but his example proves that grace can confound the expectations and machinations of curial politics. |
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When she decapitated a Japanese drug lord in Kill Bill, she did it with such grace you couldn't help but applaud. |
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Sara claimed heritage to some Asian culture, Chinese maybe, and was slim, small and all grace when she moved in her baby-blue peasant shirt and floor-length soft denim skirt. |
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When he was released, back on the streets of the ghetto, without much formal education, seeking to salvage his life, he found a saving grace in art. |
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The only saving grace is the beautifully whimsical score that carries us through the entire film and leaves us humming the theme long after it's done. |
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Next it brought an experimental acquaintance with grace and forgiveness. |
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Providing care to a partner or family member, while often a labor of love, requires the skill and grace to ensure your own mental and physical well-being. |
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The saving grace is that Sharif is emerging from several years in political exile. |
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The only saving grace is that the opposition won't want another election this year any more than does the public. |
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Movement and grace must complement what has been left unsaid by the music. |
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Given in Paris the eighteenth day of December in the year of grace one thousand six hundred and three, and of our reign the fifteenth, thus signed Henry. |
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Those who were chosen by God were no better than reprobates except that by his irresistible grace the elect could be brought to hate their sin, as Sir Walter does. |
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I swam around in circles, unwilling to return to the shore, unable to surrender this state of aquatic, marine grace to the dull, leaden heaviness of dry land. |
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Rarely does a show of this scale and nature grace the boards! |
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The person I bumped into, who apparently had an infinite amount more grace than I did, managed to stay standing, and offered a hand to me to help me up. |
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A dish called the Tidal Pool has a subtly tinged grace of oysters, urchin, wakame, and wood-ear mushroom, but its ethereal subtlety matches nothing on the menu. |
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Most football supporters have stood by him in his adversity, and greeted him with warm applause on match days despite his falling from grace so publicly. |
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It's hard to be judged on your grace and social ease when you've got clunky pleather monsters affixed to your feet. |
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The acuteness and expanse of his vision, his documentary power, and his grace and skill as an artist make his work devastatingly, frighteningly immediate. |
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The list of top sportspeople to grace Glasgow events is seemingly endless. |
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And you have to be in a state of grace to receive communion. |
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Thus there is the same relation between Christ's deeds for himself and his members, as there is between what another man does in the state of grace and himself. |
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For style in its widest sense is not merely the beauty or the grace or the conventional deportment of language, but its whole expressive apparatus, its breadth of capability. |
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With much emphasis on terroir, the reputation of Burgundy owes much of its grace and fortitude to the humble city of Dijon. |
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Novel blends of foods from different continents grace the menu. |
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She climbed with effortless grace and clipped the rope to the top bolt. |
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I longed for its lissome grace to be blown by the wind into my body. |
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You take your tumbles with good grace and always come up smiling. |
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Roosevelt had also stood with grace and courage against some of the most searing attacks aimed at anyone in public life. |
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Here we name the ugliest footballers ever to grace the beautiful game. |
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I thought she displayed a grace and charm in that speech as well as a puckish sense of humor that would make her a very appealing witness before the Judiciary Committee. |
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One can only hope he will accept his accolades with the grace and self-possession he has now. |
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It may be very American and dripping with sentiment but thanks to Quaid and a quality cast, The Rookie has a grace and sincerity that makes you willing to indulge its flaws. |
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Sally carried the dreams of her earthbound sisters with grace and good humor. |
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They were also sceptical about the World Council of Churches, then at its zenith of influence, and they began to preach God's free grace from their pulpits. |
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Global strategies can steamroller people who have a profound insight in local markets for the grace of outsourcing and other large management techniques. |
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The beauty and grace of the rituals that Barb undergoes are deeply contrasted with the inner turmoil she experiences here. |
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Positive, ripely flavoured, with a hint of wax and a long, sustained, dry aftertaste makes this the perfect wine for those who like grace at their table. |
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Cheap grace is the preaching of forgiveness without requiring repentance, baptism without Church discipline, Communion without confession, absolution without contrition. |
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He has so much, grandeur, his appearance is imposing and in general His Divine countenance overflows with heavenly grace and an inexpressible ultramundane beauty. |
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He told me that love is powerful, peace and grace are necessary for salvation, faith can move mountains, and that patience and understanding are important tools in life. |
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If that were so, it would be a shocking injustice to a flannelled gentleman who, by all accounts, played his cricket with immeasurable grace and infinite style. |
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Lilywhite wards and the astringent smell of disinfectant had turned into a sad and pullulating slum, the saving grace being the medical orderlies who had refused to surrender. |
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She showed the desperateness of suffering, a woman's incredible patience with injustice and finally, a lowbrow grace that is not common in a world filled with pretensions. |
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How Rousseff's fall from grace will play into Brazil's predatory political scene is now an open question. |
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I am afraid, madam, that his grace will not be able to see you today. |
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But by the grace of God everyone stepped away from the bar and I was able to get the keg tapped, which now made me the most popular person in all the land. |
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The film is smart, sassy, and thoroughly enjoyable, and features one of the most endearing and believable characters to grace the screen this year. |
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The lighthouse is just as beautiful inside as out, lined with clear blue opaline tiles that would grace an eastern palace, and with a handsome open staircase. |
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The only saving grace in the club was that the cocktails were fantastic. |
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Learn to have a deeper sense of your own wretched sinfulness and corruption, and to be more deeply grateful, that by the grace of God you are what you are. |
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This, of course, is the same PM many of the same commentators only weeks ago were telling us was one of the smartest pollies to grace our corridors of power. |
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Part of the healing is being facilitated by wrapping our wounds in red white and blue Band-Aids, which are being applied with the light grace of front line field tourniquets. |
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Emotionally, he is drawn to Mary, a martyred heroine falsely accused of plotting her cousin's death and meeting her own end with grace and dignity. |
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I generally perform with all the elegance and grace of a hippopotamus. |
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The rhythm of his run, the accuracy of the plant and the ease and effortless grace with which he flipped over the cross bar provided a fascinating spectacle. |
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In plain leotards six dancers brought the discordant music and bare stage to life with their precise, agile movement and amazing grace on a centre stage trapeze. |
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It wasn't exactly a movement of grace but I really didn't care. |
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They have beauty on their side, they also have grace and elegance. |
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And he didn't even have the good grace to admit being caught out. |
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Your grace and diplomacy take you to high places and to important people. |
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She tolerated my eleven year old's questions with grace and kindness. |
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They themselves have fallen from grace in recent years, with the exploits of their junior footballers taking most, if not all, of the limelight away from the hurlers. |
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Richardson's sad fall from grace began with his addiction to cocaine. |
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Chris, then, has fallen from grace and is living in a kind of purgatory, respected but terribly alone, knowing he can never be forgiven because the person he wronged is dead. |
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Of course, it is upon this 12-month grace period that Oakley wish to rely. |
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He says that the Mars mission could take place as early as 2009, but the two years' grace period allows the agency to spread the cost around that much more. |
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The loans were provided at favourable terms, and a period of grace for their repayment was sometimes granted, with significantly low interest rates. |
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Finally cubes of sweet juicy mango and fragrant curry leaves were added and we sat down to enjoy a meal with all the family after saying grace in Malayalam. |
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She ensured that they said their nightly prayers and grace before meals. |
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John Taylor is acknowledged as one of the greatest hurlers ever to play for Laois and indeed one of the finest exponents ever to grace the ancient game. |
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She turned full time professional in 1979 and came to the attention of the great Mark Murphy, one of the most accomplished and respected jazz vocalists ever to grace a stage. |
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A Tour of pure nostalgia with some of the greatest artists ever to grace the concert stage in Ireland will be coming to the north west next month. |
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It was great because we got to stay next door to my in-laws, and my mom, probably one of the best cooks ever to grace this planet, lived around the corner. |
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He was selected on the team of Centenary announced five years ago and is regarded as one of the finest footballers ever to grace the Gaelic fields. |
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His woodcarvings still grace the Hotel Marauw and Biak's House of Arts. |
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He is the most gorgeous man to ever grace the planet, plain and simple. |
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They seem to be very against any form of control for what they do, and I have never in my life met anyone who was willing to stop smoking with good grace when asked. |
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He accepted his failure with good grace and went back to the Senate. |
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Earthly marriage reveals new measures of his grace and glory to those made one in him, while also mirroring the more perfect union of God with his people. |
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The fifth study is cast in the original key, but the left hand contains the inversion of the original right-hand material, accompanied by chords and chromatic grace notes. |
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These musicians practise extensively, perform repeated grace notes, and the instrument is very responsive so that smallish errors will be apparent. |
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But age only added dignity and grace to her still slim and willowy figure. |
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The stories are told through the eyes of two fishing guides, crunch and Des, with a spare grace and humor that stand strong. |
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