Troubled lives of friends and their families drew her into delving more and more into the intricacies of the human mind. |
|
But the basics of traffic flow have been mapped out and the intricacies that contribute to slowdowns are being worked out. |
|
For all the intricacies of the spat, it smacks of political one-upmanship, petty power play and a healthy dose of ego juice. |
|
This laboratory system breadboarding enabled ESA to get acquainted with the intricacies of coherent, free-space optical communication. |
|
Freely, an authority on Ottoman history, steers a clear course through these intricacies. |
|
The students seem drawn to its clarity and concreteness, and there is no shortage of casuistic questions concerning its intricacies. |
|
What knowledge I possess of the intricacies of Strine may fairly be blamed on this small volume. |
|
As a consequence of such confident oversimplification, social, cultural and political realities and intricacies became hopelessly blurred. |
|
Nevertheless, in her kitchen, Elena led me through the intricacies of huevos rancheros. |
|
With these growing intricacies, coat armour, to a large extent, was losing its original beauty of distinction and advertisement. |
|
I'm still learning the intricacies of blogging and HTML formatting, especially indenting. |
|
If the intention is to involve the player in the intricacies and complexity of politics, it works. |
|
With their resolved conflux of curves and jutting appendages, the sculptures emulate the darting intricacies of active vision. |
|
Evaluating a company's debt, acquisitions, working capital, contingent liabilities and other accounting intricacies will help spot trouble ahead. |
|
He proceeds to explain the technical intricacies of making a timepiece when you innocuously ask him what the time is. |
|
How can one person comprehend the intricacies of copyright law and legislative change? |
|
Soon the hobby turned into passion as the intricacies of the subject unfolded with experience. |
|
You notice minute details and are fascinated by the intricacies of the world around you. |
|
Ask the simplest of questions and he takes you on a rollercoaster ride through the detail and intricacies of his troubled mind. |
|
You can start briefing him on any intricacies and idiosyncrasies that they have. |
|
|
Absorbed in the intricacies of artful expression, the young participants seem immune to the heat. |
|
The more you get into the intricacies of it, you see how sophisticated it often is and how formidable it is. |
|
Sure, I have an idea of the long game, but the intricacies still escape me. |
|
He is most anxious to meet and discuss the intricacies involved in this union. |
|
Somebody must have forgotten to explain to them the intricacies of quota preferential voting in the Senate. |
|
He also goes into incredible detail about the intricacies of infantry training. |
|
The technical intricacies of the internet are blurring the lines which divide technology and design. |
|
Orchestrating a tenants' battle with him through the courts, she became immersed in the intricacies of housing law. |
|
We just love watching other people's lives and the little intricacies that make us all different. |
|
In an arena often mired in apologetics and polemics, they articulate the intricacies of Mormon origins irenically. |
|
His dire predictions ignore the intricacies of diplomacy, foreign policy, and world history. |
|
Edwards also regarded himself as a predestinarian but admitted that the intricacies of election escaped him. |
|
He feels that qualified gemologists need to guide the customer through the intricacies of gem buying. |
|
To explore the intricacies of the plot further would give away the denouement and spoil any pleasure that might be culled from the evening. |
|
She has raised some timely related issues, so we'll try to grok their intricacies and fold them into the discussion. |
|
Nobody in the lamestream media bothers to explain all the intricacies of Fiji's political life. |
|
The book has an absorbingly detailed description of the intricacies of this market. |
|
His absorption with the world of advertising and the intricacies associated with it find dominant echoes in his works. |
|
As a malt lover, I am in the camp that says watering down the whisky is precisely what you want to do, since this reveals its subtle intricacies. |
|
Pressing the magic fax button was for him far more alarming than the intricacies of the concert, pedal harp. |
|
|
Now on the other side of the fence, McCusker has been learning the intricacies of constructing a gridiron machine in quick-fire time. |
|
Perhaps our closeness to the intricacies of identity, including race and gender, blind us to what we have in common with humanity. |
|
So the system is weighted in favor of the habitual offender who knows the intricacies of the law better than the average joe. |
|
By focusing on simpler questions, economists escape getting sucked into the labyrinthine intricacies of the human brain. |
|
So although I have no problem breading veal, or diving into the intricacies of pasta making, seafood remains a bit of a mystery to me. |
|
In 90 minutes of compelling drama, the actors explore the impossible intricacies of love, domesticity and sexual passion. |
|
It's a shame to reveal the finely crafted intricacies of the plot, but the innovative details of Harry and Lucy's courtship demand sharing. |
|
It is devoted to what molecular biologists have learned about the details, with all their intricacies and puzzles, of organismic development. |
|
He comes from nowhere to win this contest and immediately is able to grasp a lot of the intricacies of the moviemaking process. |
|
There, it has left behind the intricacies of conscious experience for the enigmas of the unconscious. |
|
Thanks to these marvellous inventions, bookworms, and others do not have to wrestle with the intricacies of the hieroglyphics. |
|
In terms of imagery I am really attracted to the intricacies of weaving. |
|
She is best remembered for her cookery programmes set in her quaint Suffolk cottage, where she meticulously talks viewers through the intricacies of every recipe. |
|
I had to struggle with the intricacies of the washing machine programmer, learn the contours of an ironing board, co-ordinate the different ingredients of a cooked meal. |
|
Another was Geoffrey Elliott, who astonished his hutmates with his total recall of the intricacies of any detective novel after just one speed reading. |
|
It is, in fact, a book that deals almost entirely with the intricacies of being in Toronto. |
|
He is particularly interested in detail and the intricacies of policy. |
|
Teacher Anna Massey is determined that her Czech pupils will master the intricacies of the English language, including the subtle distinction between land and lend. |
|
We rush down the glacier solving its intricacies by interminable weaving, creeping over tenuous bridges, snowplowing desperately below the shrouded rock. |
|
Unfortunately, you lose some of the intricacies of communication that way. |
|
|
The intricacies of this sport have changed interminably in the 29 years since their epic first meeting in New York, but everyone still loves a genuine grudge match. |
|
Diaz and Harmes start with the intricacies of concepts like interfaces, encapsulation, and inheritance, which form the basis of small patterns in JavaScript. |
|
What lady does not relish the plush touch of ermine on her cheek, the airy intricacies of a panel of lace, or the cloud-like embrace of a velveteen settee? |
|
Owen's knowledge of corporate practices and the intricacies of doing business in nineteenth-century Russia is without peer and it shows in this chapter. |
|
In some clubs, new players are appointed a mentor who takes them under their wing and talks them through the first couple of games, explaining the intricacies which abound. |
|
Recorded by Clash roadie Baker Glare, who was learning the intricacies of a Portastudio and mixing on the job, the quality varies from patchy downwards. |
|
He advocated theories existence that would be sufficiently robust to reveal the larger patterns of society and do justice to its intricacies and complexities. |
|
One suspects its intricacies are a shorthand for infinitude. |
|
Consider it a cosmic lesson in exploring the intricacies of circumstance that you often glaze over. |
|
He ran away with some quite sophisticated, intricate ideas and he got carried away with the intricacies of them and solving the technical problems that they led to. |
|
Researchers say their new technology could produce objects featuring shapes and intricacies traditional glass blowing methods can't achieve. |
|
While it treats of nothing new, it handles the intricacies of neurology as seen in paedopathy in a concise and refreshing manner. |
|
Pandya explained the intricacies of various asanas to an attentive audience, practising yoga with him. |
|
Dubbing has many intricacies, including the ability to facilitate international sales. |
|
Develop ways to lead people to get the job done and master the intricacies of profit center accountability and incentive compensation. |
|
This wasn't a PBS seminar on the intricacies of the federal budget. |
|
The book is intended to guide students, step-by-step, into the intricacies of commentarial reasoning and style. |
|
Your argumentation... is invelloped with certain intricacies, that are not easie to be extricated. |
|
A second, based on the work of conversation analysts, ethnomethodologists, and others, understands dialogue to refer to the intricacies of human conversation. |
|
English-speaking scholars in Germany and India tap the rich potential of investigating the intricacies of Schopenhauer's incorporation of the Upanishads in his philosophy. |
|
|
However, according to the Mirant Foundation, USAID cannot deal, with such intricacies as perception of an unfair Chief of Party, a corrupt employee, or internal disputes. |
|
He studied the Old Testament, the text and commentaries of the Talmud, the Mishna and Gemara, also delving into the intricacies of Biblical exegesis and the Targum. |
|
As I push my cereal bowl aside, I allow myself to reflect on the impact of this war in contrast to the seemingly earth-shattering intricacies of my own life. |
|
We mastered the intricacies of jerseys, hoods, and lures pretty well, but nowhere did it say in that book what the proper dress of the hawkist should be. |
|
We are so often reminded by sage, cauliflower-eared old snarlers that calling the intricacies of front-row play is a thankless task for those uninitiated in the art itself. |
|