What surprised me most about the books that follow was their desire to bring alternate voices and viewpoints sometimes jarringly into the story. |
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The tone was jarringly dissonant from the sunny message Kerry and Edwards have emphasized on their first few days together on the campaign trail. |
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The artificiality of the TV show, when paired with the growing intimacy between the cast members, was often jarringly surreal. |
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The van speeds on again, the jubilant music now sounding jarringly discordant. |
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The shifts from banal to sublime, mundane to imaginary, human disorder to natural order, are subtly rather than jarringly made. |
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The argument that a single company is better positioned than the market to make efficient use of an idea should strike us as jarringly counterintuitive in a market economy. |
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Silverman's big break came with a cameo in 2005's The Aristocrats, when she told a jarringly bawdy version of the famous joke. |
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Yet so convincingly does Sidibe play the part that meeting the actress for the first time is jarringly surreal. |
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The results are centered, economic, and if occasionally obvious, prove an effective offset to vocals that run from austere to jarringly dense and discordant. |
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It was the right decision-and because of the jarringly unfair terms offered, we don't believe it was a close call. |
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Not so with The Nightmare, a jarringly silly doc that attempts to suggest the phenomenon of sleep paralysis is evidence of the paranormal. |
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It's almost jarringly soon, the next series in England. |
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More jarringly, the chapters supposedly devoted to the city's 20th-century history dwell at length on individuals and movements who had little to do with Rome or, like the Futurists, actively loathed it. |
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But his exploits lead him to an experience that jarringly shakes his persona and the livelihood that he is living, uncovering a buried empathy and perhaps his biggest struggle yet. |
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His rhymes are jarringly off or disconcertingly exact, and his ragged stanzas vary from lines of one word to lines that meander the length of a paragraph, often interrupted by inapposite digressions. |
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Too much heat burns the Sauvignon grape and its aromas become neutral. Without enough sun, ripeness is not reached and vegetal tones jarringly dominate. |
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