The dark, claustrophobic opus, a tale of witch hunts and the German myth of Walpurgisnacht, has proven wildly divisive among the band's fans. |
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He dispels the well-travelled myth that, in order to achieve, successful individuals must be cold-hearted and clinical. |
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And then there's the myth of objectivity, which persuades us that there's nothing out there to believe in any more. |
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Its ideal form is the fairy tale, a container of myth related in the simplest language. |
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Partly taken in by this, partly its perpetuator, he embraced that myth to service his artistic aims. |
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This has become such a coercively powerful myth that it is now beyond all dissection or analysis. |
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For thousands of years fabulous serpents and dragons have been the stuff of myth and traveller's tales. |
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The novel could be a kind of myth or fable of the afterlife for the 20th century. |
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The myth becomes a dim pentimento, looming under a series of visuals painted one over the other. |
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They defy the myth of public sector pen-pushers meddling in business affairs they know nothing about. |
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There's another myth that Zhao was so lazy and idle that he would only come down to the world on the fifth day of the Chinese Lunar New Year. |
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Ever since, lions have been portrayed in art, myth and iconography as powerful symbols of solar strength, supremacy, glory, light and brilliance. |
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The ancient Patagonians were at least as complex, at least as long-lived, at least as rich in myth as the Egyptians. |
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The essence of the myth is that the English are standoffish, the Welsh are clannish and only the Scots and the Irish mix with anyone. |
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Each year in winter there is a four-day ritual circumambulation of the mountain by thousands of pilgrims who visit sites of myth and legend. |
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The second myth The Economist wanted do dispel was the misapprehension that blogs are essentially parasitic on other media. |
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Hart plays the genie in this raucous take on the British pantomime, a story based on the myth of Aladdin and his magic lamp. |
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Chanting rhythms and imagery of Egyptian myth and Swahili praise poem enact the symbolic death and rebirth of all Black women. |
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So he's not the Svengali of myth who convinced a generation of kids that fame is a basic human right, regardless of ability? |
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Jonson, influenced as ever by the Horatian paradigms, adopts and adapts these literalist interpretations of the myth to his own dramatic ends. |
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He analyzes the painting as an illustration of the Ovidian myth and relates it to other pictorial and textual interpretations. |
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The director's subversion of the hero myth is spelled out clearly by the contrast between the movie's two parts. |
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For example a common myth is that caste system and untouchability is fundamental to Hinduism. |
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This early medieval Sanskrit text recounts the Saivite myth of an outcast king who had been a dog in a previous birth. |
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Anyone who still believes this myth should look to the dozens of female heroines in comic books. |
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It debunks the myth of great Victorian heroes and heroines such as Dr Arnold, Florence Nightingale, Cardinal Manning. |
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He writes of the attempt to create a new myth around the heroic individual. |
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The myth of the hero has followed the same basic pattern in many cultures, and expresses a common ideal. |
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It is also a widespread myth that central banks are inaugurated in order to check inflation by commercial banks. |
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They found no evidence that vaccination prevents viral transmission, putting the whole herd immunity myth once again into question. |
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A popular myth is that tonsils and adenoids filter bacteria out of what we swallow and breathe like a kitchen strainer. |
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What's called for instead is an end to the myth of Olympian objectivity in the press. |
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It suggests that Parliament itself had fallen for the antiquarian myth so carefully preserved and nurtured by the Stuarts. |
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Although his version of the myth has become canonized, many of his details were inventions or alterations. |
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The last stanzas of the poem recall all the incipient violence woven into the myth of the Prince of Peace. |
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Barrie is keen to dispel the myth that regional dialects are somehow inferior to standard English. |
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I grew up in some of the more remote parts of Scotland with undiluted access to history and myth amid standing stones, cairns, tombs and ruins. |
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France nurtured what was essentially a myth of a united people, secretly despising and plotting against the occupiers for five years. |
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I think the more you do the more you encourage the myth of fame and stardom. |
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It's unlikely that Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn has the horsepower to be the myth buster Hutchison could have been. |
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But it's a cruel myth that they would troop off to the vomitorium afterwards. |
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A myth in South Africa holds that sexual intercourse with a virgin can heal a man from HIV infection. |
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There is a persisting myth in Indian cricket that spin is more important than pace. |
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This chosen nation myth has been the oldest and most continuous creed in American civil religion. |
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Mira's sparagmos almost literalizes the central message of the Orpheus myth for Rushdie. |
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Under such conditions man is a degraded animal, and the noble savage as great a myth as the elixir of life. |
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For these operas, Wagner mined the same vein of Nordic myth that J.R.R. Tolkien used a century later for his own Ring epic. |
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The Vedas are composed in an ancient language of mantra, myth and symbol and utilise a rich poetic and imagistic expression. |
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What it says about these women is that they have bought into a myth of soulmates and some romantic fairyland. |
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No, he just has to perpetuate that pathetic myth that Britpop was some kind of idyllic golden age for British music. |
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Freud seems to have been deaf to the importance in myth of both sororicide and fratricide. |
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Soma is much praised in the g Veda, in which is told the myth of the discovery of the soma plant in Heaven. |
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Lifar's retelling of the Icarus myth is essentially a solo danced against the choral movement of a group. |
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According to the council, it's a myth that solar panels generate electricity by storing direct heat from the sun. |
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A more obvious type of myth is that of urban legends, improbable stories of events happening to unknown people on an unspecified date. |
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It's a pretty horrible story, mainly because it's depressingly plausible, like an urban myth that's come true. |
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This story is bogus, and part of an urban myth that has been spreading around for quite a while now. |
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The myth is that western North Dakota is still the rugged, unvanquished place that shaped our most rugged president. |
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There is a common myth that America, land of the free market cowboys, is the unregulated Wild West of commerce. |
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It is a myth to claim that this is an experience unique to expatriate life. |
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The event might be entirely mythical but if the myth expresses a true relationship, then for us it is as valuable as a factual incident. |
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What myth is being alluded to and what is the name of the mythical horse so raised? |
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Formulated as much from myth as from historical occurrences, mythic history both produces and reflects collective historical imagination. |
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Daly has an intuitive feel for the mythic nature of cinema, and knows that myth and authenticity are not mutually exclusive. |
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It is here that Walker's text swerves most radically from the myth of Philomela and from the mythic paradigm. |
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Well, I think, to some extent, the liberal media was always a myth and exaggeration. |
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The Western myth looms large in the American imagination, but the place and its people are not well understood. |
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The myth consists in the belief that only deflation entails unequal and arbitrary burdens for the citizens. |
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In a neat twist, the myth is now so widely believed that many people really are changing their behaviour as a result. |
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Nonetheless, it is a myth that persists as widely accepted conventional wisdom. |
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The proposed link between the grail episode and early Celtic myth was not the only suggestion put forward to explain the grail. |
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The Thais had a traditional creation myth before the arrival of the Buddhist religion. |
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One Palauan myth recounts the story of a magical breadfruit tree that the child of the sun provided for his human mother. |
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Classic Norse myth is rife with stories concerning Loki's attempts to subvert Odin's authority, and Odin's retaliatory actions. |
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Its legend in Norse myth shows how Odin won it for the Gods and tells that it was brewed from the blood of Kvasir, the poet. |
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In the myth she was abducted by the God of the underworld, Pluto, and stolen away to his kingdom of Hades. |
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There is a common myth that private boarding houses efficiently provide safe well-managed affordable housing. |
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A myth has grown up that he blundered into his discovery and did not realise the true potential of penicillin, leaving others to exploit it. |
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I wondered whether the myth that blondes are tartier then brunettes stems from the fact they actually need to wear more make-up? |
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In fact, such ethics, as well as the morality that underlies them, are nothing more than man-made myth to the atheist. |
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The film's sometimes dreamy quality is underscored by a refrain of spirituality blended with myth mixed with fable. |
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The real origin of all these flags is severely obfuscated by myth and legend, in spite of its relative modernness and high popularity. |
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The root of this myth is a rather willful misinterpretation of the photographs. |
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They continue to perpetuate the myth that he's mistrusted by the Republican base in order to help him triangulate against Bush. |
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It is a myth that living like a miser will see you end up with a stash of gold. |
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The same myth was later used in Japan for similar purposes, with Shintoism being the competing indigenous teaching. |
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Those who hang out their shingle without this knowledge, perpetrate the myth that skill acquisition is not necessary. |
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Only in death can their message be transmogrified and their myth perfectly preserved forever. |
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The myth concludes with the moral that of all the beings ever created, nobody has ever got or will ever get the better of a baby. |
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But like the quest for the Holy Grail, SEO is also sheaved in myth and misinformation. |
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The human animal monster, as the traditional signifier of sin and inhumanity, reflects the internalisation of the myth of the Fall of Man. |
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The greatest myth is that right up to the start of the war they were open to a peaceful settlement. |
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Wendy was surprised to find the girl also had humanoid legs, and not the tail that mermaids of myth did. |
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I mean you've put the beauty myth and relationships and the body beautiful up on the screen and scrutinised it over and over again. |
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In fact, foreign sailors and merchant seamen were the first to spread the myth of Kobe beef back in the early nineteenth century. |
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A myth surrounding the vessels states that if a student drank all the beer held in one, he would be sent down. |
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This latest display of public generosity once again rebuts the myth that most people only have self-interest at heart. |
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The journalistic sense of self-importance that flowed from the myth has become a dynamo of destruction. |
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The analysis tracks political activists in their astute mediations between myth and reality. |
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The most important is the myth of Narcissus, seen as the symbol of the youth's self-absorption. |
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As with all great historical figures, the myth is both powerful and pervasive. |
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It belies the myth of Scottish meanness, eh, what with that and Ken's generous lift the previous night. |
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Awesome and seductive, they undo the myth that contemporary art is unintelligible to all but the initiated. |
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Those who favor the Balto-Slavic myth place a lot of emphasis on phonemic pitch in Baltic and Slavic. |
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If the Baconian theory is a myth and not worthy of serious attention why did he get so excited about it? |
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They work schematically to reach deep into areas of myth and the social condition formerly occupied by epic history painting. |
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A fabrication woven from fear, anxiety, fantasy and myth formed the backcloth for the initial encounter between Europeans and Africans. |
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There's an urban myth that you get better service at Helsinki upmarket shops if you speak Swedish instead of Finnish. |
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And we put no credence whatever in the old myth that the vent of the tautog closes over in winter. |
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There is a myth that gifted children don't need any special help, that they'll make it on their own. |
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While many of the short stories in this collection are part myth and part folklore, most of them have used satire to make a serious point. |
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This show is featured mainly to break the myth that film stars can never be good cooks. |
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Such is our hunger for myth that we swallow fictions and reprocess them as truth. |
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He then adds in elements of autobiography, fragments of myth and history and a dose of magic realism. |
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I'm super-interested in sexual matters and the myth of monogamy, and this album is a form of lovers rock. |
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It is something of a myth that detectives solve crimes by assiduous collection of evidence. |
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The music is inspired by the Ancient Greek myth of island dwellers whose diet of fruit from the lotus tree makes them forget their past troubles. |
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This independent research provides the hard evidence that explodes the myth once and for all that supermarkets have farmers in an armlock. |
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The social myth around leaders serves to program life out of people who, with the social lobotomization, appear as cheerful robots. |
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It is something of a myth that only roses that have been budded on to a rootstock by a nurseryman will grow. |
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On one hand, as Theios observed, Western artists depict the myth and romance of the West and seldom its harsh truths. |
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Of special interest to us here is the myth that the creativity deity Obatala molded the archetypal human image from divine clay. |
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In the latter example the Pygmalion myth is combined with that of the archetypal mother. |
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This reduces the myth to history's earliest account of road rage, complete with an autopsy report. |
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Photo collections in biscuit tins and shoe boxes mediated the void left by this absence of myth and history. |
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There is also a myth about the riddance of tapeworms concerning the other end of the body. |
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Wine and life-giving waters were on equal footing in Egyptian culture, and they also shared a duality in both myth and in fact. |
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It's high time we rid ourselves of the myth that professional sport is somehow the almost exclusive preserve of heterosexuals. |
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The myth of the draft as a class leveller comes from WWII, where it was only true for about six months. |
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Her story is retold as a myth of origin for the nation, but not in any kind of straightforward way. |
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Ancient vases and carvings tell the story of the war, but whether they are retelling myth or history remains unknown. |
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The fourth crucial technique of his allegory is the use of myth to orient events, to give resonance to images, places, persons. |
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What does a country built on headstrong individualism and the myth of self-reliance do with its people convinced that they know best? |
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It was the last myth that anyone needed, least of all those who loathe the notion of intractability. |
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Just to show we are not the cold-hearted, ambulance-chasers of popular myth we have brought you some good news this week. |
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The antediluvian myth is one where it is suggested that the ancients lived exceptionally long lives. |
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Still, there seems to be a kind of secretive admiration of the Amazons by the male myth makers. |
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This perpetuates the myth that small firms are here today, gone tomorrow and are difficult to deal with. |
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One myth is that aluminum is not sufficiently strong to serve as a structural metal. |
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This has obvious parallels with the striges and lamiae of classical myth and belief. |
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A second great myth is that property is literally as safe as houses while the stock market is the investment equivalent of Dodge City. |
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It's a common myth that dairy foods contribute to allergies such as hayfever, but it's just that, a myth. |
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Even then, long after the defeat of the saints, the myth of the coming catastrophe and reformation is never dead and forgotten. |
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A common myth about wraparound mortgages is that you have to pay high interest rates to the financier. |
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There is a myth that the animals get fat and lazy and that working dogs no longer work but none of that is the case. |
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It is part of a drive to dispel a growing myth that work experience is only for those pupils who are bored with the academic curriculum. |
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The recumbent figure, whose sexual ambiguity is iconographically unique, is one of several figural types conveying the myth of Hermaphroditus. |
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Like the myth of Hercules, the legend of Samson is a tale recounted in many cultures. |
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A pervasive myth is that the extended family does not exist and that society is composed of nuclear families cut off from extended kin. |
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The powerful myth of the dangers of protectionism is one of the philosophical keystones of today's globalisation model. |
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Some would argue that it is the widespread myth that the camera never lies that has kept reality TV alive as a genre. |
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He also moved to dispel what he said was the myth that Queen Mary never sailed in convoy because she was too quick. |
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Thus, for an adoring readership did Laurie Lee foster the myth we demanded. |
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A place where limited editions, white labels, one-offs and addresses on the backs of hands congregate to explode the myth of monoculture. |
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The primary myth of advertising is that you can be one of these people and have these things too, if you only buy this product. |
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Plato does not provide any consoling myth at all for the jumped-up dictator who claims to know what is best for the people. |
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The film takes the myth of the werewolf and transplants it into a small-town community and carnage ensues. |
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It's a myth that goes back to the revolution and the triumph of America's ragtag guerrillas against the rigid, hierarchical British army. |
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The director's vision must embrace myth and reality, welding them into a seamless whole. |
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It has long been clear that the myth of auditor independence has been a weak link in the financial reporting chain. |
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Part of the myth is that it's easy, quick, fast money, but there are always strings attached. |
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But when we consider the status of women in academe, we may confront not so much a myth as a glass half empty or half full. |
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I don't necessarily see the two interpretations as mutually exclusive, because we're in the melty melty realms of myth here where there's more than one way to skin a cat. |
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A few phone calls later, O'Reilly says, the Hopkins myth was unhorsed. |
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White later wrote that he regretted the role he played in transmitting the Camelot myth to the public. |
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Of course, the hoteliers jacked their prices up to the roof and did catch a fair number of those believing the annual myth propounded by the would-be profiteers. |
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For decades now writers and journalists have been chipping away at the myth of Orwell to reveal some of the truth. |
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Likewise, it's only a myth that twisters avoid large cities. |
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This reflects the myth that the trust funds' balances represent an asset. |
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And they all travel affordably, busting the myth that travel is only for the elite. |
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History records that Paganini stunned audiences with his playing and wild looks, further reinforcing the myth that he had made a pact with the Devil in return for such talent. |
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I will now consider how the Promethean myth is recast in terms of modernity in the story of Frankenstein and the issues regarding male power this raises. |
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The highly respected, intelligent and tenured Harvard psychiatrist has embarrassed his university by very publicly embracing the myth of alien abductions. |
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Ariadne is this character in Greek myth who accompanies Theseus on his dangerous expedition to the heart of the labyrinth to kill the dreaded Minotaur. |
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I believe that categorizing this story as an allegory is more appropriate than doing so as a myth because a myth is defined as explaining natural phenomenon. |
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The first abiding myth is that the miners' leadership faced a choice between a negotiated compromise and the all-or-nothing resistance they mounted. |
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Actually the Santa myth goes back to a Lapp man in folk history who used to cut firewood and give it to the poor during the winters, who also carved wooden toys for children. |
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They had accepted all that world of sexual repression, had accepted its rules, the hypocrisy of the myth of female virginity and, needless to say, they had accepted authority. |
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Most cultures have deep at their core a flood myth in which the great bulk of humanity is destroyed and a few are left to repopulate and repurify the human race. |
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And how has the Scottish myth of egalitarianism survived two and a half centuries of severe inequality? |
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Unfortunately, there is much myth surrounding the causation of the zits. |
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And Julie Copeland speaks to Indian artist Nalini Malani in Brisbane, whose timely installation reworks Hindu myth to reflect India's terrible, contemporary conflicts. |
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It is a myth that efficient regulation, which protects those it should protect without distorting the economy, is a luxury that only rich countries can afford. |
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It is a myth that lightning never strikes twice in the same place. |
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It's a euphemism for the Tarot major arcana, based on the myth that the Egyptian god Thoth's wisdom was written down in the eponymous book, for magicians to discover. |
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Others, such as the sculptor Arturo Martini, and Massimo Campigli, created a more archaizing style, drawing inspiration from ancient myth and Etruscan art. |
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Amelia Wilson's illustrated history of the Devil is a wonderful introduction to the myth of the Archfiend as he appears throughout history and across religions and cultures. |
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At the same time, the transpacific migrations within and of Hollywood continue to perpetuate the myth that any marker of Asianness is synonymous with foreignness. |
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It is another black-on-black exchange that also dispels the myth that all black men are Lotharios or that African American men and women do not have long-term relationships. |
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A myth of Merrie Africa was fostered with assiduity, an ideal of timeless village community as appealing to radicals and socialists as to conservatives. |
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The point of the Santa Claus myth is to compel children to play nice, finish their greens, and go to bed early. |
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At the beginning of the second book of Plato's Republic, Glaucon challenges Socrates, and his idea of justice, with a myth concerning the ancestor of Gyges, the Lydian. |
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If a myth is built around an author, her most intimate thoughts become worthy of a hardcover. |
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Recognizing the diverse nature of Hispanic families, the purpose of this article was not to perpetuate the myth of sameness or ethnic homogeneity. |
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Chloe of the Midnight Storytellers will amuse the guests by recounting tales from myth and legend, as well as adaptations of literary short stories. |
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Taurus draws on the myth of io, the nymph who was turned into a snow-white cow. |
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Why are manlike monsters a persistent part of myth and legend? |
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But I think the myth gains its staying power because, as far as modern interpreters are concerned, Orpheus does fail. |
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One myth I would like to bust is that PR is a measure of a web site. |
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For one thing, that all intersex people are gay is one myth intersex activists hope to dispel. |
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In it, she draws from the Greek myth of Narcissus, the young man who falls in love with his own reflection, and plays with that notion of desire and passion for self. |
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Corman introduced beatniks, hippies, and druggies as suitable cases for cinematic treatment, and consciously challenged Hollywood's reigning myth of a classless society. |
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The opening theme is based on the ancient myth that the River Lee was formed by the gorging tail of a giant serpent defeated in battle by St Finbarr. |
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It's the biggest myth since the tooth fairy and Father Christmas. |
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Again a brilliant movie taking a hold of the myth that lurks around us all the time. |
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Sadly, many people still fall for the myth that women in abusive relationships look sad and traumatized all the time. |
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Based on the Irish myth for Sidhe they are immortal and fair creatures. |
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Everyone knows the story of the ugly duckling who grows up and turns into a beautiful swan thereby perpetuating the myth that beauty is desirable. |
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From this deliberate fabrication the myth of Fluoride preventing tooth decay was born and has been adopted by the Dental Profession as the unalterable truth. |
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On a less conventional level it is about the unbreakable bond between siblings, the blurring of myth and reality and the journey between life and death. |
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The Indian captain also came down heavily on the critics and said that all those who said that Team India was a myth would now be made to eat their words. |
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I think the timocratic structure of divinity in early Greek myth might be quite a good thing to apply to the tale of Eris, the apple and the Trojan War. |
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One well-known myth about Dionysus concerns the invention of wine. |
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In later Greek myth Hecate is presented as the daughter of Hera and Zeus. |
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He said the average customers were men who gambled at weekends, dispelling the popular myth that housewives were behind the rise in the popularity of poker. |
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It should not surprise anyone if it turns out that Jean Houston's autobiography is a piece of fiction, a heroic myth spun by her imagination out of the fabric of her desires. |
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The myth of the orient, and the orient Express, both facilitated and quelled illusions about foreign cultures. |
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Most of my Somerset will have to stay unlearned, leaving the county, the land and the people to grow in my mind on a basis of myth and wishful thinking. |
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Bromhall's next foray into the borderlands of science concerns the infamous Mother Goddess myth that all societies were supposedly female-fixated in prehistory. |
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Believe it wholeheartedly or look at it as a founding myth of Western culture. |
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Carefully unpicking the myth that has grown up around these games, Dougan illuminates an horrific period in Ukrainian history without succumbing to sensation. |
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Yet spend time with her and the myth of Odessa's past comes to overshadow the present. |
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The legendary peasant woman kept a pot-au-feu or bouillon pot on her hearth and, myth has it, threw into it whatever she had around to stew for the day's meal. |
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They have become almost shrouded in myth but their dedication and unshakeable mindset is no mystery when you consider their starting point on this journey. |
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Now, whether you seek our civilisation in religion, language, values, aesthetics or habits of thought, you get only a myth or a sniff of it, never the real thing. |
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Not only in popular culture, but even in modern evolutionary psychology, the prevailing myth has long been that boys will be boys and girls will be, well, good. |
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A major problem is that this contact has been paternalistic and poisoned by the myth of racial superiority. |
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The most famous buccaneers have been shrouded in legend and folklore for so long that it's almost impossible to distinguish between myth and reality. |
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From Shreveport to Ferriday and all points in between, along the backwater burgs and the big city haunts, the myth of the Big Easy is examined in this exhaustive overview. |
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Men may like to keep this myth going, but I'm bursting your bubble, boys. |
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Nina Fishman also gives ground to the myth that the 1970s were a time when unions had too much power and were constantly going on strike for spurious reasons. |
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They are released now by officials anxious to dispel the myth that bishops, some of whom still occupy grand palaces and stately castles, enjoy a life of luxury. |
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There is a myth that teams spend the off-season resting or on vacation. |
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A study done by an associate professor at Ohio State University has debunked the sticky myth that 9 out of every 10 restaurants fails in the first year. |
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None of them subscribe to the myth of the omnicompetent designer. |
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But you know, there are times in this fabulous country when I can almost convince myself that the hate campaign is a myth and that Pommie-hating is a thing of the past. |
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That's bogus, the casting couch is a myth created by the media. |
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Our culture is also to blame, Huston says, for perpetuating the myth of storybook romance, which is more likely to doom a marriage than strengthen it. |
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It successfully meshes history and character and myth and storytelling. |
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We usually think of the Orphic myth as a story about the artist's deadly gaze and the power of his art, about love and its fatal moment of madness. |
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Blind faith in an over-subscribed, vainglorious myth will only hinder you. |
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The finance minister insisted it was a myth that major projects such as the building of Dublin's port tunnel habitually overran to the cost of several hundred million euros. |
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This widespread myth has its origin in the southern states where pests with similar names such as jigger flea or the chigoes do attack by burrowing under skin. |
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It could be the deconstruction of the myth of the Nietzschean superman. |
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What I think is more of a worry is the sort of standardisation and homogenisation of myth and film where you're given stories rather than encouraged to develop your own. |
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In many pagan myth cycles, of paramount importance is the winter. |
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Trangmar's starting point was the Greek myth of Ariadne, who sent a ball of thread twisting through pathways to enable Theseus's safe passage from the Minotaur's labyrinth. |
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So much for the myth of an intolerant, close-minded conservative. |
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Yep, that's the idea, he is searching for the myth that guides his life. |
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Does it appear to be a myth because other foodstuffs are preventing any noticeable beneficial change from abstaining from eating chocolate or is it all a load of cobblers? |
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Wherever you go in Western France you follow in the footsteps of history, shadowed by myth and legend, with fable and fairy tale snapping at your heels. |
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Mr Osborne repeats the myth that society's ills can be blamed on refugees. |
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But by opposing the myth of the objective reporter, don't you risk falling into the trap of your onscreen persona and the personality cult that grows up around it? |
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Major sources for Roman myth include the Aeneid of Vergil and the first few books of Livy's history as well as Dionysius' s Roman Antiquities. |
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It will be suggested here that the myth of Perseus, involving the decapitation of Medusa, is a narrative version of ritual. |
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The myth of the Protestant Chaucer continues to have a lasting impact on a large body of Chaucerian scholarship. |
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The myth that the Celtic monetary system consisted of wholly barter is a common one, but is in part false. |
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It could be said that the legendary history of Britain was created in part to form a body of patriotic myth for the country. |
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Known from the myth in which Zeus seduces her in the guise of a white bull, Europa has also been referred to in relation to the present Union. |
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Despite his discoveries, the myth persisted in Europe that California was an island. |
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Yamm and Baal, the storm god of Ugaritic myth and often associated with Zeus, have an epic battle for power over the universe. |
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Yet, according to recent research, the alleged grumpiness of great-grandma and great-grandpa is more myth than reality. |
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In particular, myth was studied in relation to history from diverse social sciences. |
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However, the myth was revived in 1997 when author Dava Sobel presented it as an unqualified truth in her book Longitude. |
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In so doing, the bullocky assumes a larger than life dimension and passes into the realm of myth and Australian legend. |
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However, it is a myth that the nights are cold after extremely hot days in the Sahara. |
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It may sound like a myth but experts say the male menopause really does exist. |
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Researchers at the University of Cambridge have shattered the myth that Americanese has taken an unshakeable hold on the Anglophone world. |
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But could the myth be strong enough to forge an independent country? |
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Local myth has it that one can still hear the church bells of Rungholt ringing under the water when sailing through the area on a calm night. |
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The Sacred Circles show was heavily into myth, especially the current myth of the Red Man as mystic. |
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These are analogous to, and inspired the myth of, the knights of the Round Table of King Arthur's court. |
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In the 70s, this myth kept openly gay people out of teaching positions. |
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One myth was that it was deemed to be the value of a cow in Kent or a sheep elsewhere. |
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Since divinity is intellectual, and all intellect returns into itself, this myth expresses in allegory the essence of divinity. |
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The myth is believed to have symbolized a clash between forces of order and chaos. |
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A comparable myth in the Greek tradition is the myth of Aphrodite rising from the foam of the sea following Ouranos's castration by Kronos. |
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As far back as 1889 Sophus Bugge suggested this was a version of the myth of Lucifer. |
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Another popular myth which seems to date back to ancient Arabia is that of jinns, also spelled djinns. |
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Consequently, modern individuals are not obliged to abandon myth for science. |
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The myth you are not allowed to hold hands in public in the UAE has also made people EoACAystressed ' said Kayed. |
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In many cases, the meaning of the national myth is disputed among different parts of the population. |
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Two myth cycles developed by the Wintu and Yana groups of Indians are described in detail in this special edition of rare ideas. |
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And likewise the Easter bunny, a bizarre pagan myth if ever one there was. |
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Another myth associated with rosacea and acne rosacea is that it's hereditary. |
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I knew the falling-in-love-with-your-best-friend myth was just Hollywood WTFery. |
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So myth number one is that horses who finish fast in the final furlong are horses to follow because they possess a turn of foot. |
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The myth associated with how Tiresias became a hermaphrodite reveals much about relations between the sexes. |
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His primary targets were Tom Harpur, Alvin Boyd Kuhn and the Christ myth theory, and only indirectly Massey. |
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The myth of 'race' has created an enormous amount of human and social damage. |
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For Herodotus, then, it takes both myth and history to produce truthful understanding. |
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While the story itself became a part of myth and legend, some historians believe it is based on fact. |
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The myth and epic stories of Ramakien provide the Siamese with a rich source of dramatic materials. |
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The Hero Twins myth recounted in the Popol Vuh relates how one of each pair of twins was decapitated by their ballgame opponents. |
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La Malinche's legacy is one of myth mixed with legend, and the opposing opinions of the Mexican people about the legendary woman. |
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For example, Tylor interpreted myth as an attempt at a literal explanation for natural phenomena. |
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Therefore one myth that needs addressing is that all so-called Euro-sceptics are retrogressive little Englanders. |
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Nri and Aguleri, where the Igbo creation myth originates, are in the territory of the Umeuri clan. |
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Language scholars long ago denied that the myth of a standard American dialect has any validity. |
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The History of the Kings of Britain is now usually acknowledged as a literary work of national myth containing little reliable history. |
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