The concise delineation of the features closely parallels a description of Sargent's drawing technique. |
|
Therefore, it is not surprising that parallels are drawn between transpositional activity and the virulence of conventional parasites. |
|
My dad ran a toyshop in Blackpool, but I think that's about as far as the parallels go. |
|
However, it is important to note that this also finds parallels in the keyboard toccatas of a number of North German composers. |
|
A tale of time travel which covers the oyster bed disputes, it is a story of greed and struggle with modern parallels. |
|
There are both striking parallels and important differences between the contemporary war on drink and drugs and the old temperance crusade. |
|
To me this rationalization parallels the theosophical speculation of New Age favorites like Rudolf Steiner, not the medical knowledge of science. |
|
There are obvious parallels with the creation of so-called tribal homelands, or Bantustans by the Apartheid regime in South Africa. |
|
It's tempting to see parallels between their rich, expressionist daubs and the emotionally charged abstractions of Perelman's restless muse. |
|
In this projection the meridians are vertical and parallels having increased spacing in proportion to the secant of the latitude. |
|
The technique appears to have parallels to the Barnum effect used by some mediums, clairvoyants, and tarot card readers. |
|
His predicament allows him to spot unlikely but truthful parallels between comic books and real life. |
|
The artist also parallels the columnar folds of Peace's drapery and the regular fluting of the columns behind her. |
|
Exposed layering is steepest in the northern flanks of the dome where it parallels the outer slopes of the bedrock collar. |
|
Although dazzle patterns have striking parallels with early abstraction, Wilkinson's work was relatively conventional. |
|
The parallels to contemporaneous avant-garde film-makers and artists is striking. |
|
He acknowledges that one should not push the analogy too far, but he persists in his search for parallels in the painted and plastic arts. |
|
This distinction between creative and computational tasks parallels the distinction between judgmental and intellective tasks. |
|
This leads to the purely mathematical problem of finding the positions of the points of concurrence for various sets of parallels. |
|
In both cases, alterations of developmental timing produce parallels between ontogeny and phylogeny. |
|
|
The parallels between the two unconnected, coeval sites would have fascinated her. |
|
This argument has parallels with Illich's thesis of clinical iatrogenesis and related theories of commerciogenic illness. |
|
The proposed new categories have parallels with the classifications which are already used for unit trusts. |
|
As quite a few theorists about conspiracy theory have pointed out, the rise of conspiracy theories parallels the rise of the internet. |
|
This dramatic rise in cases of asthma in the Caribbean parallels the increase in dust flux from Africa to Barbados and Miami. |
|
Figures show an increase in the number of reported anti-gay attacks, which parallels a similar rise in racist assaults over the last two years. |
|
Across major phylogenetic comparisons, the evolution of Hox clusters generally parallels the evolution of axial complexity. |
|
Although Bratwurst roughly parallels the highway, you'll not see the road from the forest. |
|
Riverside access ends at the village of Catton and we return on a back road that parallels the Swale. |
|
Access is from the road that parallels the east side of Winnemucca Dry Lake. |
|
A railroad track parallels the first base line where diesel engines thunder and fume to haul my father's commuter train to the city. |
|
Cotton's career parallels the rise in transition metal organometallic chemistry. |
|
The parable of the Two Brothers, a popular story among the Sukuma of Tanzania, has interesting parallels with the Lucan Prodigal Son. |
|
These features have interesting parallels with accounting history and historiography. |
|
The logic by which Paul parallels Adam and Christ is central to the notion of original sin as developed by Augustine and others. |
|
Plan your cuts so that the direction of the wood grain parallels the long edges and clamp a straightedge to the plywood to guide your cuts. |
|
Elton's stout defence of his thesis parallels the tenacity of his beliefs regarding the practice of history. |
|
There are some important parallels in the Hellenistic Stoics and Epicureans to certain themes in Zhuangzi. |
|
The capitulation of the left on economic growth parallels its defeat and marginalisation in political struggles. |
|
Rhodes has spoken of how her work has its parallels in her own history of being culturally off-centre. |
|
|
The history of woodland exploitation in Ireland has parallels with the decline of Caledonian native pinewoods in Scotland. |
|
The hemal system parallels the water vascular system and probably distributes nutrients from the digestive tract. |
|
The work displays a fascination with sensuality in film and parallels this with voyeurism and the desire to touch. |
|
McIntosh sees parallels with Lady Macbeth, the Shakespearean villainess who famously asked for male characteristics as she plotted murder. |
|
Now add parallels beyond those in the same direction, through the vertices of the largest triangle. |
|
It attempts, in parallels, to raise serious political and emotional questions about the moral predicament of the present day upright people. |
|
The profile parallels that observed for bradykinin stimulated smooth muscle cells. |
|
Here again, one can draw parallels with South African homestead murals, most obviously with Ndebele examples. |
|
Now in many other mythologies you can find gods that have parallels with Athena. |
|
Along some mountainous coasts the continental slope descends abruptly into a deep ocean trench that parallels the landmass. |
|
Livy, however, did not go to any great lengths to establish parallels between the body politic and organic analogous equivalents. |
|
Are parallels to the anarchic sensibilities of our own abject artists valid? |
|
Continuous parallels are drawn, for example, between modern asylum-seekers and 1930s German Jewry. |
|
The parallels between race relations and gender relations are sometimes surprising. |
|
It's easy to make parallels between the back rows but really a back row is only as good as the forward pack in front of it. |
|
Are there any parallels between euthanasia in animals and the discussions about euthanasia in humans? |
|
Arellano draws interesting parallels between Morrissey's music and Mexico's ranchera music tradition. |
|
Finally, the discrimination imposed by sexism has parallels in the prejudice implied by ageism. |
|
O'Grady's depiction of treachery and oppression by Elizabethan bureaucrats recalled contemporary parallels, thought the reviewer. |
|
The management of a sexually acquired rectal discharge parallels that of urethritis. |
|
|
In particular books one and two set out basic properties of triangles, parallels, parallelograms, rectangles and squares. |
|
The combination of percussion and reeds, and the frenzied pace of some of the pieces, creates some uncanny parallels with Moroccan trance music. |
|
I sometimes imagine that I see certain parallels between modern Aotearoa and the historical worlds of that other boot-shaped nation, Italy. |
|
While there are interesting parallels between performance and body art in Asia and the West, there are also significant differences. |
|
This has obvious parallels with the striges and lamiae of classical myth and belief. |
|
According to Samuelson, Japan pioneered the new stagnation and the parallels are disturbing. |
|
This approach draws parallels between similarity judgments and analogic comparisons. |
|
Through a magnifying lens can be admired seas, gulfs, meridians and parallels. |
|
That might have been crass, but the film is peppered with jarring references and disconcerting parallels to current events. |
|
To some people, the parallels between the Michigan motormouth and the masters of the blues are not immediately clear. |
|
Their relationship parallels any triangular situation, for even in denial their bond is inexplicable. |
|
The question parallels the large question ringing in the ears of millions of puzzled Americans. |
|
Several immigrant workers drew parallels with their experiences in other countries. |
|
In their explanations of graphology, linguists often find it useful to draw parallels between this system and the system of spoken language. |
|
His story parallels that of Oliver Twist, trapped in a rigidly stratified society and at the mercy of its caprices. |
|
He parallels the paths of two very different figures, each coming of age and choosing a path in life during a treacherous time. |
|
Most editorial writers seem determined to detour around obvious parallels with apartheid-era South Africa. |
|
Though Maouyo and Spencer’s lives have parallels, Maouyo’s journey to araciality was not so much a tireless social justice mission than a process of finding an identity that felt like a good fit. |
|
Our time is so vastly different in its particulars that the parallels work only in broad strokes. |
|
Do you see parallels between Nixon and Dubya, as far as comedic figures go? |
|
|
There are also instructive parallels between Schneider's work and two photographers who explored painterly and imaginative renderings of the body. |
|
The parallels Hong Kong readers find between the encroaching Titans and China have made it a huge success there. |
|
Certain parallels have been made between the behavioral effects of the immune system, including anhedonia, and the behavioral changes and anhedonia found in depressed people. |
|
The parallels between the schools of reflexive anti-Americanism and big-business globalism are far from exact, but they are multiple and they are suggestive. |
|
He uses puns, paradoxes, antitheses, parallels, and various rhetorical and literary devices to construct expressions that have meanings beyond the obvious. |
|
And I find myself skeptical about C.'s attempts to draw parallels with the more obvious scenes of contemporary Arretine ware and of later Campanian art. |
|
The demands German artisans placed on themselves in the name of purity and honor had no parallels in the experiences of artisanal classes in other European nations. |
|
Careful study of the Pseudo-Dionysian writings has uncovered many parallels between the theurgical doctrines of Iamblichus, and the triadic metaphysical schema of Proclus. |
|
Indeed, the process parallels closely the child's attempt at self-mastery. |
|
Still, the Madam Secretary cast and crew have been lately downplaying parallels to the Democratic presidential hopeful. |
|
We were reasonably confident that this was the touch mark of Simon Benning, for there were no parallels in the standard references on English pewterers. |
|
His clear preference for thematic parallels and transhistorical modeling returns an attenuated history, largely organized without causes and contexts. |
|
Do you see parallels between Banksy and yourself, as far as, I guess, toying around with these themes? |
|
So far as I can tell, the engorged, well-financed art world of today offers few parallels. |
|
A substantial number of biblical scholars have invested much energy in demonstrating parallels between the religions of the Ugarites and of the Israelites. |
|
By uncoupling our emotions from the film's many acts of violence, he frees us to draw parallels and make connections with painfully recent history. |
|
The slavishness of this translation has many parallels in other cultures. |
|
Earlier in the season, La Russa and I had discussed the parallels between managing and leading in sports and in business. |
|
Some critics may see this as collaborating with enemies of the environment, but Herd understands this as a necessity that parallels the balance of mankind and nature. |
|
Clear parallels can be drawn between the soke and the Northumbrian shire, yet they were not made because, according to Stenton, the soke was Danish. |
|
|
She could see certain parallels with prisoners in solitary confinement. |
|
He holds up a graph plotting the dramatically dropping rates of the hormone over a woman's life, a drop that parallels the drop in estrogen levels. |
|
There survives the famous first century bce Celtic calendar which, as soon as it was first discovered in 1897, was seen to have parallels to Vedic calendrical computations. |
|
If only she could express it without employing obscene moral parallels. |
|
His finding of parallels between ontogeny, paleontology, and morphology was rapidly adopted by biologists like Haeckel and used to support evolution. |
|
Where Brubeck does fall down is in his overly ornate arrangements, all painstakingly constructed to seemingly draw as many parallels with classical music as possible. |
|
Recent analysis of the Drosophila genome sequence supports previous suggestions of strong parallels between many fly and vertebrate cell cycle regulators. |
|
He contrasted the two great centers of Christendom, Alexandria and Antioch, and in doing so he drew parallels to the various parties within the church in his own day. |
|
At times, Rheingold tries a bit too hard to buttress his cogent observations with academic theories that draw parallels between smart mobs and swarms such as ant colonies. |
|
There are parallels with Preston Tucker, the idealistic American inventor. |
|
In conclusion, it is tempting to draw parallels to classic demographic transition theory to explain men's attitudes toward fertility, pregnancy, childbirth, and fathering. |
|
Some have drawn parallels between synesthesia and perfect pitch. |
|
It is no wonder that the Carolingian clerics, who were the spin doctors of their day, drew attention to the parallels, which are also manifest in Louis's coinage. |
|
The parallels to the US today are implicitly read between the lines. |
|
The relative precision of the constellations, the path of the Milky Way, and information on the parallels and colures is therefore even more remarkable. |
|
The lyrics are tightly coiled tongue twisters, sprung with internal rhymes, questions and answers, parallels and comparisons that all add up, and rhyme. |
|
Today, these parallels are known not to be exact correspondences, but the links between development and evolution remain an area of active research. |
|
He delights in tracing similarities of metaphor, suggestive accidents of fate, portentous parallels, uncanny coincidences, and unexpected connections. |
|
Therefore, in plane sailing, the departure between two places is measured generally on that parallel of latitude which lies midway between the parallels of the two places. |
|
I have to admit that her derivation probably wouldn't make good news copy, although it is a process that parallels the similar grammaticalization of gonna. |
|
|
The purges, gulags, mass population transfers, political famines, monumental infrastructure projects built by slave labour still have few parallels in modern history. |
|
In Bettina Arnold's article on feasting among the Celts, she seeks parallels for the well-documented consumption of wealth in the Hallstatt period in later Irish sources. |
|
The search for partial text parallels is helpful in order to detext interchangeable substitutions. |
|
Socialists draw parallels between the trade of labour as a commodity and slavery. |
|
Therefore, parallels with Longinus's and Vossius's prescripts for the inspired dramatist can once again be detected. |
|
The book's organization parallels that of Abbas and Lichtman's textbooks, Basic Immunology and Cellular and Molecular Immunology. |
|
Such parallels at least hint at the common descent of all animals from a marine ancestor. |
|
Stoic or Cynic diatribes, in particular, are set out as parallels for Lucius' life story, especially since the Isiac religion in Met. |
|
Martin West has noted substantial parallels between the Epic of Gilgamesh and the Odyssey. |
|
Nadia Crandall draws some illuminating parallels between nineteenth-century versions of gothic fiction and juvenile cyberfiction. |
|
Numerous ancient Greek and Latin parallels can be found for these grammata games, from riddlesome picture-poems, to more humble graffiti. |
|
I want to learn how to play, and that's all puzzles and problems, and what do I care when I go to play a game about parallels and bifolds? |
|
All parallels are nonmeeting. All nonmeeting lines have no common point. Therefore, all parallels have no common point. |
|
Its structure parallels that of the Apostle's Creed, with 25 chapters based around themes of the Father, Son, Church and Consummation. |
|
Even this extreme event only matched a normal summer on similar parallels in continental Europe, underlining the maritime influences. |
|
They had many gods and goddesses, which generally have parallels in the pantheons of other European nations. |
|
When the cleaned pictures were exhibited to the public in 1946 there followed a furore with parallels to that of a century earlier. |
|
Followers of pseudosciences such as astrology often draw spurious parallels between their beliefs and established science. |
|
This equally parallels the fact that when rats invade a home, it is the rats within that cartelize the process of the invasion. |
|
Middle-earth in many ways still parallels the world that existed in the late 1940s when the book was being completed. |
|
|
These parallels are important because they can help us predict the future. |
|
Furthermore, there are parallels in the initial tradition of menhirs in both regions, and similarities in the motifs that are employed. |
|
This is an uncommon wine-country offering in the Edna Valley, which parallels the Central Coast just southeast of San Luis Obispo. |
|
A quarter of the tales in The Canterbury Tales parallel a tale in the Decameron, although most of them have closer parallels in other stories. |
|
The Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio contains more parallels to The Canterbury Tales than any other work. |
|
Pasties appear in many novels, used to draw parallels or represent Cornwall. |
|
East of the islands, one of the largest barrier reefs in the world parallels the entire 175-mile-long country. |
|
There are certainly parallels between Godberd's career and that of Robin Hood as he appears in the Gest. |
|
To find other Old High German parallels, it is necessary to include those genres which are not composed in stave-rhyming verse. |
|
There are plenty of parallels with apartheid as penpusher Sharlto Copley slowly turns into an alien after exposure to a mysterious black fluid. |
|
The Titan in the Greek mythology of Prometheus parallels Victor Frankenstein. |
|
There are limits to the parallels between Kafr Kanna and Ferguson. |
|
The military historian must often make shift to write of battles with slender data, but he can pad out his deficiencies by learned parallels. |
|
Ultimately, the abstract parallels between algebraic systems were seen to be more important than the details and modern algebra was born. |
|
There are many parallels to the Dutch orthography conventions and those used for Afrikaans. |
|
On map projections there is no universal rule as to how meridians and parallels should appear. |
|
The book draws parallels between the post-World War I imperialist ambitions of Russia and the modern hegemonism of the Kremlin. |
|
Historical parallels and precedents for social media abound. |
|
This development parallels that of the name of the Caesars in the original Roman Empire, which became kaiser and czar, among others. |
|
The application creates pseudocylindrical and cylindrical projections, as well as projections with curved parallels. |
|
|
There are parallels between the KaiserOs expansionist Germany and Vladimir PutinOs expansionist Russia. |
|
In other words, English dramatists continued to enliven their work by indulging in parallels, examples, and personatings. |
|
Now there are parallels in the nominal realm for which scholars have actively debated whether mass nouns refer to objects with minimal parts or without, cf. |
|
Power will be supplied by an upgraded BC Hydro 138 kVA transmission line that parallels the Yellowhead Highway, approximately 10km north of the plant. |
|
He took a comparative topical approach to 26 independent civilizations and demonstrated that they displayed striking parallels in their origin, growth, and decay. |
|
In The Neurobiology of Autism, the authors draw parallels in neurobiology and behavior with autism and another type of infection, neonatal Borna disease virus. |
|
The human bones found by Gray point to some form of funerary purpose and have parallels in the disarticulated human bones often found at earlier causewayed enclosure sites. |
|
The main factor influencing Finland's climate is the country's geographical position between the 60th and 70th northern parallels in the Eurasian continent's coastal zone. |
|
Lines joining points of the same latitude trace circles on the surface of Earth called parallels, as they are parallel to the equator and to each other. |
|
This is in spite of Nova Scotia being some fifteen parallels south. |
|
The two have a relatively similar climate, but Bermuda has warmer and wetter summers, much like the typical subtropical coastal region of North America on similar parallels. |
|
Nonossifying fibroma describes a larger lesion, which, although cortically based, involves the intramedullary cavity and parallels the long axis of the bone on imaging. |
|
Despite the survey, the company was unable to secure an exclusive patent from the States General for the area between the 38th and 40th parallels. |
|
The story hence has a number of parallels with tales of Arius and his aftertypes, and must have come to mind when later evildoers were found dead in the latrine. |
|
Kemp finds parallels between the doings of cats in hats, Grinches, Snitches, Sneetches, and other whimsical creatures with lessons embedded within the Scriptures. |
|
On the other hand, the fact that OE cniht means not only 'boy, youth', but also 'servant' reflects a different, pejorizing tendency which likewise has parallels elsewhere. |
|
According to Furbank and Owens, Moore's attribution of A General History to Defoe was based on no external evidence and only those few circumstantial parallels. |
|
The T square, used by architects, makes very good parallels, if made to slide along the smooth edge of a drawing board, or a straightedge laid and kept steady on the paper. |
|
Many of the ideas and phrases that Moore points to as parallels, and therefore as proof of Defoe's continuity in his works, were commonplace in the eighteenth century. |
|
An important factor to consider about Odysseus' homecoming is the hint at potential endings to the epic by using other characters as parallels for his journey. |
|
|
The popliteal artery is exposed through an incision that parallels the anterior border of the sartorius muscle and passes just posterior to the medial condyle. |
|
Richmond also noted that there are parallels between the tale of Pyramus and Thisbe, featured in this play, and that of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. |
|
We see links and parallels between the history of the extinction of the Passenger Pigeon and our current angst over the possible continued existence of the Ivorybill. |
|
In the local microcosm, the cult of xenophobia has its parallels in the paranoid dread of new democratic generations as subliterate media savages. |
|
Further, Davidson notes that the potentially Germanic goddess Nehalennia is sometimes depicted with apples and that parallels exist in early Irish stories. |
|
Calan Haf parallels Beltane and other May Day traditions in Europe. |
|
Phase four pursues the defeat of Biafra, which parallels the disarray of the ranks of elders in Umungodo, and the beleaguered efforts to rebuild from the rubble. |
|
New weapon types appeared with clear parallels to those on the continent such as the Carp's tongue sword, complex examples of which are found all over Atlantic Europe. |
|
As well as being a painter Janes was also an accomplished pianist, and like his friend Ceri Richards he saw parallels between the arts of painting and music. |
|
The extreme case of parallels occurs in the occasional dittography. |
|
The Parallels Desktop beta is available for download through the Parallels Desktop for Mac online forum. |
|
Parallels between human and songbird phonological development have led to the use of songbirds as a model for speech development in humans. |
|
Parallels between persuasive oratory and eloquent musical performance are evident, but the precise relationship of music to rhetoric has often been unclear. |
|
Parallels in other languages are far rarer than with placenames, but English Church can also be a surname. |
|
Parallels to well-studied English lexicalization and alternation patterns were drawn where possible. |
|