For its ease of interplay and generous spirit of give and take, the rapport between them is remarkable. |
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Jim had a special rapport with Irish people and his popularity has remained incredibly strong over the years. |
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He was always able to feel a special rapport with his readers, a rapport based on a cultivated interdependence. |
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Then along came Livingstone, a man whose fondness for lizards no doubt helped him strike an instant rapport with the beleaguered first minister. |
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An evening of rare rapport and sophisticated sauciness awaits discerning pleasure seekers in the form of Sleeping Beauty. |
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I have learnt how to establish a healthy working rapport with difficult, prickly people with whom I have precious little in common. |
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The same network of gossipers that are used to destroy reputations can also be used to increase your rapport with someone. |
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Over several weeks, the two built up a good rapport, with the General often engaging him in conversation over meals he had enjoyed. |
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One must be absolutely en rapport with his machine, as an expert horseman is part of his horse or his horse is part of him. |
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The goodwill and rapport that certainly existed before is simply evaporating. |
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Woolery has great presence, and always maintains a good rapport with the contestants. |
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He loved his profession and had a wonderful rapport with the children and the people of the Bohola region. |
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Dermot and Bridie quickly established a rapport with the people of the town and hinterland. |
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Witty and engaging, he was very well informed on local matters and had a special rapport with young folk. |
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She was a person of understanding and tolerance and had a rapport on a very human level with all her pupils. |
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He quickly realised the importance of establishing a rapport with the players. |
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With her inimitable recital she established an immediate rapport with the audience. |
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She also had a wonderful rapport with her grandchildren and there was a great bond between them. |
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He had a good rapport with the people of Roscommon and served the community well down through the years. |
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His has a great rapport with his audiences and requests are always welcome. |
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I made sure that the student walked out of the class with me enabling me to develop a positive rapport with him. |
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Gradually he overcame his natural shyness and established a rapport with his audience. |
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The rapport that she established with her guards was a factor, but obviously it was far from enough. |
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The hard-boiled hero's rapport with oppressed and marginalized people has a well-articulated rationale. |
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Also, researchers find this tool easy to use and effective in gaining quick rapport with local people. |
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I went back thinking these were guys I had formed a great rapport with, and I realised that actually I was flattering myself. |
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I still remember how ill it looked to me, when I heard a great preacher vociferating from his pulpit the words en rapport. |
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The prime minister and the president have a generational rapport and an affinity of character. |
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Your recent works are known for the harmonious rapport with background music. |
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Meeting this challenge with street kids, of course, presupposes that a rapport and trust can be established. |
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Sharing a uniquely dry Canuck humour, Young and Mitchell had an easy rapport. |
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The duo display a likable rapport and a healthy sense of irony, and their show is punctuated by flashes of invigorating idiocy. |
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Kieran recalls that Margo had an incredible rapport with the Irish exiles all over England. |
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However, rather than capitalise on the rapport we had built up, I instead shrank back in fear. |
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They have a great 'believable couple' rapport that is ripe for dry silliness. |
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It is noticeable how instinctively, how easily, she establishes connections and rapport. |
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A rapport arises between them and over a few days, they hit the town together, each rediscovering their joie de vivre and zest for life. |
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He was a hard-working man who had a good rapport with people and who got on well with friends and neighbours. |
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He has a great rapport with the other players and he and his wife socialise with them. |
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To his credit, he has had an excellent rapport with the selectors, who find him quite receptive to ideas and suggestions from various quarters. |
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I think whoever follows him can build on that wonder rapport that Pope John Paul II had with youth. |
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The orchestra's rapport with the conductor was more alive and responsive than it is with most guest maestros. |
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The achievement of rapport between interviewer and respondent is therefore a delicate balancing act. |
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Working on an emergency action plan with a fire department or fire marshal helps to build rapport in the event of an emergency. |
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You are urged to make your love relationship secure by cultivating smooth intellectual rapport. |
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They struck up a rapport, and the two now frequently share a meal together. |
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The brother's share a great rapport off-screen and the equation on the sets was no different. |
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Certainly, the situation worked perfectly against Wales, the pair instantly striking an ungrudging rapport. |
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When there's a rapport, architects can be somewhat casual about the process. |
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Their set of songs were played flawlessly and they had a great rapport with each other on stage. |
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In later years, she had a special rapport with her grandchildren and took a keen interest in their lives. |
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We quickly established a rapport, and it fell to me to tell him his diagnosis. |
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However, there was a point at which I seemed to establish a rapport with a rather sexy man on the dance floor. |
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The rapport between Majority Leader Harry Reid and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell is as distant as it is adversarial, Snowe says. |
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One agent in particular developed a rapport with Zubaydah and managed to elicit an all-important bit of intelligence. |
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The smooth rapport between Government and the millers and indeed other stakeholders clearly shows that no problem is insurmountable if people put their heads together. |
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The duo also performs entirely from memory, which allows them to establish an extra rapport with their audience, free from music stands and scores. |
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As Farron knocks on doors, something he claims to do at least once a week out of election time, his rapport with voters is clear. |
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Her growing rapport with the von Trapp children, coupled with her generosity and spirit, gradually captures the heart of the stern Captain and they are soon married. |
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We struck up an instant rapport and I speak to him regularly. |
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Is there some kind of rapport that makes it okay to convey this without seeming like a threat? |
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So after you spend that time and develop that rapport, you begin to develop a keen awareness of when something doesn't seem right. |
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In the car business, you have to build the rapport before you go for the jugular. |
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Despite being unable to communicate much, they have rapport and everyone around them believes they are dating. |
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Thomas Aquinas, a university student, experienced the wealth and the fecundity of this rapport. |
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Realise that essentially you are a soul and as such have telepathic rapport with all souls. |
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He will come into telepathic rapport with every individual and each will hear Him, inwardly, in his or her own language. |
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You can have rapport, or you can have fast, legible notes, but you cannot have both. |
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Her success as a portrait painter was due as much to her rapport with her subjects as to her technical brilliance. |
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These two musicians have an intuitive rapport that suggests musical mind reading. |
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There is a peculiarly haunting quality to the sound, and the rapport between oboist and cellist testifies to the time they have spent working together. |
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He was slightly disinhibited but co-operative and achieved good rapport. |
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Basically it's cool to strike up a rapport with anyone English speaking. |
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This rapport will instill confidence when discussions about the withdrawal of aggressive life support need to take place. |
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Please give me some examples of the techniques you use to establish rapport with a prospect during an initial sales call. |
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With an easy rapport, we exchange stories, talk over problems, and plan our goals together. |
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It is important for you to be friendly and create a rapport with the participants. |
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The two remain in touch, but friends say the close rapport they once enjoyed has been destroyed, despite their public protestations to the contrary. |
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If the faculty member is not a Lion, a Lion co-advisor should be selected to maintain close rapport with the Lions club. |
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The crises of adolescence, the perplexity of youth, the search for a new way, the institution of the schools and the communities, the rapport with the Church and the world-all were oriented to the Divine Will. |
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We show how gendered social relations in the form of constructed mateship can be a useful concept to facilitate rapport building. |
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This midcall rapport detour saved the day. At the end of the call, they went to lunch and soon they were doing business. |
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It evidently needs no effort on the part of Mr. Booth to put himself en rapport with the ideal of the great Bard. |
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The memory of Disraeli was used by the Conservatives to appeal to the working classes, with whom he was said to have had a rapport. |
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The veteran Dupleix had been in India a long time, and had established a key rapport with France's Indian allies. |
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It was during this expedition that the Portuguese first encountered the Kingdom of Kongo, with which it soon developed a rapport. |
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The two established their rapport because of mutual regard for each other's intellect. |
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And his rapport with the drummer Matt Abts, the keyboardist Danny Louis and the bassist Andy Hess felt rewardingly deep. |
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It is hard to establish the same rapport of communication through email messages are easily misunderstood and the communicative intent is not as clear or as easily modified as in spoken communication. |
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Mr. Beauregard took great pleasure in regaling his staff with stories about his life with Suzanne, and in doing so established a warm and friendly rapport with his employees that will be missed by all. |
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The ensemble took roughly a half-hour to settle into its rapport, and during that time the fulcrum was Mr. Kikuchi, a pianist of probing ethereality who at 73 is decades older than the others. |
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Most importantly, Beatrice should be aware that she could be caught in a process called grooming, where a scammer gradually builds a rapport with his victim in small incremental steps. |
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My father had a splendid rapport with Uncle Petr and they both got on well with Uncle Rudolf, from whom they concealed the latest news for fear it would be the death of him. |
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I am sad to see the level of our parliamentary rapport and process and whatever go downhill so far that RCMP investigations are being used when accusations to defame members of Parliament are wrong. |
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We place high value on fraternal encounters between priests and rabbis as individual religious leaders, as well as on the development of a friendly rapport with the various rabbinical associations. |
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Instead of establishing rapport, it could have the opposite effect of intimidating the poor soul who's just become the sole object of your attention. |
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The third chapter is dedicated to ecumenical and interreligious rapport, without forgetting the Bible's relationship with those who declare themselves as estranged from the Church or even as non believers. |
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The rapport between them is as threatening as a violent storm cloud. |
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For example, if a candidate is clearly ill at ease at the start of the interview, board members can adapt by taking a few extra minutes to establish rapport with the candidate. |
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Margaret, the provider, showed us how a warm and empathetic demeanor can relax the client and help develop a good rapport between the client and provider. |
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Uppercut Company operates at the point where slam and theatre come together, examining the rapport with the public through its use of a wide range of expressive tools. |
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The rapport between mentor and protégé is relaxed, companionable. |
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Interview with this indefatigable thinker on a question that concerns not just our mobility in space, but our perception of the world and our rapport with the real. |
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And I never quitted the company, having established such a good rapport with all colleagues and the De Mot family. The various and experience gaining tasks fit well with my family life. |
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And there is an unusual rapport between her and distinguished, amiable Susan Hill as they set out to explain what is involved in being parent and guardian to The Woman in Black. |
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The achievement and rapport that you build with pupils is rewarding. |
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Our existing processes had offered us but one glimpse into a candidate's abilities to build rapport with children and self-correct. |
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But her tweets to fellow Glee alum Amber Riley and current Gleek star Darren Criss indicate a lasting rapport with the show's cast. |
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She made the switch to Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare's NICU on her 23rd birthday and has already developed a rapport with nurses who've watched her grow. |
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In his home after dark, he begins to eat himself, his autophagia the consummate allegory for the rapport between people and the paternalist state. |
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Grant and Gino share a humorous, easy-going rapport that makes the gallery an inviting place to drop in, as much for browsers and passers-by as it is for the cognoscente. |
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Pete Campbell would be just another irritating office brown-noser, a prep school Sammy Glick, except that he too has a screw loose and a mystical rapport with firearms. |
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