There are some ladies' scanties suspended in picture frames and looking remarkably like an in-store display. |
|
These surveys reveal that seemingly telepathic experiences in connection with telephone calls are remarkably common. |
|
The new 84M models are remarkably light for rifles made of steel and stocked in real Claro walnut. |
|
The singing voice, especially the tenor voice, recorded remarkably well with this primitive process. |
|
This iconic trinity is a remarkably singular instance of women as seen and interpreted by women. |
|
The harpsichord was remarkably bright, and thus at times also rather overpowering. |
|
Prior to her appearances in London she had specialised in singing male roles, because of her remarkably low tessitura. |
|
Our test drive confirms Prius is remarkably smooth on highway and surface streets. |
|
The test pilot found the aircraft remarkably stable and easy to control, and a pleasant surprise to all of us. |
|
It was good to see them all again, and they were remarkably tolerant of my motormouthed idiocy. |
|
I'm sticking with my current software, which continues to work remarkably well. |
|
Despite all the difficulties in running a hospital in a developing country, the blood bank normally did a remarkably good job. |
|
She kept up a remarkably active lifestyle despite a leg injury which meant she had to walk with a stick. |
|
His head still throbbed and his entire body was a mass of scratches and bruises, but inside, he felt remarkably well. |
|
Though he is famous for blithe dismissal of his elders, he was actually remarkably attentive to local history. |
|
This remarkably representative exhibits of 42 oils and gouaches from that later period suggest why. |
|
In principle this remarkably comprehensive scheme allows no ultimate distinction between religion and morality, law and ethics. |
|
The Hill Country along South Mopac is remarkably barren of all-night food joints. |
|
This remarkably varied community of insects, birds, amphibians and animals all thrive in a beautiful but oft-times harsh environment. |
|
The Medicis were responsible for building or renovating a number of splendid Tuscan villas and palaces and their remarkably innovative gardens. |
|
|
Many improvements were made, of course, but the idea remained remarkably the same. |
|
The kids are remarkably self-aware, often funny, sometimes quite touching in their support for one another. |
|
His fingertips massage his temples, and he seems remarkably interested in the pattern of the throw rug in front of the square glass coffee table. |
|
While the film's form is remarkably self-effacing, its content and visual style resemble the best of Hollywood westerns. |
|
For all its bawdy variety, however, Picasso's sexual imagination remains remarkably conventional. |
|
If it were not for the fact that the cost per hour of being here is remarkably high, I would recommend that everyone work this way. |
|
She's been lucky to work closely with a tight group of artists, meaning that her work is remarkably consistent and remarkably polished. |
|
And it has to be said that he was remarkably successful at it, despite some of the handicaps which we have already mentioned. |
|
The modus operandi in most of the cases has been remarkably similar in its old-school simplicity. |
|
It was very cold with light snow showers, sleet and rain, but the pitch, despite being heavy, was in remarkably good condition. |
|
His glorious blond curls shone golden in the candlelight, framing his remarkably serene features. |
|
Off the pitch he is renowned as a sporting trivia expert with a remarkably wide range of knowledge. |
|
The director was remarkably candid about making the leap from Europe to Hollywood, and working with stars of the calibre of Owen. |
|
I have to tell you, those people are remarkably well-behaved and gracious and polite. |
|
In the end, though, a remarkably cheap building was achieved in terms of square metreage, but only through some very careful project management. |
|
Because the pressures on the environment are more limited, some bioregions are remarkably intact. |
|
Now, I don't want to belabor this point, but there is something remarkably obvious that needs to be said. |
|
The financial services industry is remarkably different from the days when bank managers wore top hats and frock coats. |
|
While in general that's a remarkably perceptive observation, somehow it does not seem to apply to this place. |
|
Perky, painless and politically correct, this frothy little farce benefits from a remarkably trim running time. |
|
|
The church was remarkably successful in implanting tradition, respect for hierarchy and obedience to authority in French Canadian society. |
|
His first year competing in the Senior level, he did remarkably well in a very competitive series to reach the semi-final berth. |
|
Under its sugarcoating of carefree decadence lies a remarkably cruel and callous film. |
|
Comedies, tragedies, musicals and dramas make this a remarkably diverse theater season. |
|
I've experimented with baking cakes with these flours, and the result is remarkably grainy and indigestible. |
|
These two ideas have been remarkably powerful in explaining animal behaviour, particularly that of the social insects. |
|
Our own Ernest Walton split the atom using something remarkably similar, but it all sounds so, well, physical, doesn't it? |
|
By early this week, the island began to look not only shipshape but also remarkably like Smithson's drawing. |
|
It is noteworthy that this number has remained remarkably steady over the past decade. |
|
Fordham earned the Viking tag largely thanks to his large frame, fuzzy beard and a remarkably coiffured lengthy brown mullet hairstyle. |
|
The opening sinfonia for strings and trombones is remarkably like several opera overtures of the time, with square rhythms. |
|
Cultural life in the township is remarkably rich, bursting with accomplished singers and entertainers. |
|
Actually, it probably had more to do with the fact that my vital statistics repeated the same remarkably low number three times. |
|
After men came to terms with the psychological shock of the plague visitations, society adjusted remarkably well, though not without turmoil. |
|
Given the buffeting he had withstood, Montgomery was remarkably cheerful after his round, and praised the wonderful effort of playing partner. |
|
And when content creation and experience matters, the personal computer remains a remarkably versatile tool. |
|
His compendious book ranges from dry speculation on geology to exquisite description of flora, spangled with remarkably apt epigrams. |
|
For the unpretentious, self-effacing actor he was, Joel McCrea had a remarkably varied career. |
|
Some of them are remarkably eager to label anybody who asks the question an antiwar liberal loser sorehead. |
|
British and Australian newspapermen are still remarkably unabashed about the habit, and speak about it with shocking forthrightness. |
|
|
Gifted with a remarkably deep and sonorous voice, Rashid Khan has excelled in almost all facets of singing. |
|
Respect is a big word amongst the young, but at least some of them show remarkably little of it for anyone else. |
|
One property of the water of the Murray is the remarkably low quantity of saline matter in solution, and its softness. |
|
He is remarkably bright, infectiously enthusiastic, admirably honest and possessed of an upliftingly kind view of the world. |
|
But the constables, whose visit came on the night before the poll closed, remained remarkably unsuspicious. |
|
The latter included a vast array outlining the horrors of both Japanese and American imperialism, with remarkably blunt and unsubtle titles. |
|
He brought a strong, unstudied and remarkably fresh kind of romanticism to veils of darkness as well as sheets of summer rain or winter sleet. |
|
He himself was then nearing retirement, though he looked remarkably young and alert. |
|
Suntan lotion and lip salve are essential in the remarkably clear, unpolluted air. |
|
In Raviv's telling, Perelman is a remarkably unperceptive man who never understood exactly what he was buying or what to do with it. |
|
I found the salesperson to be so aggressively unknowledgeable and remarkably useless that I fled. |
|
However, by the opening of his act we knew that this was to be a remarkably unique performance. |
|
Yet when the logic self-destructed in practice, conservatives were remarkably content, since they had delivered the boodle to the right clients. |
|
He has aged remarkably well, his manic oddness muted by experience and dry wit. |
|
Her voice then took on a remarkably deep tone as she stood there with a far away look in her eyes. |
|
The Eustace Diamonds ends the epic length of its story on a remarkably unemphatic note. |
|
The sea is remarkably beautiful, turquoise blue and fawn at times, it rages, murmurs, sighs and sings. |
|
According to the morass of statistics, crime is a remarkably flexible phenomenon across England and Wales. |
|
Nary a murmur of dissent was voiced amongst the remarkably relaxed muso crowd. |
|
The landscape background of Elizabeth's portrait in particular is remarkably abstract, using strong colour and thick impasto. |
|
|
Someone who had been 'a remarkably undogmatic man, unassuming and even diffident in manner' became obstinate in the extreme. |
|
This series delivers a remarkably high level of visual quality within its constraints. |
|
You see, the collapse of respect for politics is a remarkably recent phenomenon. |
|
Cortisone remarkably relieved inflamed, swollen joints after just a few days of use. |
|
And because the movie is an adaption of a novel, the script is just remarkably surreal. |
|
The human immune system is a remarkably flexible and adaptive piece of technology. |
|
Radiosurgery has kept the cancer in check, and she's been remarkably resilient. |
|
What the committee saw in fact was a course which stood up remarkably well to the almost unrelenting rain. |
|
Both have suffered with their health in recent years but live happily and remarkably well. |
|
He has well-defined square, straight shoulders and a muscular chest kept remarkably youthful by a healthy exercise regimen. |
|
Nonetheless, the social grouping patterns of woolly monkeys and muriquis are remarkably flexible. |
|
I think that they are remarkably well grounded young men, I think their relationship has remained essentially unchanged. |
|
The corporate communications and public relations profession is remarkably quiet in all the rah-rah hype of blogging. |
|
Within a remarkably short time, it was realized that the family was failing to control the impiety and insubordination of the younger generation. |
|
The singer's 2001 debut was a remarkably assured collection and justifiably acclaimed. |
|
All of these elements recur again and again, helping to create the impression of a body of work that is remarkably coherent. |
|
For a man who spends so much time in the gym and out on the golf course, he contrives to keep remarkably poor health. |
|
This wholefoods, high-fiber diet kept them remarkably free of chronic disease. |
|
It's the trail of a group remarkably skilled at regenerating and always readying itself for the next attack. |
|
The deep green fine-textured foliage of mums is remarkably aromatic, lending a distinctive ambience to the containers in which they are planted. |
|
|
The royal dynasty he founded proved remarkably durable, surviving recurrent periods of minority rule in the 15th and 16th cents. |
|
The undercroft at Southwick Hall, although dating from the thirteenth century, is remarkably well preserved. |
|
Despite his bulk and heavy coat, the Komondor is remarkably agile and reacts very, very quickly. |
|
As the economic and social crisis mounted, democracy was confined, remarkably quickly, to the peripheries of European civilization. |
|
The krona itself has remained remarkably steady, consistent with Sweden's superior public finances and falling inflation rate. |
|
The periodical article system of transmitting new knowledge has worked remarkably well for two centuries or more. |
|
Despite the expressionistic framing and fancy camera angles, the film feels remarkably flat and prosaic. |
|
The young pair is remarkably candid in the book about their iffy journalistic methods and practices circa 1972, part of Broder's golden age. |
|
His music is decidedly eccentric and remarkably varied, from ambient drones to industrial noise to metallic percussion. |
|
The President is remarkably lackadaisical about finding the senior administration official who leaked the identity of a CIA operative. |
|
But he has not allowed his judgment to become clouded by a remarkably successful first seven months in Scotland. |
|
The flow was largely laminar, and the streamlines remained remarkably coherent and showed little deviation during the course of the experiment. |
|
Pinnotheres ostreum, and P. pisum, pea crab, are remarkably small crabs which live out their lives inside the shells of oysters or mussels. |
|
When I tried buying bunches of parsley, I found that many of the leaves smelt and tasted remarkably like grass clippings. |
|
This is a hall where music in its various iterations seems remarkably at home. |
|
Sandanski has the lowest annual rainfall in Bulgaria and its air is remarkably clean and pollution-free. |
|
Construction is remarkably and necessarily simple, based on a 5m square modular steel grid. |
|
Two years later, the completed house is remarkably true to the original diagram, he says. |
|
The box-like interior space of the Finnish exhibit was made remarkably interesting by the introduction of flowing, free-form walls. |
|
Some of these differences were not statistically significant, but the overall picture is remarkably clear. |
|
|
In fact, the building is extremely carefully tailored to its location and the handling of spaces and levels is remarkably thoughtful. |
|
Regardless of the specific lesson and laboratory activity, middle school student perceptions were remarkably similar. |
|
And sometimes those of us who are remarkably sylphlike wonder how anyone can get so fat. |
|
These light ice cream products taste remarkably similar to their full-fat counterparts. |
|
Mathis remarkably rearranges himself into standing position, and holds out his hand. |
|
Usually, people who have rarely, if ever, met each other before have got on remarkably well. |
|
Sometimes there are unexpected opportunities that you may find remarkably profitable. |
|
Compared with some of the other contributions you published in the last issue, it seems remarkably restrained. |
|
And he covers what could be fairly abstruse philosophical questions in a remarkably clear and simple way. |
|
It is remarkably effective at extracting whatever nutrients the sap might contain. |
|
Still others simply enjoy Poe's unmatched style that conjures up remarkably horrid mental images and brings on a wonderfully grim suspense. |
|
They are remarkably independent and self reliant and this is what drives me mad! |
|
That fact has led to one of the few controversies surrounding this remarkably successful system. |
|
If you're ever honeymooning in a foreign land, odds are strangely good that you'll meet other honeymooners who live remarkably close by. |
|
In a remarkably short space of time, a giant china clay quarry has been transformed into a spectacular space age garden. |
|
Air bubbles seem to float just before your eyes, the planes of perspective are miraculously separated, and the layering is remarkably deceptive. |
|
Children can be remarkably adaptable and are more resilient to trauma than older generations. |
|
By and large, universities offered remarkably little resistance to these changes, bending the knee whenever their funding masters passed by. |
|
The frontal sinuses may be absent, small, or remarkably large, extending through orbital bones, zygomatic processes, and into the squamae. |
|
Throughout Misery is a Butterfly, all recording tracks share this remarkably restrained touch. |
|
|
Superficially, their Cold War roles might seem to have been remarkably similar. |
|
Immediately forward and aft of this are stacked panes of glass, surviving remarkably well without the original wooden packing cases. |
|
We are at a time when current fashion trends are remarkably amenable to gun concealment, particularly in leisurewear. |
|
Indeed, party members' addiction to power in a remarkably short time has been a revelation. |
|
Here the mufti, or jurisconsult, appears to play a role remarkably similar to that of the roman jurist or contemporary European law professor. |
|
Winston Churchill's reputation has proved remarkably resilient to revision. |
|
The fact is that it can be, and mostly is, a remarkably rewarding and fulfilling experience, for both sides. |
|
Despite his unpleasant personality, he was remarkably successful at this, although these liaisons rarely lasted beyond a single night. |
|
At these, it is remarkably effective, but the whole business feels rather hollow. |
|
A few of the songs from his early period hold up remarkably well, usually those without the overt political overtones. |
|
Gunfights become remarkably tense, exciting affairs as you take cover in a crossfire of whistling ricochets. |
|
Yet striking the right balance between the artists and the suits remains remarkably hard. |
|
In a land where power is often measured by an executive's fear factor, Lyne is remarkably calm and uncommonly polite. |
|
The track itself is remarkably clear of distortions such as background hiss or those annoying pops. |
|
He was also remarkably a versatile actor, excelling equally well at noble princes and light-hearted rogues. |
|
The roly-poly, laughing baby who, come to think of it, looks remarkably like a little Buddha. |
|
It is remarkably rich in vitamin C, outdoing even rose hips in this respect and having a twentyfold advantage over oranges, weight for weight. |
|
There has been much armchair speculation on this question, but remarkably little evidence. |
|
It was a remarkably arresting photograph, and I decided to pick up the record on the spot. |
|
This goal is remarkably similar to those of the common sense logicists, but the research methodology is entirely different. |
|
|
I wouldn't dispute the accuracy, I just thought it was remarkably artful, and would expect nothing less of you, Ari. |
|
The two animals lollop and leap around the house, between them exhibiting two remarkably different lifestyles. |
|
Had Jefferies described himself in a lonely hearts column, the spiel would have been remarkably similar. |
|
People keep telling me Greece is remarkably bright and I am afraid of overexposure. |
|
Despite the criticisms voiced here and elsewhere, there is little doubt that his chancellorship so far has on balance been remarkably successful. |
|
Some organisms, such as nematodes and ascidians, have a remarkably precise pattern of cell divisions in early development. |
|
She had remarkably soft skin, he noticed, and wondered what type of lotion she used. |
|
Although quite small, the seven-year-old has become a remarkably assertive traveler. |
|
The current outpouring of books offering quick slurps of great thinkers for busy folk is remarkably blokeish. |
|
In the circumstances both matches reached a remarkably high standard with all four players performing heroics as they produced high class tennis. |
|
He analyzes various traditions of nineteenth-century associationist psychiatry in remarkably original terms. |
|
Only 17 years old at the time the film was shot, she gives a remarkably assured performance as the rich and beautiful young socialite. |
|
Each building has a unique structural system, and yet the two are remarkably similar. |
|
His novels stood out for being both remarkably well-written and astringently original. |
|
Like the art of the successor states, that of the Asturian kingdom under Ramiro was remarkably eclectic. |
|
Speaking of music, it's remarkably atmospheric and stylish for such a low-rent thriller. |
|
The story is interesting, and remarkably lucid given the rapid pace of its telling. |
|
The results were remarkably similar to the equine findings, vascular strongyle type parasitic infection. |
|
The print from which this was struck was in remarkably good shape as there is little in the way of wear and tear. |
|
On Sunday last, a cow of the Durham breed calved, along with a remarkably fine bull calf, which is still alive, a very curious lusus naturae. |
|
|
Such patriotism was remarkably sustained, though not unchanging, continuing through to the end of the war. |
|
The home team has been remarkably consistent in the league under Pat Holmes and their unbeaten record goes back to two seasons. |
|
The climbing world can be a remarkably catty place, so it came as no surprise that not everyone was awed by the Russians' feat. |
|
Arun thrust through the swinging door into the taproom of Bullfinch's only inn, still feeling remarkably weightless. |
|
He played 28 Opens, British and US, and finished sixth or better in half of them, a remarkably consistent record. |
|
Conditions at Canoe Brook were blowy and wet, remarkably Open-like in fact. |
|
Also, the field should be watched for several days to prevent pigeons, which are remarkably fond of tares, from devouring much of the sown seed. |
|
His list of virtues is a remarkably unaggressive, uncompetitive, one might almost say womanly list. |
|
Food shops line the outer edges selling, for a Brit, remarkably reassuring grub like sausage rolls, meat pies and fish and chips. |
|
Though there's plenty of brutal, taut music to be found on the record, more often than not, it's filmic, evocative, and remarkably organic. |
|
Scores of Yorkshire dialect words have remarkably similar counterparts in modern Scandinavian languages. |
|
It's remarkably good to be living through this part of the technological revolution. |
|
It is remarkably disturbing, and philosophically challenging as well. |
|
People who know him speak of a relaxed and charming man, remarkably free of arrogance or unpleasantness. |
|
She was a remarkably beautiful woman for her age, queenly and graceful. |
|
President Kennedy smiled without a hint of condescension and extended a hand to Douglas that was at once firm and remarkably soft. |
|
They came remarkably close to answering with a simple affirmative. |
|
It seems Bennett was led down this road by a remarkably kooky caller. |
|
But for someone so well-known as a diarist, we hear remarkably little from Alice herself. |
|
Despite the alien culture, I felt remarkably at home in Nepal, and as I flew over the Himalayas it was with sadness that I glimpsed their silent magnitude for the last time. |
|
|
One of the poems is remarkably well preserved and adds greatly to what is known about Sappho and her poetic technique. |
|
Made of what is called cortical bone, the outer shell is remarkably thin. |
|
Nevertheless, Leanna Brodie in the title role gave a remarkably moving, heartfelt performance as a woman yearning for something real amid the tawdriness around her. |
|
Overall, the structure remains in remarkably good condition. |
|
For the most part that blood-brain barrier works remarkably well. |
|
From his earliest works Giorgione was remarkably innovative. |
|
On balance our partnership degree programs are remarkably successful. |
|
The soil is remarkably fertile for being in such a mountainous region. |
|
Worse yet, such a tax cut would look remarkably like a political payoff. |
|
It was a government-sponsored project employing artists to make remarkably accurate watercolor renderings of folk art objects throughout the United States. |
|
The characters of Anju and Sudha are remarkably dimensional and complex. |
|
It is also a remarkably assured debut, and a reminder that the Bush Theatre's honourable legacy of spotting plays with real zing and commercial potential remains intact. |
|
These genomes have remarkably similar gene orders to previously published annelid genomes, suggesting that gene order is conserved across annelids. |
|
The densely packed pigments in chlorosomes and the rapid energy transfer between them lead to onset of exciton annihilation at remarkably low light level. |
|
Anybody who genuinely cares for Zackary can only take heart that he has fared remarkably well. |
|
But linear perspective itself is probably a renaissance not an antique invention, and Durer's approach to ancient architecture is remarkably free and unlearned. |
|
Often times, Simmons' band sounds remarkably like the traditional Coltrane quartet, with pianist John Hicks riffing off propulsive drummer, James Zitro. |
|
Thirdly, and despite all the religious apologetics that I mentioned in the beginning, the humanitarian relief effort I think has been remarkably free of sectarian division. |
|
There was lots of time between presentations for people to gather at the remarkably long refreshment table and stuff their faces with scones, coffee, and root beer. |
|
While it seems artificial at first, it's a remarkably affecting technique. |
|
|
The political pendulum swung back towards the crown in 1772 when an increasingly discredited system was overturned by Gustav III's remarkably popular royalist coup. |
|
Given their overall quality, I can't help but marvel at how it's possible to manufacture and bring these loupes to market at such a remarkably low price. |
|
The whole thing seemed so gracious and good-hearted, and remarkably wise, too. |
|
This ambitious work is remarkably astringent and contemporary. |
|
Whether or not we believe that divine precepts give us guidance, our behavior is remarkably similar. |
|
Working with animals is remarkably effective with students who have attentional difficulties, disruptive behaviors, or a general lack of interest in reading. |
|
Yet they are responsible for a multicellular organism with a complex central nervous system, and the human genome looks remarkably similar to this. |
|
The resulting pieces at first look remarkably awkward and ungainly. |
|
Even while sputtering out the most eye-rolling lines about his new love for the Kardashian family, he was remarkably pleasant. |
|
In addition, the sediments have suffered remarkably little burial and thermal alteration and contain well preserved marine organisms and terrestrially derived plant remains. |
|
Many amazing comments come from a remarkably sane Genesis P-Orridge while Carl Craig sums up turntablism perfectly as Kid Koala gets his scratch on. |
|
The animated actress bops to Frank Ocean and Rihanna, acting remarkably coy when Talley inquires into her Oscars dress. |
|
Music and dance held fast to religion and tradition because both were intensely theorised and held up by a remarkably well-preserved and staunch public. |
|
As he only comes to notice a year before he joined Handel's company, the bass who sang so vigorously in those early arias written for him must have been remarkably young. |
|
This long-overdue debut from a born writer is a remarkably honest and disturbing book, which self-assuredly combines raw earthiness with dreamlike poetry. |
|
His view of democracy and multilateralism seems remarkably uncomplicated. |
|
He looks remarkably cheerful for what must be a mind-numbingly boring job. |
|
Consumer debt has been a remarkably beneficent force in moving people into the middle class in this country over the last two or three generations. |
|
He still looks remarkably buff for an embittered, middle-aged alcoholic. |
|
Feeling remarkably like a shamefaced puppy, she trod reluctantly into the kitchen and gave them both that icy what-the-hell-do-you-want look she'd perfected by ninth grade. |
|
|
If that were the case, then it would be remarkably short-sighted. |
|
It's a feeling remarkably similar to one you get in the first week of January when countless helpings of Christmas pudding and mince pie are adorning our middles. |
|
But just staging the production is a remarkably brave act in a country where a tiny leadership elite uses its iron grip to promote once-vilified capitalist policies. |
|
The triaxial plan gives classrooms daylight on both sides which are entered off a remarkably economical central hall, while stores and lavatories occupy the corners. |
|
My research forced me to look at human societies from a microbial point of view, and they looked remarkably fragile. |
|
It should have focused the minds, but Liverpool were still looking lethargic, with the striking triumvirate remarkably light on goalscoring opportunities. |
|
Australia has long had a remarkably good university system, and used relatively modest levels of public investment in higher education very effectively. |
|
While I noticed a few more bland textures in multiplayer than I did in the campaign, the two are remarkably close. |
|
In average seasons, velvet bean has proved itself to be remarkably free from disease and insect pests, although blister beetles may eat the flowers. |
|
They are only worn at Christmas, and are remarkably unbecoming. |
|
Despite the impressive performance by the shares, those willing to sit tight should enjoy further rewards as the company remains remarkably good value. |
|
Here I am shown remarkably healthy-looking patients in perfectly starched and ironed outfits receiving treatment by acupuncture, moxibustion, cupping, and massage. |
|
Except for a tendency to have a greater skinfold thickness, all other indicators of cardiovascular risk were remarkably similar for exposed and non-exposed. |
|
And the doctors come off as remarkably patient and understanding people who take a vested interest in their patients. |
|
It is surprisingly detailed in terms of its literary assessment of Ulysses yet remarkably undetailed in terms of legal support for his decision in favor of Random House. |
|
Studies on the nutrient content of common foods suggest that Paleo is a remarkably nutrient-dense diet. |
|
Levine has done a remarkably good job of making us forget that he is, objectively, a physically sexy man. |
|
On the face of it Scott has enjoyed a remarkably uneventful life. |
|
The one-eyed leader of the Quetta Shura never talks to the press, never meets with non-Muslims and is remarkably secretive. |
|
They seemed to be dredging, but at a remarkably unhurried pace. |
|
|
In their missions, programs and courses, they are remarkably uniform. |
|
The Chinese proved remarkably adept at reproducing the armorial designs, copying painted or printed patterns such as bookplates sent from Europe and America. |
|
In case you don't know this, and I sincerely hope you don't, Jesus Christ Superstar is a remarkably bad film with remarkably dated, unlistenable music. |
|
But if Gray is a great political writer who can condense power struggles into arresting and superficially simplistic formulas, he is a remarkably unpolitical character too. |
|
He was remarkably tall, with a big head and grave Bostonian courtesy. |
|
The footprints were remarkably similar to the kind that would have been left by a small, unshod human being, but they were dated at 3.5 million years. |
|
Anna shared Beta's skill in avoiding puddles, her dress remaining remarkably unstained, which was not a good fortune shared by my dirt-splattered trousers. |
|
If, following Hancock, we say that Australians had a pragmatic, utilitarian, remarkably unsuspicious attitude to the state, this is only in part true. |
|
The media itself was remarkably restrained and somber in its reporting. |
|
After twenty-two months in barrel, the blueberry fruit seems remarkably straight forward, though a bit of vegetativeness creeps in around the edges. |
|
The buildings are nobly proportioned and remarkably detailed. |
|
Though covered in a thin layer of rust, the bow capstans and winches were remarkably preserved and looked as if they would work after a little maintenance and a squirt of oil. |
|
The three-page letter on Irish Provisional Government-headed notepaper is in remarkably good condition given that it was stored in a wallet for over three decades. |
|
Now I'm very aware that I could be opening a can of worms which would be better left closed, but I'm actually remarkably eager to hear a few other opinions on this issue. |
|
The film stays remarkably faithful to the authors vision, perfectly summoning up the brooding ominousness of small-town life in 18th-century France. |
|
The gel is known to be a remarkably effective healer of wounds and burns. |
|
Chapman couldn't help but notice that the brothers were remarkably well-behaved, contrary to their reputation for being rock 'n' roll hellraisers. |
|
Overall, the latest document doesn't do anything significant to alter the widespread perception, which is held in some remarkably odd places, that the deal was a cave-in. |
|
In particular, people had remarkably stuffy ideas about sexual behaviour. |
|
Goraks are large Himalayan birds that look remarkably like ravens. |
|
|
As I went through the documents more closely, I discovered that for all the human resources expended in surveilling us, there was remarkably little real information. |
|
The contents support a remarkably simple way of envisioning how members of the sun's family, including our home planet, make their circumsolar rounds. |
|
The man who was to enjoy one of the longest and most distinguished political careers in the post-war period was born into a remarkably humble background, 93 years ago today. |
|
Within a remarkably short span of time they cycled through a variety of literary schools and trends, ranging from neo-romanticism to imagism to surrealism. |
|
To the motley collection of recent books devoted to describing and assessing the prospects of the American imperium, this volume adds remarkably little. |
|
His simple yet remarkably efficient and original technique of pictorial production combined with his gifts as a colorist make this a highly rewarding series of pictures. |
|
Nonetheless, the group has proven remarkably resilient and agile. |
|
Indeed, the infantry battle on the desolate ridgeline above Darwin would probably have seemed remarkably familiar to a World War I stormtrooper. |
|
Nevertheless, perennial gold bugs, the Indians and Chinese, have demonstrated remarkably resilient demand for physical silver and gold. |
|
The Bell Beaker settlements are still little known, and have proved remarkably difficult for archaeologists to identify. |
|
Far from being gaumy with pitch, they looked rather remarkably smooth and well manicured. |
|
The number of companies involved in proteomics has increased remarkably during the past few years. |
|
She said a curious thing about Skye, though, which was remarkably similar to evictee David said about the young housemate. |
|
Roman aqueducts were built to remarkably fine tolerance, and to a technological standard that was not to be equalled until modern times. |
|
For a man who was supposed to be in hiding, it was remarkably easy to see him around the place. |
|
Galileo showed a remarkably modern appreciation for the proper relationship between mathematics, theoretical physics, and experimental physics. |
|
Pitcairn Island is remarkably productive and its benign climate supports a wide range of tropical and temperate crops. |
|
Amongst politicians in Southern Ireland, there was remarkably little attention paid to the clause during the debates on the Treaty. |
|
Industrialisation has been remarkably decentralised, and the area has therefore maintained quite a viable rural culture. |
|
Medina would go on to have many more tough title fights, remarkably winning versions of the featherweight world title another three times. |
|