Yet she also conveys the resilience and irony of a woman forced by crisis into a redefinition of self. |
|
The resilience of the economy was in no small measure due to the extra jobs created in the public sector. |
|
Only time will tell how long it can maintain its resilience against the powerful tide of the free market. |
|
For all his claims to resilience in the face of criticism, he is not as thick-skinned as he professes to be. |
|
Scandium is an element with the resilience of titanium and the light weight of aluminum. |
|
Heroic GB were minutes away from a great win when Darren Lockyer broke dogged bulldog resilience by scoring the match-winning try. |
|
However, a surprising resilience and unexpected buoyancy has emerged during the past year. |
|
Biomass losses from pulses of heavy canopy tree mortality may have consequences for ecosystem resilience. |
|
The feel-good element comes from Mumbai having this extraordinary resilience and effervescence of energy. |
|
There was an almost discernible sigh of relief over evidence of resilience in house prices. |
|
Of all the evergreen aspects of Wells' classic, perhaps its most enduring message is about the amazing resilience of the human spirit. |
|
This inverse relationship between resistance and resilience is of particular importance in ecotoxicological respect. |
|
Achieve increased resilience and shape-holding power from setting lotions, mousses and hair sprays. |
|
The second pathway arises from the median raphe and enervates the hippocampus and appears to mediate resilience and adaptation to stress. |
|
Strategic resilience builds an ingrained agility that enables a company to be making its future rather than defending its past. |
|
The enemy had not reckoned on the resilience of young Americans, whose grit, loyalty, and mordant humor saw them through the worst. |
|
Yet many of those 30 million paid subscribers are kids who have glommed on to texting with a remarkable resilience. |
|
Above all, the resilience of the human spirit, present without fail in each location, is what has kept the filmmaker going. |
|
The lawyer suggested that her resilience under police questioning showed that she had a mind of her own. |
|
With regard to internalizing spectrum behavioral problems, many of these children with a history of foster care placement demonstrate resilience. |
|
|
Bonaparte, however, had never made the mistake of underestimating either the power of religion or the resilience of the Church. |
|
However, the losses in market value are distributed unevenly, with some regions showing a surprising resilience to the market upheaval. |
|
By extension, it speaks to the resilience of a people who have endured a great deal of turmoil in a short span of history. |
|
Figures released yesterday showed the resilience of consumer spending last month. |
|
Cizdyn at Oriel Securities said the risers demonstrated the resilience of the market on Friday. |
|
The panicky reaction of players at the US Open betrayed their lack of resilience in the face of adversity. |
|
That said, the resilience of the teapot refiners leads some to wager they will survive. |
|
Consumer strength in the second half has been central to the resilience of the overall economy. |
|
Psychologists throughout the country consistently found receptive audiences for psychology's messages about how to build resilience. |
|
Polypropylene is being used more and more widely in the manufacture of carpeting due to its high resilience to wear and stain proof properties. |
|
The grand final rematch was a defensive scrap with Thornlie showing great resilience to fight back to win by a goal. |
|
Speed, rotation, and lightness figure just as much as strength, resilience, and weightiness. |
|
There is a British resilience and pragmatism that kicks in when something like this happens. |
|
Mr. Rhodes noted his admiration for the resilience of the Yezidi community, which has endured for so many centuries. |
|
First, childhood bereavement research already exists to enrich our understanding of resilience. |
|
Developing coping skills is one way to facilitate young people's resilience. |
|
As he entered old age Philp reacted to increasing disability and frailty with typical resilience and dignity. |
|
His essay cites the ocean's resilience to ecological damage from oil spills and sunken shipping. |
|
The crosshatched regions in Fig.1 indicate the modulus of resilience for each steel. |
|
Their story is one of resilience, despite the most shocking and appalling conditions which they have endured. |
|
|
The resilience of its merchant groups in deflecting the European efforts at monopolizing the carrying trade in the Indian Ocean was impressive. |
|
The leader and his entire coterie are a study in relaxation and resilience going into what should be a trying week at the seaside. |
|
I guess I'll have to dig deep and tap those resources of grit and resilience within me. |
|
Stock market optimists point to signs of resilience in the wider US economy, citing stronger than expected consumer confidence figures. |
|
With highlife, African music had proved its resilience and ability to absorb and synthesise foreign influences. |
|
There's also a lot of folly, superstition and craziness, but I like to concentrate on the energy and resilience aspect of it. |
|
He has, not least, his own extraordinary personal resilience, his chirpy self-belief and optimism. |
|
They have a resilience and an energy to survive what no other vegetable can endure. |
|
People who lack resilience tend to pin their problems on other people or outside events. |
|
For a man whose playing career was characterised by dogged resilience and bloody-minded determination, the manager cuts a very different figure. |
|
The form of a fold in linen or cotton shows us the resilience or dryness of the fiber, as well as the coldness or warmth of the material. |
|
The fineness of the fibers, spun with a high degree of twist, gives the yarn a springy resilience. |
|
Westport United showed admirable resilience and courage in coming from behind twice to book a place in the last four of the League Cup. |
|
Also most of the napless cloths have a lower resilience providing higher removal rates. |
|
The resilience of household finances is probably a more important barometer of the near-term spending outlook. |
|
The film valorizes the pioneering spirit, individual resilience and resourcefulness. |
|
Possessing the resilience and determination of their forebears, the Ilonggos slowly regained their foothold. |
|
But with amazing resilience and fortitude the man and his players bounced back. |
|
Publishing in research journals requires fortitude, resilience and persistence. |
|
Perhaps being war babies had given them interminable patience, fortitude and resilience. |
|
|
In this study we show how to determine with fluorescence anisotropy a quantitative value of the intrinsic resilience of the protein matrix. |
|
If all of you have not been bored to death and fallen asleep on the keyboard by now, I really do admire your resilience. |
|
There is something poetic in the way the names roll, evoking notions of pride in unremitting labour, unity in poverty, resilience in hard times. |
|
He said Irish and European beef industries showed a striking resilience by bouncing back when the going gets tough. |
|
His unsurpassed resilience to Hollywood's finest voice coaches may get laughs from the critics, but also works in his favour. |
|
Despite strong resilience in fecundity parameters, when snowmelt is extremely delayed breeding success is greatly reduced. |
|
The feel of the artery itself may suggest whether its wall has normal resilience, or is hardened and thickened by arteriosclerosis. |
|
Using herbal nervines and a nutritious diet, the function of the nervous system can be enhanced, and resilience to stress increased. |
|
Unlike desired hyaline cartilage, repair fibrocartilage has diminished resilience and a predilection for deterioration over time. |
|
Due to the resilience of the epoxy over Portland cement, the epoxy will deform slightly under point or line loading. |
|
Day-to-day resilience is as necessary in New York as a wet suit in ice water, in part to deal with fractiousness of the city's own creation. |
|
We know, too, that America has once again benefited from the flexibility and resilience of its free-market economy. |
|
I think consumer cyclicals make sense because of the resilience of consumers. |
|
But he had his own defenses, a great off-hand resilience and a deadpan humor, and he survived. |
|
Harding attacked her routines with a resilience and tenacity that reflected her training and upbringing. |
|
These people are supernormal in terms of resilience and self-confidence. |
|
With good growth forecasts, resilience to economic downturns and the prospect of more consolidation, the drinks sector is one to keep on your watch list. |
|
I am awed by the resilience of these people whose sexual identities are literally a matter of life and death. |
|
Such a tour can break the resilience of the most addicted shopaholics. |
|
Some people working in the resilience field have urged that we depathologize post-traumatic stress disorders and other responses to severe stress and adversity. |
|
|
The very rigorousness and severity of its religious and ethical code of conduct have contributed to its resilience and survival as a minority in all parts of India. |
|
The bullpen has shown resilience, with help from a deep farm system. |
|
The final pages are devoted to the resilience of her legend. |
|
Family therapists may be their best allies in passing on resilience. |
|
Undeniably beautiful, it's a celebration of resilience against all odds. |
|
Marvellous resilience by the Killough travellers saw them cling on like leeches, brilliantly grinding out four winning games to record a superb victory. |
|
That says more about the resilience of this remarkable city than any water tower. |
|
Irish migrants were well accustomed to patterns of temporary itinerancy and responded to situational exigencies with resilience and tactical virtuosity. |
|
New York has risen from the ashes with admirable resilience. |
|
Our foreparents lived through sea changes, upheavals so cataclysmic, so devastating we may never appreciate the fortitude and resilience required to survive them. |
|
Now is the time to show our courage, to show our resilience, to show the perpetrators of this diabolical act that our spirit is more resolute and determined than ever before. |
|
The January-February floods demonstrate the capacity of our people for resilience, stout-heartedness, imagination, innovation and planning, in responding to a national crisis. |
|
Further studies on these areas will help us to understand better the dialectical relationship between global forces and local accommodation and resilience. |
|
The maple trees in Westminster Abbey represent modesty and the hornbeam trees represent resilience. |
|
Key challenges are to reduce the persistent underutilisation of labour resources, to boost productivity growth and to bolster the area's resilience against shocks. |
|
They each have a unique struggle and their own reserves of resilience and humor. |
|
But as the day went on they started to find some resilience. |
|
Skin instantly recovers its natural resilience, suppleness and radiance. |
|
Tony Jaa is an utterly brilliant fighter, whose resilience and finesse as a martial-arts master is put to the test in this funny and punch-packed feature. |
|
Almost 200 Californians turned out for tips on how to build resilience. |
|
|
There's something charmingly relentless about the Muppets' resilience. |
|
The rescue workers showed remarkable resilience in dealing with the difficult conditions. |
|
The resilience Project will mail kits to individuals who sign up to participate. |
|
He put in charge a woman, Rhonda Cornum, who is the poster child for resilience under catastrophic combat stress. |
|
Building local social connections and informal support is fundamental to preventing child abuse and neglect and to building resilience in children and vulnerable families. |
|
This summer, the resilience Project will begin accepting DNA samples from individuals around the world. |
|
Pinter adores women, enjoys flirting with them, worships their resilience and strength. |
|
Once you start outsourcing and civilianising those jobs you lose that resilience. |
|
Duquette says bubblers are neither hydro massage nor therapeutic and doubts the tubs' resilience in the face of bacteria. |
|
Supported by various studies, Everly, Strouse and McCormack point out that, given the right tools, we can build up our reservoirs of resilience. |
|
Throughout the next year, the city changed but it's resilience never did. |
|
The benefits of the Tufel III elastomer include high resilience and elastic memory, and low hysteresis for flow accuracy and improved pump life. |
|
In closing, resilience is not simply adaptational but can be transformational. |
|
By building a new breakwater and extending the slipways, we will improve ferry resilience and lessen the impact of poor weather conditions. |
|
These allow for even greater resilience and HD video quality, delivered at half the bitrate. |
|
Things are pretty much back to normal now, which is a great tribute to the resilience of Grenadians. |
|
Khan received criticism for being knocked down in the second round, but proved his resilience by coming back stronger after this. |
|
Through this second role, Baptist women could assert the strength and resilience of the independent baptistic spirit. |
|
To make sense of these challenges, Camero began looking at organizations that were building resilience in Stockton. |
|
An uncodified constitution has the advantages of elasticity, adaptability and resilience. |
|
|
Karl Weick's analysis of the Mann Gulch disaster identified bricolage as a source of resilience. |
|
As a result, it gives the greatest degree of energy resilience and the energy system is going to electrification. |
|
Queensway Data Centre will accommodate up to 1500 high performance computer racks offering the highest levels of resilience and data security. |
|
You at least have to give him full marks for resilience and tenacity. |
|
Creativity, resilience and a strong sense of place are coalescing in an exhilarating accelerando. |
|
There is also increasing recognition of the need to increase the resilience of seagrass to the impacts of future environmental change. |
|
The aim of the project is to strengthen resilience by reintegrating unemployed youth in infrastructure building. |
|
Their inherent redundancy offers good resilience to single point of failure. |
|
Biofilms are known for their high level of antimicrobie resistance and resilience to host defense mechanisms. |
|
The long term viability and resilience of Indigenous communities has been debated by scholars and continues to be a political issue receiving fluctuating media attention. |
|
Prior to the crisis, financial institutions became highly leveraged, increasing their appetite for risky investments and reducing their resilience in case of losses. |
|
University of Maryland faculty and scientists will be on hand to answer media questions about disaster resilience, weather, wind and the wind tunnel. |
|
Following the floods the community set up a Flood Action Group who continue to work on recovery and resilience measures to reduce the risk of future flooding. |
|
One of the aims of TACET is to coordinate military training and exercises in the Baltic States and Poland, to provide reassurance and develop capability and resilience. |
|
Resistance, resilience, and patchiness of invertebrate assemblages in native tussock and pasture streams in New Zealand after a hydrological disturbance. |
|
Without doubt one of the best ways to develop grit, self-control, resilience, optimism, joy, and gratitude is to have a camp emersion experience with all its ups and downs. |
|
The plum blossom is symbol for resilience and perseverance in the face of adversity, because plum blossoms often bloom most vibrantly even amidst the harsh winter snow. |
|
In preparing Southern Honor, I found the same resilience and venturesomeness in the plantation girls that Fox-Genovese conveys through Gayle's diary in this opening scene. |
|
The researchers used IQ as a marker of a concept called cognitive reserve, which refers to variation between people in their brain's resilience to neuropathological damage. |
|
The researchers in Fleiszig's lab came upon cytokeratin 6A in their efforts to solve the mystery behind the eye's remarkable resilience to infection. |
|
|
Natural disasters, chronic natural hazards and climate change are geophysically interacting phenomena, as are social, economic and ecological vulnerability and resilience. |
|
Here not only strength, but toughness and resilience are important. |
|
Furthermore, Post80s workers actively cultivated career resilience through proactive building of communication networks, or guanxi networks in the Chinese setting. |
|
The scientists used cross-pollination and seed embryo transfer technology to transfer some of the resilience of the ancient ancestor of wheat into modern British varieties. |
|
Despite being largely unconsidered in the betting for what was a fair handicap, Rhombus showed bravery and resilience in equal measure to deny Kinema by a head. |
|