They were words she could not understand, but still she searched among them for some clue, some answer to the riddle of her life. |
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The first answer to the riddle of existence, therefore, is that substance exists, and exists necessarily. |
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Cold comfort for the grieving Parks, who is now trying to solve the riddle of his granddaughter's death. |
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Whatever helps understand this riddle is significant, I am pleased that I, in a small way, did something with it. |
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Understanding exactly what capital is unlocks the riddle of the market system. |
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Her routine was uninspired writhing and undulating but her pole slide was something that Plato would have written a riddle about. |
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This afternoon I set out to solve the riddle, though so far I have only succeeded in uncovering more questions. |
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The refugees first sheltered in the caves that riddle the steep limestone hill, later building houses around them. |
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Violet, however, was genuinely deep in thought, her lips shaping the words as she puzzled out the riddle. |
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You'll start to get hung up on little dumb things like the physical impossibilities that riddle most of the activities the characters do. |
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It is an unsolved riddle which has inspired explorers and writers for nearly 80 years. |
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She then has to solve the riddle of the tape before she too falls victim to its curse. |
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The stanza is written like the formulaic examples of wit and allusion in old-fashioned riddle books. |
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But the riddle of what became of the prized bird during his epic flight is slowly being unravelled. |
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But two archaeologists who have pored over the patterns for the past five years say they may have unravelled the riddle. |
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This is too frequently a riddle which drives us into paroxysms of post-feminist uncertainty. |
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When popular folk memory was matched with the images, some historians ecstatically claimed they had cracked the riddle of the revered river. |
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Every few yards there is a surreal spectacle, a puzzling riddle or a mysterious door. |
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Rob's words echoed through my brain, and they sounded like some cryptic riddle. |
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Her echo bounced from wall to wall, penetrating his ears like an unsolvable riddle. |
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The president is a riddle wrapped in an enigma inside a Chinese fortune cookie. |
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He was attracted by the riddle of Celtic, which developed on the continent as Gaulish in ancient France and northern Italy. |
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Riddles and proverbs can influence each other and sometimes a piece of advice in proverb form can be turned into a riddle, or vice versa. |
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She would ask visitors entering the city of Thebes to answer a riddle and if they could not answer they would be put to death. |
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His experiments on the lift and drag of an aircraft helped answer the riddle of how birds fly and led to new wing designs. |
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They worked with picks, breaking up the soil which was then passed through a riddle to recover artefacts. |
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A set of hypotheses has been suggested to explain this exceptional riddle of fish reproduction, but as yet they remain untested. |
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Earlier this year, it had sat for weeks to unravel the riddle of the sinking. |
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Perhaps, to answer the riddle posed by the Palace substitution script, we should take a similar path. |
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The grieving friends of a York man who drowned in mysterious circumstances have launched a campaign to solve the riddle of his death. |
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Now the riddle is somewhat unravelled by the show's writer Steven Moffat, who revealed some details of the forthcoming special of the BBC series. |
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We could riddle our last ancient forests with logging roads and clearcuts, setting the stage for tomorrow's conflagrations, or we can restore natural fires to natural forests. |
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Handpick whole sound threshed kernels of wheat from the portion passing over the riddle and return them to the cleaned sample. |
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Thanks to the Christ, the veils of the temple have been torn asunder and the riddle of the Sphinx has been resolved. |
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The riddle enables the groundbait mix to be soaked in a more homogeneous manner preventing the formation of lumps. |
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Their short poems exhibited astonishing verbal ingenuity and acrobatics and were often dependent on the pun, riddle, or acrostic for effects. |
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The answerless riddle of modern broadcasting crackled through dusty loudspeakers and across the jam-packed midway of the 33rd annual Fringe Festival. |
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He regarded Haley with a critical eye, as if figuring out a riddle. |
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Midnight had arrived, but Leander still hadn't figured out the riddle. |
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A prize that I will get if, and only if, I solve the secret riddle. |
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She was pleased at herself as if she had just figured out a riddle. |
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Each of us is a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma. |
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When Scott Kleinberg wrote about the riddle for The Chicago Tribune, he changed the answer. |
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The easy answer to the riddle of our elected official's inertia on privacy issues is that there's no money in civil rights. |
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Maybe soon, then, the riddle will have a different answer, as the world pays more attention to this invisible, horrible disease. |
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One of the two Chinese miners seen here in the foreground gathers specks of gold using a hand implement, known as a riddle. |
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A water screening process traps large pieces of gold on the plate while smaller pieces pass through to the bottom of the riddle. |
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The Gita is not for those who want to live superficially but for those who want to gain insight into the riddle of existence. |
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Waro did just that and in the course of one of these collective meals introduced one of his favourite pastimes: a riddle session. |
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Able-bodied people rarely notice the barriers that riddle the world which keep the disabled from participating in society. |
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He had a jolly laugh and his belly shook when he was really amused by something, and his wise old eyes lit up with mischief right before he'd ask you a riddle. |
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I then re-sieve it through a maggot riddle to remove the lumps. |
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Police have been brought in to help solve the riddle of who put bloodworms in swimming pools, as authorities conclude the caper may have been an inside job. |
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The question, almost akin to a riddle, is certainly a relevant one to anybody in a creative field. |
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The rhyme is no longer posed as a riddle, since the answer is now so well known. |
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The rhyme does not explicitly state that the subject is an egg, possibly because it may have been originally posed as a riddle. |
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Do ye know that riddle about the nott cows, Jonathan? Why do nott cows give less milk in a year than horned? |
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The same riddle is also known from the Faroe Islands, Norway, Iceland, and a variation also occurs in England. |
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The intellect that is delighted in the precision of his thinking and that treats God as if He was an interesting riddle does not submit itself and does not accept the Mystery in Himself. |
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The newly discovered Smilodon fossils could help provide answers to the riddle of the saber-toothed cat's teeth, among other questions. |
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It is therefore through Christ and in Christ, that light is thrown on the riddle of suffering and death which, apart from his Gospel, overwhelms us. |
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The Roman concrete has remained a riddle, and even after more than 2,000 years some Roman structures still stand magnificently. |
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The riddle may depend upon the assumption that a clumsy person falling off a wall might not be irreparably damaged, whereas an egg would be. |
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Persisting still in the same career of imbecility and assertion, Mr. Stone proceeds to enunciate the following sciolistical riddle. |
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The barber laughs so hard at the simple answer to the riddle that Logan fears for his chances of a steady-handed shave. |
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Oh, thou foundling fire, thou hermit immemorial, thou too hast thy incommunicable riddle, thy unparticipated grief. |
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The Larra plateau is one of the most impressive karstic areas in Europe with its weirdly wonderful rock formations, the mountains riddle with a network of tunnels caves, caverns and underground rivers. |
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When the Prince of Morocco shows up to try to solve the riddle that would win Portia's hand, he is played by Chris Jarman as a World Wrestling Entertainment-type blusterer in glittering boxing shorts. |
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It is a riddle that has confounded all manner of unconventional firms, from the bare-footed founders of Apple Computer to the cheap and cheerful folk at People Express, one of the first low-cost American airlines. |
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This and the riddle of the Soviet relationship with Communist China in recent months as well as the language of Peking, bellicose and threatening, assail us with fears and potential dangers. |
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There's a temptation to read Riddley Walker as, precisely, a riddle – to think that by matching every element to a literal antecedent, you might be able to weasel out the truth of the book. |
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The riddle of what Herrick has become rumbles on. |
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Who on earth was Avitis old fellow who was such a riddle to me? |
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Odin may also be referenced in the riddle Solomon and Saturn. |
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You have to riddle the gravel before you lay it on the road. |
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Earlier this week the Mean Girls actress sparked an engagement riddle by wearing an enormous solitaire diamond on her ring finger at the premiere of her new film, Bobby. |
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Unlike the answer to the Uraon riddle, her book comes with open hands, linking a wealth of references and ideas without trying to reduce them to a Procrustean bed of argument. |
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Like the eternal riddle of which came first, the chicken or the egg, some scientists have pondered the source of the first case of bovine spongiform encephalopathy. |
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