To encapsulate his humanitarianism in this immensely accessible ribaldry is a triumph of serious intention within comic means. |
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A Democrat won a tight victory for lieutenant governor while a Republican won a landslide triumph in the attorney general's race. |
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Now the former England Under-21 is hoping his goal and City's triumph will mark an overdue lift-off for both himself and the club. |
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We hope our series will help people understand the depth of courage and determination needed to triumph against such insuperable odds. |
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The heroic message of against-all-odds struggle and triumph make this film a popular favorite, broadcast ritually every New Year. |
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The show is certainly a triumph of art direction, with stylized costumes and sets that shout theatricality. |
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There was a shout of triumph as the carpenters struggling with the recalcitrant arbalest finally managed to string the bow. |
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In 1978 he set a world record in 400m Freestyle and then came the Moscow triumph which pitchforked him among the greats. |
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Balcon saw the story as a heartwarming tale of a young innocent's triumph over adversity, against the fantastic scenery of the African continent. |
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From its first appearance on the New York art-scene it scored a triumph with collectors. |
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It would signal the triumph of French civilisation over the despised rosbifs. |
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Last year the conservancy scored a triumph by acquiring 525,000 acres of desert land from the Corporation. |
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It's about a poor urban Maori community, domestic violence and the triumph of the human spirit. |
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The match was as thorough a managerial triumph as it was possible to imagine. |
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We'll end our journey in triumph with the ascent of Ben Nevis, Scotland's highest mountain. |
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Holding the edge following a 9-8 triumph at Meadowbank a year ago, the Scots tore into attack. |
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Maybe it's foolish to look at it as anything other than a triumph of low culture and cheap thrills. |
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Yet yesterday, under closer scrutiny, the triumph did not appear quite so conclusive. |
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We must, in other words, transform this tragedy into a triumph, a triumph of man's magnificence to man. |
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A triumph for him would allow him benefits that extend way beyond the tangible. |
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The climax of these commotions came during the fourth week of September, when the parliament returned in triumph from its exile. |
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The effective cure of the biggest killer in the Western world would have been a triumph for mankind, medicine, and big pharma. |
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Who will triumph in teetering stilettos and who will fall flat on her fake-tanned bake? |
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It has also brought about a greater understanding of different cultures and it allowed democracy to triumph over autocracy. |
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The music's lyricism, irony, sarcasm, and bittersweet triumph find the composer writing at white heat. |
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The triumph of the funding system and its corollary of perpetual debt is undeniable. |
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Protestors are optimistic they will triumph after a public inquiry into illegal practices by the Seattle-based coffee shop. |
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He certainly has had a lot of face time one way or another, and Americans do love a triumph over adversity. |
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This single change has alone transformed an iffy stab at rethinking Bizet into a colourful triumph which deserves to stick around for years. |
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It was not, therefore, an obvious triumph and it was, like Waterloo, a close-run thing. |
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This is excellent news and a triumph for civil liberty and freedom of choice. |
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The exhibition ends with a display symbolising man's final triumph in his conquest of the skies. |
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Many of them were from humble backgrounds and went on to triumph in their chosen activity. |
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Yet Far From Heaven is a triumph on all counts, from Elmer Bernstein's swoony yet sabre-toothed score to the precise work of the cast. |
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What was accomplished in Missouri was a major triumph for the sport of swimming. |
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American Beauty swept the board, a triumph of thoughtful, provocative cinema over Hollywood's usual predictable bilge. |
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Scottish home rule was a triumph of participatory democracy, but it arrived when people were losing the habit of participation. |
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The Coalition's announcement is a triumph for those over 60 that highlights the increasing influence of Australian superannuants. |
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Their livers were then cut out and borne in triumph to a local restaurant, where the chef was ordered to cook them. |
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It was his third successive tournament triumph after winning on grass at Halle and Wimbledon. |
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It was a triumph for de Gaulle's strong will and his deft political footwork. |
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But the triumph of style over substance is always subject to the law of diminishing returns. |
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The triumph marked a successful emergence from a prolonged hibernation for the sport in Myanmar. |
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A musical reliving the Dons' incredible European Cup-Winners' Cup triumph of 20 years ago will be taking centre stage in a Granite City theatre. |
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You just don't get it, the Civil War was the death of democracy and the triumph of corporations over the living. |
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All joking apart, the heavenly Hellenic national triumph should act as a loud, trumpeted warning to the Premiership's pampered platoon. |
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The triumph of God's suffering love, as revealed and embodied in Christ, is a theme that unifies the entire catechism. |
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Filmed almost entirely using stop-motion animation techniques, the film is a triumph for the team of animators and for the co-directors. |
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Langer and Montgomerie had appeared to be heading for their second triumph of the day. |
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The film is based on the British Navy's triumph over a German pocket battleship, the Graf Spee, in the early months of the second world war. |
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And yet to me to love in a carnal sense was at any rate to enjoy a triumph over countless rivals. |
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But in this struggle it is not the carnal desires that always triumph as some people imagine. |
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It's a carbon copy of his triumph in 2001, also after being written off early in the election year. |
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It is a modern-day fairy tale complete with magic, an ogre, brave deeds, and the ultimate triumph of good over evil. |
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For Ben the Bucket, the Dale's demon gardener, the summer has been both a triumph and a tragedy. |
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It was lauded as a triumph for democracy and a defining moment for the future of Africa. |
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Sputtering, I discovered the volleyball floating next to me as whoops of triumph entered my ears. |
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Feeling part of a larger community of like-minded nonviolent protestors, I felt buoyed up by the possibility of triumph over injustice. |
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If ruthlessness is allowed to triumph on the island, it will spawn imitations elsewhere. |
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He even welcomes England's World Cup triumph because of the spin-off interest it has created in the game. |
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Galashiels regards it as a triumph that the supermarket chain is bulldozing its way into town. |
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Yesterday, he drove away from the scene of his triumph having missed the cut on ten over par. |
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Introducing a new leading character can spell disaster or triumph for an author. |
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Could this be a sign that we have lost the remaining vestiges of faith and hope in the triumph of the human spirit? |
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The triumph of the strong over the weak and the effectiveness and inevitability of brute force are merely the working out of the natural order. |
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After this late night triumph she became one of the most sought-after cellists of her time. |
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Cultural Industry's show is a triumph of theatre puppetry, mime, music and song over modern technology and effects. |
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Finally, in the triumph of a soul at last filled with peace, the minister breathed his last. |
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He may not play top-class snooker again, but the comeback from cancer is his biggest triumph of all. |
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In this game of snakes and ladders, it is possible to come down a ladder and climb to triumph on the venom of a snake. |
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The rise of relativism, and its inevitable corollary, nihilism, represents the triumph of the bourgeois. |
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In the triumph of Royalist counter-revolution Milton saw the dangers of political passivity, of ideological sloth. |
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Charles could look to the future with a reasonable optimism that he would secure a modest triumph over his occasionally unhinged enemies. |
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Eventually, I'm told, maps will be rendered redundant by Global Positioning Systems, which will mark a triumph of science over mumbo-jumbo. |
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Detractors say skeuomorphs represent the triumph of familiarity over function. |
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A silver medal in the senior competition was, however, a major triumph for the young fighter. |
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Clach climbed five places into fifth spot after a wash out in the Highland League, with a 2-0 triumph over north rivals Fort William. |
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The York owner was in the money today after watching his horse triumph in the first race on Knavesmire yesterday. |
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The triumph also meant a shutout victory for goalkeeper Tim Howard, the first American to play in the final. |
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He returned to Rome in 166, when he and Marcus celebrated a triumph together. |
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Whatever the meaning, the painting is a small knockout, a triumph of the allegorical imagination. |
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It's fresh, a triumph of spirit, like spring sun undeterred by dirt-encrusted windows, first breath of morning against your naked spine. |
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The scene was a triumph of decorum, until Harmon, an enormous cat, entered the room, carrying a dead goldfish. |
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But in fact Miss Bates is a triumph of style, because she has her own unruly style, which is a part of Austen's prim one. |
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If that happens, it may well be a triumph of biographical scholarship, but it's apt to have literary consequences too. |
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She was safe, for the time being, and her family hugged her tightly, in triumph and relief and gladness. |
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On June 14 troops marched into the town in triumph to take prisoner 12,000 defeated and hungry troops. |
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A team of young St John Ambulance volunteers has returned in triumph to York after winning a national quiz competition for the fifth time. |
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It then toured the entire country before returning in triumph to Dublin's famous Abbey Theatre, selling out the 600 seats night after night. |
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The difference is that on this day, an old classmate of theirs is returning in triumph to the old neighbourhood. |
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Her victory was an unlikely triumph for a woman who lay backstage crying before the curtain had even gone up. |
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The victory was a tactical triumph for the German, who started a season-low sixth on the grid. |
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Hitler refused to accept the Allied victory as a triumph with strategic dimensions. |
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It is a triumph of modern technology and construction and an example of the best collaboration between engineering and architecture. |
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Nevertheless, I do get a sense from the trailer of a resounding triumph and victory when all is said and done. |
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They returned to the palace, tired, weary, and many fewer than they had started out with, but flushed with the triumph of victory. |
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His greatest triumph was undoubtedly his achievement in training Laois ladies to win the All Ireland senior title three years ago. |
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There is a delightful comedy in the Oscar mix and three period biopics that reach for triumph in the face of adversity. |
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I suppressed a shiver of disgust and fought down the feelings of triumph writhing in my stomach. |
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In a triumph of AFL rebranding, the players who leave themselves open to a shirtfront are now the hard men. |
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And his visual style is a triumph of minimalism, his camera typically positioned about three feet above the ground and rarely moving. |
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In his last start, Rumsonontheriver dead-heated with Hymn for first in the Hawthorne Derby, his first stakes triumph in a 19-race career. |
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A triumph of engineering ingenuity, the Millennium Dome is the largest setpiece project of the UK's millennial programme. |
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This awakening symbolises the triumph of good, winning against the evil forces of darkness that are represented by the winter. |
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She would triumph over them and with one mighty blow, strike them all down. |
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It is ironic that after he guided the national team to a rare LG Cup triumph in 2002, there is an effort now to ease him out. |
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It is time for goodness and Godliness to triumph once more over wickedness and evil. |
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He begins his account by detailing the apparent triumph of the evangelicals within Quakerism during the early to mid-nineteenth century. |
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Getting back to the task at hand, he scooped visible wreckage away, wary of the glass shards and smiled in triumph as he spotted his quarry. |
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My triumph seemed complete and her cheeks seemed pinker than usual when she finally emerged from the powder room. |
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It will tower over the community for years, a constant reminder of bureaucracy's triumph over democracy. |
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The world acclaims the hero who marches to triumph at the head of a great people. |
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This triumph leaves them in a comfortable position at the top of the table. |
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The website is as I though a triumph of pretentious style over actual content. |
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It's a myth that goes back to the revolution and the triumph of America's ragtag guerrillas against the rigid, hierarchical British army. |
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Mark Williams was jubilant after his title triumph ended his 26-month wait for a tournament win on home soil. |
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Today, Saturday, his triumph had been walking the 20 yards to the Adirondack chairs in the backyard. |
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His latest triumph came at Blackpool's annual town crier competition where he beat 20 other criers. |
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It's easy to write this off as the triumph of greed and the law of the jungle. |
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So today's meeting is a triumph for all those who have worked so hard behind the scenes to make it happen. |
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Only the triumph of nonviolence, secured through just laws justly applied, will bring the terrorists down. |
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The history of man, which is peppered with triumph over adversity, has been a long and difficult one. |
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To secular people it seems crazy, the triumph of religion over common sense. |
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You align yourself with Whig historians, happy to see the victory of the Hanoverian regime as a necessary triumph of progress and pragmatism. |
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But his career was like a roller-coaster ride, lurching from despair to triumph and back again, before ending up the toast of a new generation. |
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The building has been the permanent home of Scottish Freemasonry since 1910, and is a triumph of the craftsmanship so prized by Victorian Masons. |
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In its extreme forms, postmodernism represents a celebration of choice and the triumph of style. |
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Virginia Woolf's granddaughter, speaking at the Hay-On-Wye Literary festival, celebrates the triumph of the counterculture in Britain. |
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Not only were they much the stronger during this period, but they were better together, and gained their great triumph most meritoriously. |
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But today none the less marks a triumph of huge import, signaling America's and New York's irrepressibility. |
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On their way to the 1991 African Cup Winners Cup triumph over BCC Lions of Nigeria, Power beat Rivatex 4-3 on aggregate in the first round. |
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And in a triumph of irrationalism, they announce that they are to be married. |
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Many contemporary philosophers see the ultimate triumph of atomism as a victory for realism over positivism. |
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Such dumbing-down of aesthetic sensibility is a triumph for the corporate sledgehammer that has so bedazzled him. |
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It sounds like a lot of hassle, a real triumph of so-called style over substance. |
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You see, I think that the ultimate triumph of the Cross, of good over evil, will only be complete in the future kingdom of God. |
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A well-functioning bench represents the ultimate triumph of the forces of civilizations over the rule of nature, red in tooth and claw. |
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The failure of the program helped pave the way for the triumph of a consumerist approach. |
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We must not believe that the triumph of experimental science reduced to nought the dreams and ideals of the alchemist. |
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His head was displayed on a pike near Westminster Hall, the scene of either his greatest triumph or his most monstrous regicidal crime. |
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If anything, the reign of Henry VII marked as much the triumph of the king's courtiers in politics as of the king himself. |
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The secret's out, as the 4,000 sweaty Mancs who witness the Yorkshire tykes triumph will tell you. |
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York City's 4-1 FA Cup triumph over Radcliffe Borough last Sunday marked a number of notable firsts for the Minstermen. |
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The two ideals conflict, and the triumph of the Newtonian ideal is a repudiation, and not an incorporation, of the Aristotelian ideal. |
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The book is a bit relentless in its melancholy tone, with few moments of joy or triumph for the characters. |
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It constitutes an immensely proud moment, a triumph for Scotland, and represents the true spirit of the Make Poverty History campaign. |
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His triumph consists in the fact that he can be neither fought nor punished, because he has already taken care of both these things himself. |
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The actual triumph of the programme was the resuscitation from the dead of Dante Sonata. |
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American triumph at the end of World War II could reaffirm the master narrative of American conquest. |
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They have been thru a lot and so this is more than a wedding, it is a triumph of love. |
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The play-off triumph was also achieved despite half of the side being unavailable because of a school trip and the team falling 2-0 behind after just five minutes. |
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Actually, it's more of a triumph of dehydration and fettuccine alfredo over the human body. |
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They celebrated their triumph with a parade through the steets of the city. |
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Nevertheless, the triumph of West Coast spiritualism over East Coast secularism has civilization-wide implications. |
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He gives a blow-by-blow account of a mission that ends in tragedy for some of the soldiers but in triumph for Karzai. |
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Partick Thistle were another team celebrating after clocking up their third league success of the season with a 3-1 triumph over Stirling Albion at Firhill. |
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What should have been a day of joy for freedom lovers, and those who believe in international solidarity, instead became a day of triumph for warmongers. |
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Only last year, he played the innings of his life, taking the West Indians to a sensational triumph against the Englishmen in the Port of Spain Test. |
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What they all share is a triumph of the human spirit in adversity. |
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Everest conquest today is often more a triumph of modern equipment, where anyone with the money and the inclination can gulp that highly addictive, rarefied air. |
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Cornwallis himself remained in Yorktown, pleading indisposition but perhaps unable to face the triumph of revolution. |
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Some might say the club have taken refuge in recent years in the rosy glow of their triumph of 1967 so they might be as well moving permanently to the Portuguese capital. |
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In Hindi, a man who behaves wickedly is described as behaving like Ravana, and the effigies of Ravana that are burnt at Dusshera mark the triumph of good over evil. |
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The realisation of this musical play is a triumph for director McWhir. |
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In the comments he compares the pleasure he gets from working his will on a recalcitrant domestic appliance to the triumph a caveman felt when slaying a mastodon. |
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She let out a yip of triumph and sent the large staff at my head. |
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The company is as much a triumph of electrical engineering, but also financial engineering. |
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Many of us in high school or college read William Goldman's novel, Lord of the Flies, which depicts the triumph of evil when man is left to himself. |
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Neither side is so flecked with past triumph that the neutral might say, Let the one who has not won before win this time. |
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Many liberals were rooting for a Tea Party triumph in the four-way Wisconsin Republican Senate primary last Tuesday night. |
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To Mitchell, his schools are simply an example of the triumph of the free market. |
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The two rulings are a triumph for hardliners at the interior ministry who lobbied for tighter controls on nightclubs that they blame for leading Thai youth astray. |
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The Aitolians, whose power had been steadily rising since their triumph over the Gauls at Delphi in 279, were an obvious threat to Macedonian hegemony. |
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And I have been taken with how Best Mate's triumph has captured the imagination of people who are not interested in racing, but are interested in sport. |
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Once hu does step down, the triumph of the princelings will be nearly complete. |
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The stepford Husbands triumph in the novel, but deep down they know that history will not favor them. |
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Chasing a victory target of 80 after dismissing their opponents for 170 earlier today, the tourists sealed their comfortable triumph in just 17.2 overs. |
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The triumph of the civil rights movement was that it removed the legal practices of segregation, which made black people second and third-class citizens. |
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Kagan's nomination is a triumph for liberal ideology and judicial activism. |
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So, the film is all about the triumph of spectacle over narrative, but sometimes you need just a little bit of narrative to make things worth while. |
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And what Irish woman will ever forget Mary Robinson's history making triumph in 1990, when she broke the mould by becoming the first woman to be elected President of Ireland? |
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But Clay was saved by the bell and went on to triumph over Cooper. |
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It was a magnificent triumph for the Gillingham-based Emma to take on and beat the top-notchers from the high profile sports of football, cricket, triathlon and superbike. |
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As with many aspects of modern life, light pollution represents both a triumph of technology and a minor disaster. |
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The German midfielder scored a blockbuster at Bolton on Saturday to help Villa to a 2-1 triumph but Hendrie has already scored some belters himself this term. |
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Cooper-Bristols pioneered the lightweight mid-engined car and the victory was seen as a triumph for the small, entrepreneurial British engineering companies. |
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A woman could head a corporation and split the atom, but her appearance as a bride is still seen as her moment of triumph and the pinnacle of her career. |
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River-users who had painted nightmare scenarios of fully laden petrol barges sheering off mud banks into the bridge welcomed the change of heart as a triumph for common sense. |
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The security services insisted that this triumph should remain secret for 50 years. |
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That triumph also came after a penalty shoot-out, and was made all the more remarkable by the fact that it was achieved in the Roman's own home stadium. |
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By any other reality show standard, his story of triumph alone would make him unbeatable. |
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Twenty-four years on a play written by a Knockmore man to commemorate the 21st anniversary of the triumph has achieved the same level of acclaim as the team that inspired it. |
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The feeling and display of joy in England since Saturday morning was way beyond what it would have been had the triumph been achieved by a combined British team. |
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The Party's third election victory was a triumph over the media class. |
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After several months of floods, gales, tantrums, and boisterous whisky parties, he returned in triumph to a London which was already agog at his endeavour. |
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His mission is only to arrange a cease-fire so that the President may pull his army out of the cities in triumph without having offered any concessions to them. |
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Flying Scotsman will return to Yorkshire in triumph next month, when it is the star attraction at the NRM's Railfest celebrations, which mark the bicentenary of the train. |
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It was not, however, a triumph of thoroughly disciplined cricket, of well constructed sessions of play or of an overwhelming superiority over the host nation. |
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Supporters of GM crops see them as a triumph of scientific progress, allowing farmers to increase production, combat pests, and cut down on harmful pesticide. |
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It was a triumph of organisation and entertainment, a crowd-pleaser from start to finish and an event that will ensure the golfing status of Fota Island as a matter of course. |
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In an age governed by regulation and timidity, where originality is all too often swamped by political correctness, this building will stand as a triumph of individuality. |
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The racist suspicions of the French toward Mediterraneans underlay the eventual ironic triumph of Italian accordion music as the defining Parisian sound of hal musette. |
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Because Walters's story of triumph is the prime thread of the documentary it overshadows the more disheartening stories. |
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But that, again, is a triumph of naturalist ideology over common sense. |
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The past few weeks have seen a near total triumph of pessimism. |
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The crisis of socialism and the triumph of neo-liberalism have left the field open for nationalist and reactionary forces to take over the leadership of national movements. |
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State control of the Triennale and cinema laid the groundwork for the triumph of industrial design and neo-realism, respectively, in the post-war period. |
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Any Asian film that doesn't happen to be a martial arts triumph is left behind because the buy-back buyers steer clear of annoying subtitles or classical music soundtracks. |
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Sir Clive Woodward was quite correct to attribute his World Cup triumph to critical non-essentials, to the search for small refinements and extra training sessions. |
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Everyone who saw him was in agreement that the triumph of his long career was Mathias, the guilt-ridden burgomaster in Leopold Lewis's melodrama The Bells. |
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The runner-up spot would be an undreamed of triumph for the Tories, but probably her best hope is for a significantly increased share of the vote. |
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It was a regression, the triumph of a latent aristocratic gene that resides in the heart of humanity when democracies get lazy. |
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Well, if you couldn't be there in person, celebrating England's triumph over their traditional cricketing foe while stooging around the Caribbean would take some beating. |
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There are other ways to look at this, and it's true that none are a resounding victory for the far left, but it was a triumph for centrism and moderation. |
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Another triumph for military intelligence, the finest of all oxymorons. |
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I want civility and respect to triumph over anti-social behaviour. |
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The trophy for that triumph is clear as day with this bunch. |
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Their victory had been a triumph of cold logic over raw emotion. |
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Yet the very triumph of these principles imparted a rancorous quality to public life, as the wealthy pastoral and professional elite fought to hold on to their advantages. |
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Cardington has had a colourful past, full of triumph and disaster. |
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Diwali means a festival of lights, triumph of good over evil. |
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Yet Scorsese finesses this flaw pretty well by staging each psychological breakdown as worse than the preceding one, and each triumph as more vivid. |
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The ego's greatest triumph is to inveigle us into believing its best interests are our best interests, and even into identifying our very survival with its own. |
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Sitting on concrete piles and a sea of polystyrene that keeps it from sinking into the bog, the track is another triumph in a resurgent era for the Chinese people. |
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She returned in triumph to show us the sea bass cooked, sitting on a still smouldering bed, before taking it away again to be divided into portions. |
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The general opening triumph remains largely in tact, but he dampens the drums, doubles certain passages, equalizes, and transforms it into a loping choral dervish. |
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Albion Rovers danger man Iain Diack raises his arms in triumph after putting his side in front in only the third minute of their Scottish Cup tie with Queens Park. |
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That triumph of spin over substance has cost this administration dearly. |
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Caesar, by virtue of his military victories over the raiders and bandits in Hispania, had been awarded a triumph by the Senate. |
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Therefore, the celebration of the Eucharist is understood as the experience of Christ's triumph over sin. |
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He believed that good would triumph in the Parliament, and pushed for human rights legislation just as he wished for a unified Germany. |
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He received no triumph on his return and did not apparently run for the consulship, but he did marry Julia, the aunt of Julius Caesar. |
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Finally, on May 26 of the year 17, Germanicus celebrated a triumph for his victory over lower Germany and his uncle sent him off to the east. |
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The last century witnessed the triumph of Modernism in architecture, urbanism and the arts. |
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Faced with the choice between a triumph and the consulship, Caesar chose the consulship. |
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The 1950 production DB2 was a styling triumph for designer Frank Feeley, and Brown later recalled that many believed the car styled in Italy. |
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I call it the overclass, and it represents a great triumph for the United States and for the West. |
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The star that represents this triumph was retained when the usual crest was reinstated the following season. |
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In this drama, then, the protagonist paraffins triumph in their appointed mission. |
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The enterprise was now feted as a triumph by the public and Thomson enjoyed a large share of the adulation. |
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Equally important in explaining the Soviet diplomatic triumph in the Near East was Nasser's reaction to the Eisenhower Doctrine. |
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The Granata are flying high in Serie A and last weekend's 3-1 triumph at Hellas Verona lifted them to seventh place. |
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The finale builds grippingly to those jabbing A's, and triumph vividly is beaten into submission in the last bars. |
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The wholesale disfranchisement of Southern black voters occurred during these years, as did the rise and triumph of Jim Crow. |
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In a 2002 UK poll, Red Rum's historic third triumph in the Grand National was voted the 24th greatest sporting moment of all time. |
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Lion raced to a 5-2 succes at dominies but Anker Inn swept to a 6-1 triumph in the dartts games. |
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Leigh's last screen appearance in Ship of Fools was both a triumph and emblematic of her illnesses that were taking root. |
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This much we can realise, even though we are so close to it, the old safe instinct saves us from triumph and exultation. |
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Joshua Reynolds depicted Sarah Siddons as The Muse of Tragedy, largely due to her triumph in the role of Lady Macbeth. |
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Similar to Beowulf, Judith conveys a moral tale of heroic triumph over monstrous beings. |
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Queally's third triumph arrived when Wyatt Earp rattled home up the stand's rail to take top honours in the Sporting Index Stakes. |
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The school was a triumph for her husband after a lustreless career in Hong Kong, but it had brought her low. |
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The Reformation was a triumph of literacy and the new printing press invented by Johannes Gutenberg. |
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Peter was a little annoyed with them for knowing so much, but if he wanted to lord it over them his triumph was at hand. |
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Furthermore, the tree's triumph over death is celebrated by adorning the cross with gold and jewels. |
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In the second half of that century, the intellectual triumph of Latindom and Christendom is complete. |
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Napoleon's triumph at Marengo secured his political authority and boosted his popularity back home, but it did not lead to an immediate peace. |
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The decisive French triumph at Rivoli in January 1797 led to the collapse of the Austrian position in Italy. |
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You have to say that Sir Eck was the perfect house guest after his team's triumph in the Battle of Britain. |
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The campaign had been very successful, but the English triumph would only be temporary. |
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The ornamentation of an arch was intended to serve as a constant visual reminder of the triumph and triumphator. |
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He was brought as a captive to Rome, where a dignified speech he made during Claudius's triumph persuaded the emperor to spare his life. |
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Win and it's a Pyrrhic victory, a triumph for political desperation over principle. |
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Germanicus was recalled to Rome and informed by Tiberius that he would be given a triumph and reassigned to a new command. |
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What remains in the arts and crafts produced by internees is evidence of the triumph of the human spirit, the true art of gaman. |
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They were able to achieve an important triumph against their chief rivals. |
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The triumph of Eads ironclads, and Farragut's seizure of New Orleans, secured the river for the Union North. |
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Instead, he offered Germanicus the honor of a triumph for his two victories. |
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Rangers have won 6-0 in each of their last two matches against Forfar and they are 4-6 to triumph by at least three goals. |
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There was also triumph for another two show homes at Redrow's Heritage Park venture in Penymynydd, Flintshire. |
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Still to open his Majors account and with more mess-ups along the way, it would be poetic justice for him to triumph this week. |
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For winning owner McManus, it was a third triumph in the race, after Bit Of A Skite and Butler's Cabin. |
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Did an angry Newt Gingrich triumph over a slumping Mitt Romney? |
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England celebrated double triumph at the Velodrome as world champion Victoria Pendleton beat Aussie Anna Meares in the sprint final. |
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England's main men arrived home in triumph yesterday after their stirring win over Australia on Saturday. |
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Wayne Jones, who ended Welding's run last year, maintained his hopes of another good run with a 3-0 triumph against qualifier Ian Branks. |
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Wagner's Mastersinger HIPPODROME WELSH National Opera score a huge triumph with this new production of Wagner's Mastersinger. |
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Our triumph was out of this world and a real body slam to Hollywood proving what we can achieve. |
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But the triumph of Malay cookery is to send in the sambals in perfection, particularly the one called blachang. |
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But old-fashioned, bitter tribalism means not all will raise a glass if they triumph and that's the way it should be. |
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Sharing in the triumph of a Barry boy made good was the main reason many people came out. |
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Nine months later, Bowman turned this tragedy into a triumph when he became the first double amputee to re-enlist in the United States Army. |
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Monaghan deserve to be odds-on following their Tyrone triumph but Armagh seem a shade overpriced after their victory over Cavan. |
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For Baker the year 1980 is crucial because it marked the triumph of the Reagan presidency, that is, Reaganism. |
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And Mr Stuke does it so well that we kind of want him to triumph even when we know he's up to dastardly deeds. |
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The parting does not really occur until the triumph of rabbinism, which did not take place until the third century. |
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My favourites, I think, were the super-crisp Japanese radish, a triumph of texture with a light delicate flavour. |
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But Verlaine's quadrisyllabic lines, which know when to run on and when to be end-stopped, triumph with their carefully wrought musicality. |
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Many believed that the reduction in public spending was a disaster but the spin doctors presented it as a triumph for lower taxation. |
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It's a small triumph that LiveWire's sparkless production manages to preserve the plot. |
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Indeed, the Republican triumph may be part of a larger trend. |
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First up to the oche at the Winter Gardens in Blackpool was Baxter, who surged into the last eight with a 13-7 triumph over Jamie Harvey. |
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But he was back in action for Oldham at the weekend, crossing for two tries on his dual-reg debut in the 32-10 iPro Sport Cup triumph at Barrow. |
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Although it was a triumph of civil engineering, the Thames Tunnel was not a financial success. |
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Faced with a choice between a triumph and the consulship, Caesar chose the consulship and entered the city. |
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Wolves have not left that particular part of the North-East with a win since a 2-1 triumph on April 11, 1951, under the watch of legendary boss Stan Cullis. |
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Here doctors confront diseases that are obscure and vaguely medieval, the triumph over them further romanticized by the sheer bizarreness of the challenge. |
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His achievements include key improvements to the telescope and consequent astronomical observations, and ultimately the triumph of Copernicanism over the Ptolemaic model. |
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He did not know what it was to wrangle on indifferent points, to triumph in the superiority of his understanding, or to be supercilious on the side of truth. |
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The army entered the city in triumph and killed its governor. |
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