I don't think so, and far from sullying the name of Hogan, it would embellish it. |
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The Dutch, in particular, used clobbering to embellish Chinese blue and white export and Meissen porcelain during the 18th and 19th centuries. |
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The exhibition is also illustrative of how computer software could be used to creatively embellish digital photographs. |
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We tend to sing melodies into his ears, or plink away on the piano, and he can help us realize it and embellish it. |
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While most of the panels were made to embellish walls in domestic settings, some were altar frontals. |
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Pronounced cusps at each side embellish the conventional New England Queen Anne vase splat design. |
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To further embellish the tag, embroider a motif on the second tag before gluing the two together. |
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Add fresh flowers or small tree ornaments to embellish the wreath for a party. |
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Notice, too, that like good storytellers these advocates embellish the tale with some interesting exaggerations. |
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The stress deepened her dependence on alcohol, and her amateurish efforts to market her story led her to embellish the details of her espionage. |
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In a survey 92 per cent of respondents admitted they had felt a need to embellish a story when in a social setting. |
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My hope is that by making this public here, he will perhaps be dissuaded from continuing to embellish this story with false statements. |
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In Taylor House, where all sides concede that appellants will exaggerate, embellish and tell outright lies, his story is pretty tame. |
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And in any case, there will be plenty of memories gained and stories to embellish after another extravaganza of Celtic solidarity. |
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Nothing so improves a dreary experience like the realization that it will yield a story we can embellish. |
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These ornaments are made in silver, and precious and semi-precious gems are used to embellish them. |
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The easiest way to do this is to embellish a little when describing your current job title. |
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The material, by turns dark and comic, is simply too extraordinary to embellish, and the book too extraordinary to put down. |
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While architects have often drawn on the past to embellish their schemes, few have so comprehensively taken so much from one classic period. |
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Ornate decorations and artistic gilt work embellish the statues, which are embedded with precious stones. |
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His songs came off best when he would embellish them with ad-libs and stories. |
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He was a gifted conversationalist and had many fine stories and yarns which he could embellish with style. |
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The more you embellish your note with seemingly pointless trills and scales, the more you care. |
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For a touch of elegance and personalization, embellish the pocket with an embroidered monogram or crest. |
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They'll embellish and add things until the joke is so stuffed full of extreme vulgarities that everyone is shocked. |
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Paintings of fruits, flowers, animals, and national anthem written in ornate Urdu calligraphy embellish its forehead. |
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They embellish some of the fireplace mantels in palaces of Bagatelle and Versailles. |
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Pin-tucks embellish heirloom clothing and look complicated to sew. |
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The aim of his painting was not, as previous schools had maintained, to embellish or idealize reality but to reproduce it accurately. |
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The ability to embellish a quilt with embroidery opens upunlimited creative potential. |
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Later redactions of saints' lives tended to omit historical details that were no longer easily understood and to embellish the text with more outlandish miracle stories. |
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Ok I embellish but that's my interpretation when she cues the violins. |
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Artists now have the means to embellish gourds with paint, beads, charms and buttons, as well as proper tools to wood burn and carve designs into the plant. |
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The sides cut at an angle embellish and lighten the massiveness of the piece. |
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Like jazz players, early musicians can embellish melodies and chords within a certain structure. |
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Glass decorated with narrative scenes and with devices appropriated from the classical past were some of the Western decorative motifs used to embellish glass objects. |
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The students were encouraged to embellish the eyes or tail with additional items, but otherwise they were to use only one box to create their cows. |
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After all, your attendence would still embellish its coffers even if you are not directly paying. |
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I am not rising to in any way correct the speech, but rather to ask him to embellish it. |
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It also takes years of training to be able to sew, embroider, bead, and otherwise embellish these clothes. |
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It is clear that a people who tells his story after having lost everything, does not sing the real thing, but they embellish it. |
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We follow concepts that mesh with our mental framework because they embellish our beliefs. |
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As you get more comfortable with a skill, you begin to see places where you can improve or embellish your practice. |
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The member across the way and some of her colleagues always embellish figures. |
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A good journalist knows where to draw the line, to gather the facts of the story they are working on and not to embellish it with irrelevant details. |
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We must guard against any tendency to embellish bourgeois democracy, as our opponents do routinely. |
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He loved to embellish and we were determined not to let him slip one past us. |
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They can be fitted with modular elements to embellish them with a particular style according to the town or type of environment. |
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A high discount rate may underestimate the liability that followed from negative cash-flows and thus embellish the prospects unduly. |
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When I get older and start getting a bit tired then I can turn to the past and embellish the old stuff. |
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Complement your monograms with names and embellish your special monogram or name with frames and flourishes. |
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When I play with other people I always try and adapt to their music, I try and embellish what they have there. |
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Some WAV files to embellish you results notably increase the size of the package. |
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Not only does it introduce new music and speech formats, but also can embellish them with text, graphics and video. |
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A shaped finishing strip, either plain or decorated used to embellish an architectural element. |
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The anthemion was used widely by the Greeks and Romans to embellish various parts of ancient buildings. |
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This type of epaulet was used mainly to embellish frock coats worn by men. |
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Decorative plasterwork with friezes of palmette motifs in relief, embellish the dome in the centre of the portico for latecomers and the upper part of the walls of the entrance area. |
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But what most visitors do not know, and this is the reason of this chapter, is that several other statues, monuments or bust in medium or smaller scale embellish the water side and the various gardens. |
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Our garden center suggests you discover, in a charming frame, numerous shrubs, longlived plants, grasses, annual flowers and many other things to improve and still embellish your garden. |
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As labour intensive sectors dried up, the unemployed moved into recession-proof sectors, forcing more candidates to lie about their criminal pasts and embellish their work histories. |
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The illustrations by Céline Malépart are joyful and show us that sadness, joy and happiness can be expressed effectively through words or through the vibrantly coloured drawings that embellish this marvellous text. |
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Natural elegance Some women never flaunt their jewellery in a showy way, preferring to cultivate a more secretive relationship with the objects that embellish them from day to day. |
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Through sensory description we create and embellish our stories. |
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Several of these have been restored to something approaching their former glory by national conservation bodies like English Heritage, often as an afterthought to the restoration of grand houses that they commonly embellish. |
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From this point of view, the proposed legal bases should be perceived as a technical adjustment, though there is a strong temptation to take this opportunity to embellish them with innovations and improvements. |
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Do not embellish the tri-logo with decorative elements. |
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Adnet asked the artist Maurice Savin to embellish his oak dining table with white ceramic caryatidlike legs. |
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The Hitching Post restaurants stand on tradition too, but embellish it a little. |
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If the actual facts are so repugnant to you, then why embellish them? |
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And like all bad liars, immediately gave into the urge to embellish. |
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Instead of 101 ways to stuff a poussin, surely the readers needed 101 ways to embellish two-minute ramen noodles. |
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He used language to embellish his material, including the use of both poetical and archaic words. |
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Alfonso, in particular, wanted to transform Naples into a real Mediterranean capital, lavishing also huge sums to embellish it further. |
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I also used quite a few of the flat-fingered kind of ruff to embellish some notes. |
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You think they exaggerate sometimes? You think they embellish things, stretch the truth, play loose with the facts? |
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The main quills may be dyed, and then applied in combination with thread to embellish leather accessories such as knife sheaths and leather bags. |
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Music also holds a supereminent position in the classical liturgy: Gregorian chant and sacred polyphony have developed in the course of the centuries in order to serve and to embellish it. |
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Podolski gave Walcott a chance to further embellish Arsenal's first-half performance when he eluded James Perch and slipped the ball through to the striker. |
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Each of the Arts whose office is to refine, purify, adorn, embellish and grace life is under the patronage of a Muse, no god being found worthy to preside over them. |
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