She was in bed with her lover, a single blanket covering their entwined limbs. |
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Her life was now entwined with Michael's, and now April was out for his blood. |
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Pete had had his fingers entwined in her red locks and she had let her hands roam his back when the door was suddenly flung open. |
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A casual, rusticated set with hay bales, trellises entwined with climbers and gentle harp music played live, establish a mood for us. |
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Their lives were entwined in a special way and during that time familiarity bred its own sense of humour. |
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While their paths diverged after 1990, their fates are entwined again this season. |
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At the bottom of the bell, a white silhouette of a boy holds a rope entwined to the clapper. |
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Much is made about her being beneath him when the two become romantically entwined. |
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There was an archway over the entrance with vines and flowers entwined in the woodwork. |
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White lights entwined with silver ribbon draped the window sills, door frames, and banister, bunched with clusters of holly and mistletoe. |
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The rare cornucopia shown in Plate XVI is embellished with free-floating murrhine and entwined with a seventeenth-century-style crested serpent. |
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So, as we learn more about stratospheric ozone and climate change, what were once two separate problems have become more and more entwined. |
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Melodies and counterpoints are entwined throughout the mix, grounded by the swagger of Fridmann's surprisingly muscular basslines. |
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Live roses had been picked from the garden and were entwined in the pattern, along with jewelled clips and silk ribbons. |
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He brought her in close to his side, hands entwined behind them in a criss-cross, moving quickly in a circle. |
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Slender of thigh and elfin of feature, she proceeds to conjure up a world in which haute couture is seamlessly entwined with high culture. |
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The club's fortunes were considered to be inextricably entwined with those of their, supposedly, one stellar performer. |
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Apple, pear, plum and cherry trees shadow the hard tennis court which has full perimeter fencing entwined with climbing roses and clematis. |
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The lattice, with its entwined flowering twig pattern, was finished in pink, bronze, and green by brushing on copper-based colorants. |
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I entwined my fingers with hers, experiencing relief and dissolved anxiety as I felt her squeeze back. |
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The gnarled brown trees twisted into the earth and entwined each other in thick embraces. |
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With business and sport now irretrievably entwined, there's big money in medals. |
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The girl forgives him and is entwined around him during the closing scenes. |
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Their outstretched branches covered the mossy ground and entwined with the branches of the neighboring trees. |
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Indeed, the history of caricature has often been entwined with the history of censorship. |
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There was an apotheosis in which all three figures were shown entombed, enshrined, mummified together but not entwined. |
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Life conditions and life strategies are as tightly entwined as the Gordian knot. |
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Well, it is a lightweight, intricately entwined, sparkling dainty flat chain in yellow and white gold in combination with coloured silk threads. |
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Delicate gold filigree entwined itself around her lower arm, wrist, and hand. |
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A gathering of spectators surrounded his car, the back end now entwined at the base of a tall oak. |
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My own family's history is deeply entwined with that of the Northcote electorate. |
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Flirting seems inextricably entwined with some sense of unavailability or unrequitedness. |
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The monument is a massive flagpole entwined with the trunk and branches of a symbolic banyan tree forged in steel. |
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Look at all those wires running up and down the walls, entwined like over-cooked spaghetti on an unappetizing plate. |
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For seven minutes the quartet play a tuneless dirge that occasionally changes and is entwined with a slowly oscillating synthesizer. |
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Nowhere have so many muscular and healthy bodies been put on display, so many entwined haymakers and tractor drivers, workers and peasants, strong men and women. |
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There were place cards with calligraphy situated in front of each chair, and even the chairs had the tiniest bit of tasteful crepe paper entwined around the backs. |
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The rich polysemic nature of Kanak languages, some intricately entwined with Polynesian vocabularies, testify to these congruences of aquatic and terrestrial meaning. |
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The ferret's survival has forever been entwined with that of the prairie dog, a foot-tall rodent that makes up about 90 percent of the predator's diet. |
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The fate of major British sporting projects are inextricably entwined. |
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The fate of pubs and their football teams are therefore intractably entwined. |
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Snakes twist up and around the largest proscenium, and another is entwined in thick vines. |
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I have already sent away for a surcingle which has a silver buckle with the initials A and M romantically entwined. |
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Yet another detail: a prospective ladylove's leg is entwined with a man's, proof that physical contact of a sort is already taking place. |
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On the floor four members of the same family lay, their limbs touching, entwined in death. |
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His conversations with these eclectic figures within scuba diving's short history are entwined with his own memories of particular dives in different parts of the world. |
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The bust is delicately entwined with organza plissés and pearled and sequined lace motifs, decorated with silvered reliefs. |
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Still, alarms bells are ringing, especially in countries entwined with the ailing Greek economy and, to a lesser extent, the anemic Italian one. |
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The bitter fight became entwined in the leadership tensions that were reaching a crescendo at the time. |
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Marriage thus has anthropological, personal, social and religious dimensions that have deeply entwined roots in our history and culture. |
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Anthurium flowers are entwined with one another in order to obtain a round mass. |
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Frustration with the government's economic policies is now entwined with rapidly expanding anti-Western sentiment. |
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When democracy is entwined with endemic corruption, elections themselves can give rise to corruption and violence. |
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Do people in water-rich countries understand that the fate of those in water-poor countries is entwined with their own? |
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He is especially drawn to the fact that reggae music is so entwined in the day to day life of Jamaica. |
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The tournament is also entwined with local religious practices, social gatherings, family visits and festivities at home and in the open air. |
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Torn portions of his jacket were found entwined in between the turns of wire rope and the drum. |
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Thus the fate of the disappeared has become closely entwined with that of Pakistan's higher judiciary. |
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Different aspects of economic and social life at a global level are entwined together and with their respective interests. |
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Within this process, technical progress and organisational change are inseparably entwined. |
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These are technological rather than natural in origin, and deeply entwined in fundamental ethical debates. |
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The birth and development of museums are intricately entwined with issues of identity faced in every era. |
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This business is intricately entwined with the building and renovation sector, which tends to take longer to slow down than other activities. |
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Both had wide platforms built around them in stone and mud, with three images of entwined snake gods embedded in the mud, close to the tree trunks. |
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It is through her that the multiplicity of other characters are entwined. |
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He bunches himself up tightly, one leg entwined over the other, with the crossed leg dangling, limply, languorously. |
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Entangled particles are inextricably entwined because they share the same wave function, or quantum description, and therefore, in a sense, the same future. |
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At the door a couple is entwined on the floor blocking my departure from the suite. |
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It helps that Seapunk is entwined with a 1990s aesthetic, which has taken hold in the fashion world. |
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But it does raise the possibly tragic question of how her sexuality, addictions, and eventual death are entwined. |
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Lazily, Bren watched slumped backward into the cool, itching grass, hands entwined behind once bright hair that had been lightened by long hours under a summer sun. |
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The vine and the ceremony are deeply entwined with South American indigenous religions of the Amazon. |
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He touched the entwined dragons that were blazoned onto his skin. |
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Cool aqua marine blue entwined with canary yellow and feisty pink in intricate patterns and finely detailed paintings were printed onto the scarves. |
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Golding's challenge to any definite sense of comprehension through superficial perception is inextricably entwined with his writing's own visual aspects. |
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The pitch at Twickenham was replaced by a hybrid 'Desso' type, in June 2012, which uses artificial fibres entwined with real grass. |
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For a wildly elaborate seven-volume Qur'an, completed at the start of the 14th century, the calligrapher Muhammad ibn Mubadir entwined individual golden words in involute patterns of stars and hexagons. |
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This theory suggested that disasters and capitalist economy were inevitably entwined. |
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In the ocean, leatherback turtles can become entwined in fishing gear. |
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The hieroglyph for his name features a twist of flax within a pair of raised arms, however, it also vaguely resembles a pair of entwined snakes within someone's arms. |
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Fifty years of European integration has seen the economic prospects of Member States entwined as never before, bringing unprecedented social progress. |
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A simple braid is entwined with rope to give an unusual finish. |
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I'll never forget what Robert Lantos once so eloquently said: we must never forget that our cultural sovereignty is so inextricably entwined with our economic sovereignty. |
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The unusual piece of ceramicware features a wild-looking cat entwined around the handle glaring at a mouse on the lid. |
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A single heart with something else like an arrow going through it, roses entwined around it, wings and a dagger can also have different meanings depending on the person looking at them. |
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Around 10,000 years of evolution separate Scottish wildcats and mainland European wildcats, and they are intimately entwined with the human culture of Scotland all the way back to the Picts. |
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They're very problematic and sometimes down right rude to each other, but there's definitely chemistry, and definitely some other emotions entwined in there. |
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As we suggested in the previous section, this indicator is particularly hard to pin down because academic and professional training are so closely entwined. |
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He begins by briefly tracing the history and evolution of the Vulcan and Victor aircraft, explaining how their entwined pasts would come together again en route to the South Atlantic. |
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Following the conclusion of the nominating convention, the political purposes, activities, and identity of the nominated candidate and their registered district association become entwined. |
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Thrown together by sheer happenstance, their lives will be entwined for decades to come. |
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The tree roots go deep and are entwined with the roots of the terrified Iraqi people, all precious beyond measure, and I have no punch line. |
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Robert Kitson One of Michael Phelps's greatest triumphs as an Olympian was entwined with a loss in a discipline in which he was meant to be indestructible. |
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These delicate, swirled-tail members of the syngnathid family are frequently depicted in mythology, rapturously entwined. |
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The so-called courtship dance of many snakes is often mistakenly interpreted as a dance in which the forepart of the bodies of a male and a female are held high and entwined. |
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Things start promisingly with pairs of erotically entwined lovers feeding one another in semi dar kness, teasing, luring and tempting with the promise of food. |
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Delicate mimosa blossoms are entwined with sheer freesia and night-blooming jasmine petals, while heady, rich tuberose provides depth and texture. |
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This title was granted to his younger son but when Henry's heir unexpectedly died the title of King of England and Lord of Ireland became entwined in one person. |
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It is common for neck biting to occur while the snakes are entwined. |
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Entwined within this Gordian knot is a truth so terrible as to be rarely spoken. |
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