Rarely does one hear sound as vibrant and keenly phrased as Ma's at a dance concert. |
|
His elegant, meticulously phrased performances of Haydn and Mozart became legendary, as did his caustic, witty bons mots. |
|
Why had she phrased it as though it were an affliction rather than a state of being? |
|
In fact, the way you've phrased your description of her behavior sounds like you want to be released. |
|
Josh Chafetz suggests that all of the papers merely latched on to how one reporter phrased a follow-up question. |
|
This question is phrased very generally indeed, and it is quite impossible to conclude from it that there is a potential conflict of interest. |
|
Pound wished poetry to escape from what he felt was a rising tide of sloppy, flabby, sing-song verse, inaccurately and unobservantly phrased. |
|
All seek to offer hope, whether phrased as the vision of God, blessedness, eternal life, the greatest good, perfect happiness, or holiness. |
|
Yes, some criticism is misplaced and should be rejected, but this isn't always the case even with criticism that is badly or rudely phrased. |
|
Although phrased in diplomatic language, this was a clear warning to China not to seek to retake Taiwan by force. |
|
I phrased it as a sarcastic taunt, but I genuinely wanted to know the answer. |
|
The way Hugo phrased his words they were more of a command than a request and Solomon grudging obliged. |
|
A flute just always sounds flutey, no matter how exquisitely it is phrased, or how cleverly the flautist manages the dynamics. |
|
That brings us to the subject of our poll tonight, and the question is phrased rather indelicately, but, nonetheless, it is the question. |
|
Here is her contribution, as delicately phrased as one might expect in such an august literary journal. |
|
As originally outlined, these research areas were phrased totally in scientific and technological language. |
|
The fact that he's served his time makes no difference given the way the law is phrased. |
|
Although each question is phrased differently, all basically require the student to combine description with analysis and discussion. |
|
Support vector machines can be phrased as statistical query algorithms, but the number of queries scales with the number of datapoints. |
|
Computers were good, but an inaccurately phrased request could produce some very interesting results. |
|
|
Ultimately, how progressive Americans look depends on how the questions are phrased. |
|
He phrased it as a question, but Damien knew him well enough to know that it was a thinly veiled demand that his brother stated. |
|
The way in which the minister has phrased the budget is that all interest will apply. |
|
Downing Street last night tried to gloss over Lord Butler's scathing, but tactfully phrased verdict on its shambolically informal style of government. |
|
The credibility of that contention would depend on exactly what Wildstein told Christie and how he phrased it. |
|
In other words, the love that dare not speak its name, as Oscar Wilde phrased it, doesn't have to sing to make itself heard. |
|
They also ensure that their questions are phrased in such a way so as not to antagonize an opponent or impugn his honesty. |
|
Music must be phrased with crescendos, with suspense nevertheless music has to be entertaining for action parts and soothing for reflection one. |
|
The second half of the program also included a lithe and buoyantly phrased rendition of the Ravel, for which the weather graciously cooperated. |
|
In some countries, the law may be so phrased as to potentially criminalize the actual expression of criticism against the ruling regime. |
|
Be sure that the causes as phrased have a direct, logical relationship to the problem or effect stated at the head of the fishbone. |
|
Nicely phrased but foggily plotted, it's impossible to kick this into theatrical life. |
|
Sure, it was phrased passively, and sure, it came at the end of the address. |
|
His arguments, phrased in the vocabulary of the modern scientist and based upon the latest of neurological studies, are those of nineteenth century liberalism. |
|
He phrased it well, said we spend more time thinking about our next inevitable failure than our next success. |
|
Although phrased differently and sometimes interpreted strangely, these teachings are the bedrock of Light and Life. |
|
If article 292 was also intended to cover other cases of ship arrests, it would have been phrased differently. |
|
In addition, aside from the Code, most of the criteria for the selection of chief executives are phrased in value terms. |
|
Surveys should be phrased in such a way as to make the customers prioritise needs, keeping cost as a factor. |
|
The conductor's subtly, phrased, light treatment of the first movement and the long unbroken lyrical line of the Andante quasi allegretto really made the music glow anew! |
|
|
They also realized that descriptions and explanations of observed phenomena could be phrased in mathematical or geometrical rather than anthropomorphic terms. |
|
Here's a man who clearly knows how to achieve the lineaments of gratified desire on the faces of his women, as I think William Blake once phrased it. |
|
These sub-heads, which are not all very clearly phrased, should accordingly be construed according to their general sense and without too much nicety of language. |
|
I suspect from how you've framed and phrased your question that you have some real problems relating to people in general or maybe women in particular. |
|
For once I could only think about Becca, the uneasiness growing as I remembered the look in her eyes, and the deliberate way she phrased her last words to me. |
|
However, more specificity in how Conservation Objectives are phrased is needed for the various LOMA teams to ensure that the same guidance to management is phrased the same way in all cases. |
|
At such moments, the movie offers a dream of perfect articulateness — superbly trained actors delivering expertly phrased remarks with ease and force. |
|
Certain of the panel's recommendations were phrased as preconditions for approval, while others were more general suggestions regarding the project management process. |
|
Mr. Binney phrased the melody as a string of hiccups and then eased into an elastic mode, coolly extemporizing over bass and drums, with ample space for Mr. Weiss to fill. |
|
Alain Lefèvre proved himself to be talented and energetic in everything he played? very much in the manner of the great keyboard virtuosos, he phrased with much verve and spirit. |
|
He concluded his remarks, and phrased it quite well, by saying that the best approach to improving services for consumers was through competition and disclosure. |
|
Opinion-poll results depend, notoriously, on how questions are phrased. |
|
It seemed that earlier the questions weren't phrased in such a way. |
|
Even phrased as they are in Higher Managementese, these comments touch the heart of the matter. |
|
I could have phrased that less colorfully, but I stand by the sentiment. |
|
Still, much of his signing was poignant, ardent and supplely phrased. |
|
With the proposed draft, the basic supply mandate is phrased technologically neutrally, so that the services could be provided not only at post offices, but Post ATMs, by mail, as well as electronically. |
|
In a word, classic anti-Jewish motifs are made palatable to the Canadian ear when craftily phrased in terms of freedom of expression or a right of the oppressed to self-determination. |
|
Santos was brilliant with various kinds of rhythm: the trickily arranged snare rolls of marcha, samba's swinging two-four, strangely phrased five-beat cycles and the Afro-Brazilian six-eight. |
|
The Southern version of this state, touched in the head, often phrased as tetched in the haid, like or simply tetched, is similar. |
|
|
Alternatively phrased in terms of reasonableness, commensurateness, or the like, this is the basic substantive standard governing all self-help law. |
|
But on reconsideration, however snottily phrased, if you had to provide a one-paragraph sketch of how my people see the world, it would be hard to improve on this. |
|
This indicates that, should future therapeutic relationship questionnaires include such questions, it may be beneficial to use monosemous words and clearly phrased questions. |
|
That is why they are phrased in the descriptive terms of a judge announcing the law to be applied in a given case rather than in the mandatory terms of a statute. |
|