He is a superb ballet dancer, yet here attempts to combine his enchanting talent with modern Cuban movement. |
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Hunter claims most of the real talent in Scotland is to be found in the small independents started by people fed up with big company culture. |
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If you were a talent scout you'd have his youngster on the top of your list until you realised he turns 31 in August. |
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It's due to a gap in leadership and talent at many agencies, perhaps an outgrowth of a brain drain caused by the last recession. |
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Perhaps the paper might toy with the idea of further endorsing the country's cartoon talent with a full page of strips? |
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Reviewers and critics paid Swinburne the compliment of identifying him with Sappho and praising his talent as Sapphic. |
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There have been cases whereby judges bypass talent when viewers thought maybe an auditionee deserved to go through to the next round. |
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In 1982, Fei was discovered by a talent scout and entered the entertainment industry. |
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Eurovision is the grandaddy of all talent shows and the Super Bowl of singing. |
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After flying a few missions, Richard showed such talent that he received his own crew and was then a full pilot. |
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I feel sure that the new generation of practitioners has no less talent than that of the great masters of the past. |
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His sheer originality and overwhelming talent guarantees that there is no other performer like him. |
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To put together critical creative teams, the 21 st-century organization must go to urban centers where reservoirs of talent are concentrated. |
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Remember, though, that they are looking for talent so it can be absolutely anything from a tap dance to the whistling of a tune. |
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Or is he a poetaster whose taste is overridden by the dream of a talent he has never possessed? |
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The simple truth is, there is only one man alive who has ever been on-air talent for a successful film critic TV show. |
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Stiles especially shows a talent for deadpan comedy that very few of her recent films have given her the opportunity to show. |
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The cream of local musical talent have come together to perform in aid of this very good cause. |
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It is his skills as a talent spotter, though, that have earned McNeill most plaudits. |
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But I do think it's very high risk, because you don't necessarily listen to all the talent in your newsroom when you're this headstrong. |
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But he was undisciplined, a trait that no amount of talent can ultimately compensate for. |
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There are many people from outside the U.S. involved in scouting or evaluating talent all over the world. |
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The result of their talent and hard work went on display at the museum in an exhibition that is due to end today. |
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The great Oz is not some mighty thaumaturge, he's just a funny little old man with a talent for special effects. |
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There's some great talent here and I'm looking forward to seeing the films. |
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His second album released with Sony showed his talent as a serious music writer of original works. |
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Thomas, only fourteen years older than Henry himself, was a respected mercer with a talent for languages and diplomacy. |
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She was gifted with her hands and had a special talent for knitting and embroidery. |
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Luckily, the discovery of a latent talent for ventriloquism was soon to change his seemingly tragic fate. |
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The talent files are a bit skimpy and limited to director Petersen and the three main actors. |
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Discovering you have a natural talent or aptitude for something feels good. |
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So even when his talent was at last appreciated, he seemed certain to remain an erratic, blowing hot and cold. |
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Tutors at the college were bowled over by her natural artistic talent and offered her a place on the course. |
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It possessed no outstanding dynamic talent save raw, brutal, straight-line speed. |
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Mahler sang his praises, and Puccini said he had twice as much talent as he needed. |
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As a child and as a teenager, I often wrote fiction for pleasure, and was told that I had a talent for it. |
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Acting talent isn't important compared to an ability to schmooze tartily on the red carpet. |
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All of the team possess undoubted talent and they should come good in the weeks to come. |
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Caroline, who is a singer and takes part in local talent competitions, was never able to get up on stage and introduce her own songs. |
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Known to be a talent spotter and a shrewd judge of stories, his very first sitting with Gunasekhar convinced him. |
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We now know it will sacrifice talent and demolish the dignity of a loyal employee for a cartoon version of moral purity. |
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A blinkered approach to spotting talent is regarded as one of the many factors holding back youth development. |
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Yet this nascent talent was now magnified many times and tempered with the force of volunteer telepathists as it drilled achingly, relentlessly. |
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He once again proves himself to be the most fully realized but underused comedic talent in tinseltown. |
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All 16 drivers have been selected through the Red Bull Driver Search Programme, which scouts out young talent from all corners of the globe. |
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They both had that great French talent for making gourmet meals from ordinary materials. |
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Their music is recognised worldwide and their talent as balladeers is limitless. |
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Stacey's parents saw talent in their daughter, who loved tumbling on their front lawn with her best friend. |
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Our main focus is on promoting young talent and we are developing this sponsorship to recognise individuals who aim high and work hard. |
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The reason was that he was extremely musical and showed great talent for the violin. |
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On Sings Pajo introduced his shaky baritone to the world along with a new-found talent for writing great rootsy folk. |
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He was optimistic that the nation would reap medals at the event due to the massive talent and experience in the junior squad. |
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It just so happened that I had the talent to win at another level instead of being the meanie on the tennis court. |
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Kleeblatt is a charming Bavarian with a fine talent for putting together an opera production and choosing a fitting cast. |
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Promotions also let product marketers use popular, high-priced talent at minimal cost. |
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There doesn't appear to be a major drop-off of talent despite the flood of newcomers. |
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Fans have grown frustrated that a player who displayed such talent at Leeds just two years ago is almost unrecognisable now. |
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But, seriously, if any player can match talent with the redoubtable Williams this year, it's Rush. |
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While many of his contemporaries took poetry toward prosiness, he cultivated what turned out to be a dazzling talent for rhyme. |
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The effort is to harness the latent talent in the country in TV production, broadcast journalism and media management. |
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Hopefully it is not the last we will hear from a band with such talent and promise. |
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His oeuvre is rich and deep, betokening a talent reaching beyond chart-toppers, as most anyone familiar with his music can attest. |
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Hollywood had the talent pool and financial impetus to justify cranking them out in large numbers. |
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Fame is winning a televised talent show with a song, and then releasing a couple of singles and an album or two. |
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She mentioned the possibility of bringing in a bloodhound, because of that breed's particular talent in picking up a scent. |
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Augustus John, who had a certain talent but nothing to say, so admired Romany culture that he dressed like one. |
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His employer recognised his talent and encouraged him to attend public lectures on science. |
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But he eventually decided to focus on his own songwriting, headed east, and by 1996 was flexing his talent at open mike nights in New York. |
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You can start to think all singer-songwriters are much of a muchness, until you see a real talent like Liam Frost. |
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This gives you a talent for successfully performing difficult work under tiring circumstances. |
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At least those who were there got a sample of this artist's talent for rhythm and rhyme. |
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If she is not taken in hand and directed on the right lines, hers could be a talent that is, wasted in the desert air. |
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She proved to have such a talent for ballet that she will now be trained with the best in the country. |
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Son of Imelda and Tom, Emmet showed great artistic talent and ability from a very early age. |
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As you can imagine, having such high profile talent draws a sizable crowd of followers. |
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Kate was a popular pupil at school, with a talent for art, music and drama. |
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All the talent in them went into the songs and the dialogue was left to stretch unnaturally between show-stoppers. |
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Trusting in her talent and staying in touch with reality seems to have been the wisest career plan of all so far. |
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This talent to imitate, observable in parrots and some other bird species, is not an ability that can be acquired by coincidence. |
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But her considerable pluck, vivid imagination, and true talent enable her to regain the respect of her judgmental community. |
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His talent was mixed with good humour and his willingness to see the better side of any situation was his great strength. |
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But Graeme Souness wants the former Liverpool star to act as a talent spotter for Rovers. |
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In life he was regarded as an awkward customer, a cranky, eccentric figure with a talent for rubbing people up the wrong way. |
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His talent at piloting was uncanny and he had spent his time mooning about the docks, watching the skimmers. |
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Making his debut in the tournament, Morozevich suddenly found a hidden talent for the art of blindfold chess. |
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In fact theirs is very much a superficial similarity, based on prodigious talent and youth more than anything else. |
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Three top talent spotters will open a new office in Glasgow tomorrow to sign up the cream of the country's new talent. |
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It will be intriguing to see in which direction this important talent heads next. |
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Fund management is a merry-go-round with what talent there is often on the move. |
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Otherwise, his talent for timing, body language, and heroic drama are as solid as ever. |
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The first three players on the books have the talent to form the nucleus of a premiership winning side. |
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His rare talent means Joshua has been termed an art savant, a name given to someone who is gifted in a certain area. |
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At the same time, they'll be scouting out potential talent for their live music venues. |
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On top of mimicking drawings and my mum's handwriting, I also discovered a talent for vocal impressions. |
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Once a year the group stages a talent show, choosing a theme and designing costumes especially for it. |
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The host country and the coach, in particular, made the best of the limited talent at its disposal and beat Italy by a golden goal. |
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Well blow me down if I don't give you an Academy award on the spot for your breathtaking talent and originality. |
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His is a talent meant for all-seater stadiums, a thoroughbred who should be a key player in the Ireland squad at the next World Cup. |
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The press adored him, a prolific, maverick talent who survived on cheap noodles and peanut butter so he could make films with his dole money. |
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It was through Emma's unfaltering belief in his writing talent that he decided to change tack and concentrate more on his own screenplays. |
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Mason has shown signs of the talent that has many calling him this year's rookie sleeper. |
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America identifies and nurtures talent more methodically than any society I have heard about. |
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But there is now a seam of talent in reserve that gets the manager's blood racing. |
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His talent for wringing bitter humor out of miserable lonely men is matchless. |
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Yet they have the ability, potential, talent and prowess to go for big scores. |
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The lowest U.S. peacetime unemployment rate since 1957 has ignited a talent war raging through corporate America. |
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In mitigation, one couldn't help notice the wealth of talent on the sideline. |
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But perhaps I wish we had the talent that we have in fiction in playwriting, because I think our novelists are quite extraordinary. |
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Last Saturday night the Riverbank Arts Centre was thronged with talent and supporters for the Kildare Youth Theatre Talent Competition. |
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Much like the steady drop-off of band members over the years, the rotating talent pool of guest vocal chanteuses has irreparably thinned. |
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We went after the directors and the operation planners, but they are still at large and so are countless foot soldiers and talent spotters. |
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He's also, to varying extents, the producer, publicist, talent scout, music director, photographer, and costume designer. |
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He is currently running talent shows in Dublin in aid of the children's hospital. |
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The students of Padma Seshadri said their half-yearly exams last year were postponed to facilitate their participation in the talent fair. |
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He views hiring as a way to infuse a growing company with much-needed talent and entrepreneurial vigour. |
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They gained local fame on the radio and auditioned successfully for a popular radio talent show. |
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Chen revealed that the two paintings were created in the heyday of the two masters, fully displaying their talent and skill. |
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Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan's untimely death in 1997 robbed Pakistan of an immense talent and world music of one of its twin godheads. |
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Since winning the talent show in February she has been recording a TV showcase. |
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Why is it that with so much talent out there, you guys jump behind something that's only good for its kitsch value? |
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Perez did not emerge as a consistent major league starter until last season, but his talent was discovered much earlier. |
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This was such a senseless act of violence perpetrated upon a great talent and a great man. |
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Pupils at the primary school proved to be a gifted bunch when they staged a talent show. |
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Far from depreciating talent and performance, we prize the exceptional and award prestige, money, and status to those we most want to emulate. |
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She differed from all the other models I had met in that she didn't take drugs and possessed a talent for shrewd observation. |
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Buying the best talent around and then making derogatory remarks about other professionals is a swift route to antagonism. |
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It exposed local musical talent and encouraged a community spirit often lacking in other towns. |
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The new company will represent talent from the worlds of theatre, film, television and literature in Scotland. |
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Apart from showing the artist's immense talent as a painter, the exhibition aims to show that Turner was also a very astute businessman. |
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There's a talent in distinguishing which old-school tune has the bass and catchy guitar riff to place firmly in a rapper's rhyming game. |
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She has deep respect for raw artistic talent and admits there is probably a frustrated artist in her trying to get out. |
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Murray appears to have all the talent to be the player we all want him to be, but the thing he needs most of all right now is time. |
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When I started racing, I did really well in go-karts and saw I had the talent to do it. |
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And his massive talent for riding motorcycles fast also earned him fame, fortune and happiness. |
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We've already had in excess of twenty people audition, and I'd say the average level of talent is in excess of our expectations. |
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Bromley's sporting talent is to be rewarded in the Excellence Awards in recognition of their achievements. |
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All of the parents and mentors looked proudly on as the youngsters put on a display of marvelous talent and skills. |
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Comedy and cabaret also attract large audiences and appear to have a large talent pool. |
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Come on, we chide, they can't have all the wealth, status and talent to boot. |
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With an abundance of talent in the school, it was no surprise to see a troop of students providing the entertainment at the interval. |
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Sykes has a nose for the ball and the talent to be a playmaker, but he sometimes gets caught out of position or lost in traffic. |
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They are long on management talent and typically expect to be involved in the day-to-day operations of acquired businesses. |
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But talent is worthless if it is not combined with hard work, commitment and team spirit. |
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What else one could have asked for, at a time when such shows had become more show-offs than unearthing the talent of the kids. |
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I got to say you have a talent for finding one of the derpiest photos of this guy. |
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Companies that can manage talent well will find that talented people beat a path to their door. |
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A talent for design and beauty makes visual art or architecture a good choice of profession. |
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Most of these advertisers realize they don't have a reservoir of marketing talent of their own at corporate headquarters. |
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But to do so required a lot more scientific and engineering talent than the new nuclear powers have. |
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The emperor's talent for showing himself open to all cultures was also well demonstrated by his relationships with the Jesuits. |
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Fair enough, Scottish football is a comparatively small pond and the reservoir of coaching talent is not exactly boundless. |
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Sport places the poor on a level playing field with rich nations since talent is all that matters. |
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In addition to opening her home, Zena buys expensive clothing for Ifa and applies her talent toward making the young beauty even more dazzling. |
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Looking out over the next five years, it is impossible to forecast how acute the need for intrapreneurial talent will be. |
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The actors and models have a facility to update pictures, even include a showreel and view statistics of pictures sent to talent hunters. |
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At stake will be nothing less than the future of the finest natural boxing talent to come out of the east of Scotland since Ken Buchanan. |
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The nature of her talent is resoundingly dramatic, distinctly different from the more discursive male laureates. |
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By the time he reached his teens he showed precocious talent and at the age of 25 he was a rising star. |
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Madison is a refreshing mature artist with natural talent and strong views about all aspects of her music and career. |
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The plan was temporarily shelved due to capital starvation and a shortage of technology, as well as a lack of talent to carry out the project. |
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One of her most endearing qualities is a talent for comedy, although she is not aware of it herself. |
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Above all, she has a breathtaking fearlessness, and the talent to back up her temerity. |
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Now she joins the literary big time, rubbing shoulders with such veteran talent as Canada's Margaret Atwood. |
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He didn't bring a resume of playoff success, but he had pure talent and the ability to backstop a risk-taking team. |
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Mr Hornby, pictured, is in the saddle as our newest tipster, and hopes his talent for spotting winners rubs off on readers. |
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Top talent spotter Barrie Tait has ended 12-years of Red Devil roving to establish Leeds United's scouting network in the region. |
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They're a tribute to the quality of talent we've been lucky enough to attract to the channel in its first year. |
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Jamie has a reading age of nine and has poor writing and maths skills, but has a talent for working with his hands. |
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So impressed were the talent spotters at the League of Ireland club that they signed David up at the end of the first session. |
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The enclosed facility is Olympic caliber in size and quality, and you'll likely witness local talent of near-similar ability. |
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A former Westhoughton man who had a talent for recording his life and times has left an interesting legacy. |
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I'm not sure if he's scouting future talent or having a little professorial fun with us. |
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It would be too bad if professional boxing had to be stopped because there is a lot of good talent here. |
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It could be said that one of the features of contemporary opera is both the dearth of conspicuous talent and the amount of money pursuing it. |
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His mother, Jini, was an artist and his father, Mark, a farmer with a talent for photography. |
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He is a player of real talent and skill and has the ability to make a real and lasting impression at the highest level. |
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He is short, bespectacled, narrow-shouldered, a big talent in a Woody Allen-esque package. |
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They serve as a reminder of the soccer glory of the city, once a cradle of football talent in the country. |
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Stunning works of art in their own right, they display his artistic talent and great flair for design. |
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It's a decision Kindler makes based on the talent he scouts at the festival. |
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Are too many of the top quarterbacks sliding down the backside of the hill with not enough young talent to replace them? |
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We entertained ourselves with a talent show, boxing matches and tug-of-war duels. |
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He had come all the way from a small village to watch the best of talent gathered from all over the country. |
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Identifying talent and providing an opportunity to exhibit it is of immense importance. |
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His ability to mix music and his emerging studio talent made many artists visit his studio to record. |
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Kalina is also very creative, with a talent for painting and design, and wants to be a fine arts dealer. |
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We were delighted to see such a good crowd and plenty of talent on the night. |
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These creative young people are part of the vanguard of new talent blossoming in our midst. |
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Until now a system hasn't been in place to identify talent and bring it through to the national side. |
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It was a close competition as there was so much artistic talent on display on the day. |
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Most of the players were recommended by a club coach, a talent scout or a high school coach. |
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She sang any chance she could get and was eventually discovered by a talent scout while singing in a club in Philadelphia. |
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It was tasty enough, but I suspect the chef's talent lies with the savoury dishes. |
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Her first public appearance was at the age of four, singing in a local church, followed by local talent shows and stage productions. |
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At the age of 15 he was spotted by a talent scout for Leeds United and signed up, along with 10 others, by new manager Don Revie. |
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She didn't say anything about being found by a talent scout in 10th grade and starring on several TV shows before making it big as a singer. |
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Still a competitor, he branched out into fitness modeling after a talent scout noticed him training in a gym. |
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Bott possesses a mean mullet haircut and a talent for sharpie dancing, amongst other dubious pursuits. |
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He was handpicked by a talent scout who saw he had what it takes to appear in the show. |
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The quartet has been writing new songs so immensely good, their talent scares me sometimes. |
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The decision proved fortuitous when his show at the Red Lion was caught by a talent scout from Reprise, who signed him to the label. |
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Saturday will also feature two large marquees with an array of exhibitors, and a third marquee holding a talent contest. |
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In 1953 a talent scout for Columbia Pictures noticed him in a Broadway play and Lemmon began his Hollywood career. |
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As we celebrate Robinson's arrival and what it meant to baseball and this country, his absolute talent as a ballplayer is well worth remembering. |
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He began his career running discos before becoming a talent scout for a record company. |
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I really can't be bothered to get all dressy for school, though Tahlia tells me I should in case a talent scout is around. |
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Later in the year they will be organizing some student events such as a talent show and international day. |
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Do they act as a reservoir of near-professional talent to plug injury gaps? |
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She performed in talent shows as a child, and by the time she was a teen, she had her own group. |
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She lost in a stunning upset yesterday on the British TV talent show where she had become an international Internet sensation last month. |
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He has involved himself with local events, including being a judge at a charity talent show. |
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To overcome the obvious disadvantages of such callowness, standout toughness or really remarkable talent are required. |
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Rees, a rugby nut, probably noticed that the larger-than-life, if gobby, pupil was developing a talent for sport. |
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This is one of the saddest things for me in baseball because I see a ton of talent there. |
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In these you take the measure of his enormous talent as a draftsman and colorist. |
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That's right. I'm a social deviant, I was born with a special talent for monkey business. |
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The two critical ingredients to the balance between giving advice and taking advice are talent and respect. |
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You had quite a bit of brand name talent involved for an independent, low-budget movie. |
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This was a much deserved honour to a truly wonderful lady, gifted by God with a musical talent second to none. |
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Schlafly has a talent for making irrefutably obvious what was murky a moment before. |
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All the houses have been snapping up as much of the available talent as they feel they can afford. |
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One cannot really blame them because even the best talent in women's athletics have found it difficult to stay afloat in the international arena. |
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The unit has the raw talent and experience to compete with anyone and appears to have the best chemistry of any grouping. |
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They were invited to appear on a BBC talent show in 1976 and within months were given their own half-hour programme. |
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Her brilliance at the keyboard is an inspirational example of how talent can overcome adversity. |
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The intimate setting, the interactive, spontaneous nature of the show and the versatility of the talent make for a fun and unique evening. |
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He has the appearance and acting talent of a male underwear model lifted from a magazine spread. |
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This was Kevin's third win in four years and it just goes to show how much talent this fine young man has. |
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The trouble with this new level of competition is that there wasn't really enough talent to go round. |
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Artistic talent is very often present, but the will to express this talent may be slow to appear. |
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Younis Khan, another young talent rated very highly in his country did his bit at one end. |
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Again, a large pool of talent is available from among the Government servants throughout the country. |
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North Carolina looked far from sharp last week, but talent eventually will win out. |
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We can operate on a level playing field, in which effort, struggle, and talent win out in the end. |
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They had hammered their God-given natural talent into something extra special through dedication and hard work and were examples of modern icons. |
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It's also a shop window for talent scouts from top English clubs, of course, so the prospects are bright indeed for the Cushlough man. |
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It's the biggest shop window for new comedy talent in Europe, and success there can lead to great things. |
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A great big thanks to Kurt Wien for the use of his airplane and his talent to make the air-to-air photo session a success. |
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Week two, however, was just a killer and has me doubting the talent in a lot of areas that I thought were all set. |
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I was waiting for my name to be called, so I could try out for the talent show. |
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Majid, a cricket buff, is reckoned to be a good cricketer who has all the talent to represent the state in interstate championships. |
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He is an unprecedented acting talent that deserves a look or seven, and maybe even a few awards to boot. |
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Her cousins sent a tape of her voice to a talent spotter at a major record company. |
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The strange fascination of talent shows has made them a spectacle that continues to draw attentive audiences. |
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American David Bartley might well have been a drummer if he hadn't discovered his talent for tickling the ivories! |
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Westergren's technical wizardry and talent in exploring linked themes through different mediums are cause for wonder. |
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But if either approaches his former talent level, Offerman will become a highly paid benchwarmer. |
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But if his rugby talent has rarely been questioned, his mental attitude has raised the odd quizzical eyebrow. |
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The acqhire is another example of how top-tier accelerators are becoming talent feeders for big tech companies. |
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That almost supernatural talent for empathy was his greatest political gift. |
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All performers acquitted themselves with considerable talent and enthusiasm and seemed to genuinely enjoy their roles. |
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Her beauty, intelligence, and talent made her well-respected in her tribe, and made her father likely to bend to her will. |
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Filmmakers were quick to spot his talent as he started acting in several small roles. |
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Over more than half a century his talent and intensity have proven big enough to fill any role. |
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His unique talent has earned him a worldwide reputation as the world's most popular phantom. |
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It takes talent to transform a joke into a jocular jewel and the cast of the Mad Mission movies succeeds time and time again. |
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It comes across as a film made by actors with more talent than the script can serve. |
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The nationwide open auditions produced such a wealth of talent that this year the BBC is also inviting back the best of last year's finalists. |
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Martha's self-titled debut shows that raspy, yearning voice to good effect, along with a remarkably-developed songwriting talent all her own. |
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The kids won their leagues as 7th and 8th graders, thanks to their talent and camaraderie. |
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It proves that beneath the showmanship, there is real talent and a deep well of genuine feeling. |
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Of course, not every theater company has such deep wells of musical talent on hand. |
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Who are the tall poppies whose talent and drive must be restricted and restrained? |
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Frankly, if it means being bored to death by a whining old former talent at a rally, I'd give it a miss. |
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As someone with almost no talent for languages at all, I can testify that the program at Macalester was tailor-made for the study of Russian. |
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Yet memory is not as limited, fragile and boring a human talent as it is often thought to be today. |
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Kate herself is well renowned for her talent on the melodeon, yet this was her night to enjoy being around family and friends. |
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They continue to resist the corporate juggernauts that routinely flatten talent into the pap of pop. |
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He has a talent for being a down-and-out guy and he has a natural bent for comedy, as Russ reminded me on the way out of the theater. |
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You start thinking this is the stupidest idea for a motion picture ever conceived and you have no talent to write a movie. |
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There is not a lot of talent jumping out at any new manager or selectors but what we do have is a lot of talented players of the same like. |
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How, it asks, is poetic talent related to worldly success, and ought one to live if the talent burns out? |
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The good news is that the future of British rallying is looking bright, thanks to the burgeoning talent of Guy Wilks and Kris Meeke. |
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Shari developed her talent and her mom thought her little angel was adorable in a tutu and tights! |
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He was surprised to discover what a talent he had for producing sexually explicit pap. |
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How heartening it is in these cruel and trite times to know that real talent may still receive its just reward. |
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Armed with enormous talent and intelligence, Kasparov reigned supreme over the board of 64 squares like none of his great predecessors. |
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Promoting juvenile talent is the lifeblood and future of any sporting club. |
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Soon after he had joined the army, Drake had shown both talent for combat and strategy as well as a nose for top information. |
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Academies costing millions can easily become selective and drain the schools round about of talent and social muscle. |
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I am dead certain we have the talent needed for winning in the Olympic games. |
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For some, whose gifts are not well rewarded financially by our economic value system, time and talent may be the widow's mite that Jesus once praised so thoroughly. |
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This looks to be an actual, honest-to-god service acquisition, and not an acquihire for the engineering talent as has become so common in the Valley of late. |
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Despite the flaws, there was enough expertise in the starters and second course to confirm that there is still a great deal of talent in the Balbirnie kitchen. |
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Everyone wishes her well because she's a great talent and a lovely lady. |
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His daredevil talent catapulted him to global fame as one of the greatest F1 drivers of all time. |
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Apparently scientists are baffled by the endurance of one man who has the rare talent of staring at the sun for hours at a time without injuring his eyes. |
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But that reckons without the special talent which is Thierry Henry. |
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At the age of eight he won his first talent show with his rhyming skills. |
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But will it keep women of talent and substance and mettle and ambition from gunning it forward? |
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It does take a certain talent to take Paul Newman and present the actor without a scintilla of excitement. |
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You've got to realize that there's only five significant British films that come out each year, so there isn't a whole reservoir of talent from which to choose. |
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The curator had wanted the artists to produce work while they were in Europe in order to prove their talent to any skeptics. |
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By thumbing our nose at the world and dismissing the consensus views of the scientific community, we are scaring off that talent and sending it to our competitors. |
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Since I'd found that book lamentable, I asked why so much attention, not to mention lucre, was being thrown at a historian whose chief talent seemed to be self-promotion. |
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It might be wise to save your money until a collection of Morricone remixes is produced that properly highlights the composer's talent for mood and atmosphere. |
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The man's principal talent is for spinning self-serving tales. |
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Robinson, meanwhile, brought class, writing talent and a voice to die for. |
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She first came to national attention on the hit talent show American Idol. |
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Gently melancholic ageless classic from the lost talent of English song. |
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