She bade me goodnight and walked away, swaying only slightly, and humming an off-key tune under her breath. |
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He played stuff, the like of which you've never heard, and every tune blew your socks off. |
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I don't understand how people tune into the fashion zeitgeist, nor how they work out what's in and what's out. |
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Homer speaks of a flute player piping a tune to which men rhythmically stomped grapes. |
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She's in tune with trends, but she's a confident individualist when it comes to style. |
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To tune the focal length continuously, optical designers have developed the zoom lens, which consists of a group of lenses. |
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To be fair, the irresponsibility of this government is perfectly in tune with the irresponsibility of governments everywhere. |
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That also explains why he's gone to America, a much bigger media market and an area more closely in tune with his political beliefs. |
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The ensign above him flapped restively in tune with the men under his inspection. |
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Could you just sing the tune of the hymn rather than the hundred and fifty-seven little twiddly bits? |
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The stage fright seemingly mounted when he had to tune up in front of a full room anticipating his first song of the set. |
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Too few people appreciate the genious of the Constitution and the gentleness of economies that are in tune with natural market laws. |
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He can get a bit boring, because over and over again, it's the same tune with more twiddly bits. |
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The wind occasionally blew cotton fluff into the set, which made you feel really in tune to the emotional side of the play. |
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He folds his chair and, chin high, marches across the street to a military tune that haunts his mind. |
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As if to counterpoint the tension, a rollicking square-dance-inspired tune by Smith's sister, Soozie Tyrell, fills the room. |
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Fellow Finnish button-accordionist Kimmo Pohjonen supplies a peaceful closing tune named after Finland's national flower, the lily of the valley. |
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The State has yet to fine tune a foolproof system by which accidents can be prevented. |
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Such music would probably have sounded disturbingly out of tune to Renaissance ears. |
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There's not a duff tune on it, but one track in particular justifies the purchase of the entire album. |
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The tune evokes clowns in bloomers and lion tamers, even for those who have never been under the big top. |
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No one's forcing anyone to buy skybox seats, tune in to Monday Night Football or plunk down a Ben Franklin for that replica jersey. |
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The tune seemed like a joke, the kind of thing you would forward onto friends who appreciated LOLcats humour. |
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The foursome will also attend a four day training camp at Coffs Harbour to fine tune team tactics prior to the championships. |
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My dad was a big big fan of Ry Cooder when I was growing up, and I can remember frugging wildly to a tune or two by him. |
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What rubbish would you have to tune into on another channel to avoid the sight of us lot in action on the telly next June? |
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For some people it's all about the song, and they just can't find the tune beneath all the fuzzy guitar noise. |
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From early morning, the general atmosphere was calm and relaxed, more in tune with a public festival than a mass protest. |
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We can no longer believe what our negative emotions are telling us, because prajna is bringing us in tune with deeper truths. |
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She was still garbed in his clothes and her hips were swaying slightly to the tune she was humming. |
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I usually tune into a show only after my critic chums have geeked out over it so often that I feel naked without an opinion. |
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We tune skis, mend Gore-tex, modify toys, and attack piles of forgotten gear on total faith that it will snow before Christmas. |
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As the evening progressed, the accordion player moved on from more traditional tales of woe to sing the theme tune from Love Story in Finnish. |
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With the theme tune in the background of your mind, it is just too much to handle! |
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In tune with the usual modus operandi of the industry, the audio was released on Wednesday and people struggled to find parking place. |
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Ultimately they tune out, and the social justice movement takes another step backwards. |
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Today's bagatelle is a familiar tune played by The Torero Band featuring the arrangements of Moorhouse. |
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Where some vocals are half backed and hang baggily over the grooves of the music, Lukie's works with the tune and blends perfectly into the mix. |
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I say thankfully because I'm not looking for electioneering when I tune into Bill Maher. |
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I start eating my deep fried strips of beef in honey and chilly sauce in tune to elevator music. |
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She was still very young, perhaps eleven at the eldest, and was humming a soft tune under her breath. |
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A charming, and thankfully short, tune with two different and rather difficult to discern time signatures. |
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They were angry, but they had a sense of humour and knew how to tune their guitars. |
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She had to play it all by ear, and this tune had some glaringly discordant harmonies. |
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He's served as an Air Force bandsman for 20 years and can just as easily strike a tune on an English horn. |
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That he can stay in tune and hit insinuating low notes isn't in doubt, but could he possibly sound any more detached? |
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So, whether you're in the mood for dozing off, or feel like punching your name in drywall, there's a tune suitable for every temperament. |
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The acoustic guitar sounds a strangled folk tune and the scrape of the strings is sourced and dragged through the track. |
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Some parents have noticed their babies quietening when a familiar song or TV theme tune comes on. |
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Instead of appearing on the silver screen she will be singing the theme tune to the film. |
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They are endotherms and they can finely tune the thermal, water, and chemical balance of their bodies from minute to minute. |
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Mary was sitting on the bed, tapping her foot and humming a tune as she set her needles, thimble, and thread into a sack. |
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A delightful scene has them alone in the gym, dancing pas a deux to an uptempo rock tune and obviously having the time of their lives. |
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He took the cash when he was in debt to the tune of several thousand pounds. |
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With tvguide, I can grab what's on the site quickly, grep it and tune in something interesting on my TV card. |
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It's a tune about the great inventor Tesla's attempt to create a death ray. |
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Even the proceedings of the programme were different in tune with its central theme. |
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I like to speak in Tibetan, but prefer to write in English, I like to sing in Hindi but my tune and accent are all wrong. |
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He was playing a tune that was almost identical to Rod Stewart's Sailing but wasn't quite, presumably for copyright reasons. |
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Kevin played a tune on the tin whistle for me before I left for fourth class. |
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Still, we carry on cheerfully, whistling a merry tune as we stir it all up with a wooden spoon. |
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I think by the way, you might think of having trumpets and trumpeters do your signature tune when have you a new one. |
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In the key of A minor, this lively marching tune in triple meter uses only two fingers in the right hand and four in the left. |
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The tune and the Kiss-like pyro are the same, yet his entrance gets a bigger pop now than ever before. |
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Listening to recorded birdsong is only one of many ways on the Internet to tune in to real animal voices. |
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I think this particular ecofeminist was saying that we should all be in tune with the sacred cycles of life. |
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He also attempted to fine tune the money supply with mintage of new gold coinage and adulterated silver coins. |
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I thought that there should be a trimmer somewhere on the radio to tune the stations in stronger. |
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Order a steak, tune in to that trendy trip hop and soak up a classy laid back vibe. |
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Those in tune with local film gossip have been waiting for Hussain's vision to hit the big screen for a long time. |
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So if you tune into the radio station this week, we will give you all the details about the programmes and the times they will be broadcast. |
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They tune in to the soft voice of an instructor, gently urging them to forge a union between mind and body. |
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Being in tune with nature is the easiest and only way of ensuring a life of contentment and happiness. |
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Ruth smiled and fingerpicked some more, a tune not going anywhere, just noodling. |
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A few days after that fateful jam session, Rocky was sitting at home, fingering his guitar to a tune only he knew. |
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As she started humming the tune and pulled out a stack of papers from the only file in her filing cabinet, the phone rang. |
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I tune in for the fashion firsts, the fashion faux pas, and to see what's in fashion. |
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A mouth organ provides the tune and Kate uses her voice to provide the anger and bitterness the words deserve. |
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Nevertheless, the crowd didn't seem to mind these trifles too much as they danced and sang in tune to the band's peppy, upbeat funk-rock. |
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Birds were singing, in tune to the slow movement of water over the pebbles. |
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If you close the account before the end of the 12 months, you'll be penalised to the tune of one month's interest. |
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Several London churches are mentioned in the rhyme, and the original tune mimicked the peals of their bells. |
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Their paymasters there are clearly totally out of tune with the UK public on these issues. |
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The kazoo always sounds daft, and the Swanee whistle is almost impossible to play a recognisable tune on. |
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In tune with the tradition of worshipping nature, the Kanuma festival is dedicated entirely to cows and oxen. |
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Within a couple of hours, however, they had changed their tune in the wake of negative feedback and agreed to discuss the situation further. |
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Damon's dark outline is by a large stereo, which he promptly flips on to an upbeat cha-cha tune and turns. |
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Almost every church in the area was represented, and there were half a dozen bands striking up a tune for the event. |
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If he is out of tune why is he favourite, and if Leona sings with a strengthless whistle why is she second favourite. |
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Then The Smiths came on Top of the Pops with an odd, catchy tune called This Charming Man. |
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A song with a catchy tune and outstanding lyrics might do a lot to fill the cinema theatres. |
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It is a very catchy tune and is getting a lot of airplay on the local radio stations. |
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Both her tone and her tune epitomize soul and bring her character, a washed-up cabaret dancer, to life. |
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The muted, playful tone feels off, contrasting harshly with the mysterious slamming doors and the solemn tune Marianne plucks on the piano. |
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He showed no sign of being effected by my harsh look, as he remained his annoying self, humming some tune I was vaguely familiar with. |
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This is essential listening for guitarists, but fans of left-of-centre music would be well advised to also tune in. |
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The tune to which the words are set is rather more interesting, being the Old Prussian March. |
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The grille design is certainly in tune with the aggressive trends of the moment, but not as in-your-face as some. |
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A tinny piano plays a bouncy ragtime tune over faded sepia photos, unwittingly romanticizing an era now long past. |
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Look around a synagogue when a cantor offers a new tune for prayer, and both sides of the debate will become apparent. |
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Students of all ages were encouraged to tune into Cantonese radio and television daily, Leung added. |
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I'm doing BFBS next Friday at 1.30 pm, so if you know any squaddies, get them to tune in. |
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It was the only tune with vocals in the entire program and everyone in the house sang along. |
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Thanks to the sailor who bugled a tune for the group as well as the several songs we heard over the radio. |
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The novice whistler should resolve to not leave this place until they can hold a tune and maybe perform a few minor key scales. |
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Other than that, it's 6.30 ish, so I'm away to Oxford, whistling a happy tune and lugging a bag that feels like I've packed it for about a month. |
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His classmates told me how good Robert was at whistling and he whistled a tune for me. |
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Stephen came strolling in, whistling a tune he had just heard on the radio. |
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Julius smiled and began whistling an old tune he liked as he walked down one of the many corridors of the colony. |
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The figure slowly walked into the room whistling a familiar tune of one of his favorite bands. |
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They have a Williams Sonoma, and I was picking up some useless items for gifts when I heard the bouncy tune on the speakers above. |
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Armed with read-write data, library managers can fine tune performance and ensure that all disks are operating at appropriate levels. |
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If he doesn't change his tune the Democrats will eat him alive on this one. |
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I thought Knight was doing an Anastacia as this album opened to the rock-tinged tune of her latest single Come As You Are. |
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Arizona's other urban pillar, Tucson, seems more in tune with the desert, and uses local trees and plants to landscape gardens and parks. |
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Not a word did he speak to the little girl, but began singing a little ditty, an old tune full of light and the sun's laughter. |
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He is more in tune with what the coaches want, and he's playing the ball much better. |
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He was born into a family of musicians, and by the age of four he could play any tune by ear. |
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In a society as dominated by consumerism as America, cash tills often ring in tune with the national mood. |
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Smiling, the child started to plink the tune away, in a light, merry, happy-go-lucky way. |
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Emotional logic is a language that sometimes isn't easy for Libran minds to tune in to. |
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In the nearby field, a heavily yoked yak drags the wooden plough through the rocky soil to the singsong tune of his master. |
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Although the tax cut helped ignite a boom on Wall Street, it didn't do much to change the tune of the city's intransigent legislators. |
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And another when he serenaded them with a banjo while plucking the theme tune to 1970s hick-horror flick Deliverance. |
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With a deep breath, Jeananne plucked at her harp and sang a shrieking tune to the only audience member without the means to block out sound. |
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Whether hip-hop, classical, or traditional, the tune you carry will be an obvious conversation piece. |
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The canonic working of the tune in the accompaniment is most ingenious. |
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This much we know: the UK is a net contributor to the EU to the tune of around £12bn a year. |
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The Department for Work and Pensions has funded the schemes since April 2013 to the tune of £180m a year. |
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In addition, the centralised nature of the system is not in tune with the needs of high-quality research. |
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It brought me more in tune with the need to increase the supply of affordable, good quality housing in this province. |
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It is more in tune with today's markets and younger, more mobile demographic. |
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I followed up on this question because it is in tune with the previous one. |
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The association can learn how to offer a particular service, what aspects are involved and how to tune the service to members' wishes. |
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In our example: « You appeared to be in tune with me when I exposed the way the estimates were built. |
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It's a subtle mix, as you have to find the right dose to keep up the pace and be in tune with your machine. |
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It is also bad business, since the stations and the newspapers must be in tune with their markets. |
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In FM mode, turn clock wise to tune down and turn counter clockwise to tune up. |
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If all you do is focus on technical specifications and features, the audience will tune out and look elsewhere for solutions. |
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Instead of the fast dance mix, which had been blasting from the speakers for most of the night a slow ballad hummed its tune through the chilly night air. |
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Have your mechanic tune up your vehicle according to the maintenance schedule or once a year. |
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The Truth seekers can also tune up to such uprising energies and move upwards along with it. |
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A bouncy Dean Martin tune plays as the thick-necked thugs tear into one another. |
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Media reports allege that the EU has provided the Turkish army with funding to the tune of EUR 13 million. |
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I have spent a lot of time training my voice and making sure that when I go to the studio I'm not pitchy and I'm not out of tune and I'm quick. |
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It sometimes helps to sight a growler visually then tune the radar for maximum return. |
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It's just, why not make it so clear that even the biggest Anti-Federalist looney tune can't misinterpret the meaning? |
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This option would be in tune with the EU's general policy interest in backing moves towards regional integration. |
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Members of the Royal Family wish any elements of protocol to be in tune with what is generally acceptable in Canadian society. |
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After putting the finishing touches to an instrument, he plucks a mournful tune which fills the workshop, his big brown eyes briefly lost in thought. |
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He re-recorded the tune in 1964 and that version has been used ever since. |
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Canada has always made an effort to harmonize and be in tune with American policies. |
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The pocket-sized TU-80 runs on batteries and can tune almost any instrument, thanks to a chromatic tuning mode and ultra wide tuning range. |
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I used to listen to John Peel in the late seventies and early eighties when radio one was still on AM only and you had to tune it exactly or you got Radio Moscow interfering. |
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In order to be in tune with its time, the case is shaped into curves and modernized. |
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Remember that kid at the back of the class who would tune out and sketch the most fantastic characters you ever saw? |
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The pre amp is also equipped with a Mute Out to tune the instrument soundlessly. |
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If they are not interested in a programme, they may tune out or turn the set off. |
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They embrace as the polka tune that repeats in her head returns. |
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The first tune was the Goltrai, a sad plaintive tune for all who died. |
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String up with SP strings so you can stay in tune longer and play with confidence. |
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Students can also focus on the large amount of background noise they tune out most of the time. |
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A familiar tune billows above us, and we are carried along by it for a short distance. |
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The romantic opening theme that sets the scene for this core is typical Warbeck, an emotionally inflexed tune of great beauty and sentimental charm. |
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Wozniak was not the only Canadian to shine on centre court at the Wimbledon tune up event on Tuesday. |
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It is very difficult to convey too much information over the telephone and the interviewer may tune out lengthy answers. |
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If you can stay in tune with yourself, it's actually easier to connect up to the outside world. |
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If it was something that a bunch of adults did, they would likely tune out. |
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But in the end, I enjoyed being able to think up a tune or a composition from a just a loop and an atmosphere. |
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This brings us to the final misconception, namely that the Internet is helping to counteract young Canadians' tendency to tune out of politics. |
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And then once more, he marched off, whistling a merry tune as he went. |
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With that she walked away whistling a tune off the top of her head. |
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You can tune the list of settings depends on a current active language of the language support system. |
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In the meantime, those of us who never hold a tune or tread the boards could still do more to keep that hippocampus happy. |
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The whole of the sung portion of the tune lasts a mere sixteen bars in four-four time, barely enough space for a jazz ensemble to clear its collective throat. |
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Textbooks are updated every year, to ensure our educational program is in tune with the times. |
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Sanjeet let himself out, whistling a tune from a 1960's movie. |
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It's quite catchy, but so is influenza, and the exposure needed to set the tune in your brain suggests that the response is Pavlovian rather than genuine in nature. |
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Any such attempt will have implications to the tune of thousands of dollars considering the evolving trends in the global cultured pearl industry. |
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One of the more memorable scenes in the book, at least for me, has Smith observing a working-class woman whistling a tune while hanging out the washing. |
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Comfortable soft touch, the Mavic handlebar tape is the perfect add-on to tune your bike and demonstrate your Mavic addiction. |
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Such an approach would also be more in tune with the growing omnipresence of technology. |
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At the camp, Adrien meets Paul, who has a sixth sense and is very in tune with Adrien. |
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British viewers can tune into Graham Norton's dulcet tones for live coverage on BBC1 tonight. |
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Tip up or down on the center bar to tune in the station you want assigned to the selected preset number. |
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The Inverness Pipe Band, aboard a local boat, struck up a tune as it got closer to the ships. |
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She was just trying to tune out her sister's endless gabber. |
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They support themselves on one hand while waving their legs elegantly to the tune of their tuneless music. |
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One of the ways it envisions getting out of that deficit is to increase payroll taxes to the tune of billions of dollars down the road. |
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The Ministry of Culture subsidizes this event to the tune of 50,000 dinars per year. |
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For something extra, tune a portable radio to an unused channel in the FM band. |
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Already in 2001, Switzerland was involved in the EU Framework Programme with over a thousand projects, backed to the tune of CHF 120 million. |
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Unfortunately, the ending comes far too abruptly and consequently feels kind of preachy and not at all in tune with the feeling of the rest of the play. |
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You can find the lyrics for Change SHRA, SHRA, sung to the tune of Que Sera, Sera at www.chfc.coop. |
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This guitar virtuoso presents Cubamenco, an enchanting voyage to the tune of flamenco and cuban rhythms, all with a jazz flavour. |
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I think we're growing out branches to the tune of north of 20 in any given year, and have been for quite some time. |
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Some patients feel so overwhelmed when faced with complicated medical information that they tune out or misinterpret what is said. |
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If necessary, use an eye mask, ear plugs, or white noise to help tune out disruptions. |
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The Whistler automatically change the global height of the tune to let the notes fit on the tin whistle. |
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Many on the right are convinced they are more in tune with the public than Mr Cameron's cautious, languidly metropolitan inner circle. |
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The two other groups, who felt slighted in the Turkish era, now feel more in tune with the neighbouring states Serbia or Croatia. |
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Just turn on your radio, tune it to 87.9 and you are good to go. |
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My parents always seemed to be understanding people but recently they have changed their tune and want to know what I am doing and where I am going all the time. |
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He also accuses environmentalists, who were happy last year when the task force report came out, of changing their tune and saying the city needs a new garbage strategy. |
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He sings the Schutzmannlied, a tune that makes fun of the self-importance of the Berlin police and its folly. |
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Success to the tune of a massive worldwide tour of 120 venues with an average capacity of 12,500 fans. |
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Musicologist would make a fuss if I was saying that you can tune your guitar with that software? |
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Bizarrely enough, an odd little comic tune plays as background music. |
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You can select new settings before you scan an item to fine tune exactly how you want to scan it. |
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The tune was so pure, it reminded Katrina of all the good things in life. |
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The state would compensate the landlord for his lost dues or services to the tune of four-fifths of the capital value of the allotments he was ceding. |
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He could basically tune his guitar to the room, find out how the room responded to the amplifier, and dial it up so he could have maximum control of the feedback. |
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But it was not so much Django's dress sense that blew people away, it was his incredible talent for reproducing a tune he had only heard once. |
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Unlike most city workers with their regimented hours, lumberjacks toiled in tune with the changing seasons and available daylight. |
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Last, in line with its strategy, Boralex continues to fine tune its thermal power stations' output according to market conditions. |
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Significant work has been done on the product to fine tune a very ambitious new version. |
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Set the performance capacity of this node relative to others in the domain to fine tune load balancing. |
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However, due to variations in the left margins and other variables it may be necessary to fine tune these settings at the beginning of each roll. |
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We still have some points to improve about engine power delivery and chassis set up but we have two sessions more to fine tune the bike tomorrow. |
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Full educational coverage for children has not been achieved because the principles and goals announced are out of tune with reality. |
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As it approached the hangar, the sound system played the grandiose theme tune to Air Force One, a thriller starring Harrison Ford as a tough, embattled president. |
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As the average age of wagon is high their technical characteristics are often out of tune with today's market requirements. |
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You may also wish to fine tune your strategies for coping with stress or eliminating it whenever possible. |
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The secrets of death are hidden in Scorpio and are revealed to those who turn inwards and tune into the inner being. |
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In order to fine tune sensitivity to interest rates, use can be made of interest swaps and other derivatives. |
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If it is good old-fashioned, nail-biting, tension gripped, nerve jangling action you are looking for, then tune in to the weekly Championship episode. |
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This is a patronising and complacent attitude and one that is completely out of date and out of tune with where we are today. |
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Response: The notion that age equates to grade is out of tune with what we know about individual differences. |
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Bad policies have distorted the output of the educational systems to become grossly out of tune with the requirements of the labor market. |
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His delivery is so smooth that it appears extemporaneous, but his analyses and the provocative bombs he drops hit with such precision that he played this tune before. |
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The music-hall song was a mass-produced article, with a select few numbers achieving immortality by virtue of an inspired tune or a good catchphrase. |
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There is one dive I need to fine tune so the next time I can be on the podium. |
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Use the tune pop-up menu to choose the basic transposition and register of Zebra2 and the fine tune to fine tune 50 cent up or down. |
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I never yet could make out why Saul threw a javelin at David, but if that was the tune he played on his harp I can understand it, and justify it as well. |
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If you tune into music in order to relax or lift your spirits, that's great because music can certainly inspire those things. |
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A signature tune was also used to herald the entrance of an individual performer in variety shows, a practice that continues on some television chat-shows. |
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A typical fuging tune places the tune in the tenor voice and harmonizes it with block chords. |
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All were well spaced, in time with the music and in tune with each other. |
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And governments that were opposed to the war were buoyed and emboldened by being in tune with their electors. |
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Never a man to suffer fools gladly, Monroe stalked off the stage before he was halfway through the first tune and never came back. |
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Hoisted up in the space of the cellars, each of them resonates to a different tune and radiates a light unique to it alone. |
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At first the student hesitated with the chord changes and fumbled quite often, messing up accidentals in the tune as we jumped from key to key and so on. |
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Attention deficit disorder is not a social disease, but the show tune excuses juvenile delinquency as a social disease. |
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How I envy my Other Half, who can not only boast a fine whistling technique, but who can summon up a veritable oompah band whenever he's got a tune on the brain. |
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The dissonant frequencies can dominate the fundamental frequency, thus you may have to tune this one accordingly. |
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The barren trees were in tune with the sense of desolation all around. |
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His soloing, particularly on Hootie's Blues and his confessed favourite tune Cherokee is said to have set off wild dancing and fevered excitement among the concert goers. |
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The discussion will be live-streamed, so if you're interested, tune in. |
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A chorale tune in Dorian mode is fragmented and turned in on itself. |
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With its straightforward narrative, show tune chestnuts and quaint, old-world coziness, the show is a guaranteed crowd pleaser for the Sunday matinee crowd. |
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Human speculation can no more anticipate God's mind than forecast what tune the wind whistles as it blows over the Rockies. |
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Then there are snippets of absorbing esoterica, such as the fact that Mozart wrote the tune to Twinkle Twinkle Little Star, or that Vienna has its own Vegetable Orchestra. |
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Great Scott, who would have thought that this would be the destiny of the Union Volunteer in 1861-2 while marching down Broadway to the tune of 'John Brown's Body. |
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We don't see that playing out of tune or singing off-key is revolutionary. |
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The tune plunked out on the pianoforte was ridiculously simple, and even then, Clara made many obvious mistakes, creating chords that were hurtful to the ear. |
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Few Democrats even in South Carolina will bother to tune in to the dutiful TV stations that are running the 90-minute gabfest on May 3rd. |
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For God's sake, is it not enough to be in debt to the tune of EUR 4 700 billion? |
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While continuing to fine tune it, I truly believe that our model must be arduously defended. |
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Mr. Gates's view certainly seems to be in tune with the electorate these days. |
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I have confidence in Mr Barroso as a good conductor for an orchestra that has yet to tune up. |
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Casting off the conventional boxy image of a utility, sporty and dynamic lines are in tune with the rest of Mazda's passenger vehicle lineup. |
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Indeed, one needs to be in tune with these issues, but there needs to be legislation that includes what we consider to be essential safeguards. |
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The signature tune fades up, holds for 5 seconds, then the music, quizmaster's voice, applause and cheering fade out. |
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A brief, jaunty, martial tune in the clarinets leads immediately into the yearning melody sung by cellos. |
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So if you're looking for a taste of something different, pack your appetite, tune up your taste buds and head to Ottawa this autumn! |
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Not to say that we develop search engine friendly pages, and tune up eash image. |
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So during zazen, concentrate your attention on the navel, tune your breathing, or tune your navel with your breathing. |
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For Human Resources, we need to be in tune with demographics and impacts on employers' training needs. |
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The idea was in tune with the times and had already been discussed after Balboa's discovery of the Pacific. |
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Competitors will don their costumes, tune up nothing and attempt to thrash and headbang their way into the grand final in London. |
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The roses were in bloom, two nightingales soliloquized in the boskage, a cuckoo was just going out of tune among the lime trees. |
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He may pitch on some tuft of lilacs over a burn, and smoke innumerable pipes to the tune of the water on the stones. |
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As a result, the Japanese found themselves having to dance to a new tune and it was one they were scarcely familiar with. |
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John Goss, who wrote the hymn tune for Praise, My Soul, the King of Heaven, came from Fareham. |
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The author of the tune is unknown and it may originate in plainchant, but a 1619 attribution to John Bull is sometimes made. |
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The first published version of what is almost the present tune appeared in 1744 in Thesaurus Musicus. |
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Stereophonics also performed the original opening theme tune for the TV series Long Way Round. |
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But whereas the welfare state could not be easily adapted to fit with the way the world was going, Germany's foreign policy turned out to be far more in tune with the new challenges of an interdependent world. |
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We tune in to AFFLECK's interior monologue. |
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As a result of all this the Department of Marine and Fisheries settled down to a comfortable jogtrot of precedence and custom which, if nowadays far short of acceptable standards, was then in tune with the facts of life. |
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I dare say she would sing a different tune had she searched in vain for her spouse, as I did, through the rubble of the decimated United States Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya, two and a half years ago. |
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Even though they praise the natural beauties of their country, they sing a different tune when it comes to its society and the country's political ruling class. |
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Slides of famous Kurdish writers and singers interleave with quant villages and mighty mountaintops to the epic tune of what sounds like a Kurdish version of Star Wars' Imperial March. |
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We should find in ourselves the true fundamental morals and be in tune with ourself, everyone has his own personnality and has got to accept himself and recognise himself the way he is without complacence nor shame. |
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Such an outcome should contribute to strengthening the stability and security of Kosovo and the region as a whole, and be in tune with the spirit and the trends of regional cooperation. |
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He is the great disturber and his ideas often unsettle us and yet, as we know, only those with imagination and a readiness to be disturbed will be in tune with the call of discipleship. |
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He put his slant on the session as usual, though this turned out not to be in tune with the opera singer who had envisaged a very conventional portrait. |
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If this experiment in coordinated global security and survival is to succeed, it must be in tune with the pulse of the international community in as many ways as possible. |
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It is essential that the tools that school boards develop be continually reviewed and be in tune with the development characteristics of children in a minority setting. |
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People want the benefit of the knowledge translation work, but the NCCMT does not appear to be in tune with the various public health people in the field as much as they need to be. |
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Evolis, the European leader in solutions for plastic card personalization, leverages innovation to always be in tune with market changes and offer the latest encoding technologies for plastic badges and cards. |
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They were playing at full volume one of these incredibly rich tune from Central Asia, a surprisingly harmonic chaos, where instruments are so numerous that if one comes to miss, it doesnt make any difference. |
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The popular tune adds zest to such a uniting and lively song of praise. |
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A familiar tune was playing, albeit a peculiar rendition of it. |
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Immerse yourself in fresh produce, gourmet delicatessen products, bargain clothing and all manner of goods to the tune of buskers and the bustle of the local crowd. |
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People tend to tune out what they believe is useless information. |
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This is still only a higher frequency of mentation, but it is a very difficult one to tune into unless you have mastered the observer and the one-pointedness exercises. |
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Top honours go to the electric power-assisted steering system. Its state of tune permits slop-free high-speed driving with direct linear response and low-effort manoeuvrings when parking. |
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An elderly and somewhat scatterbrained lady, who repeatedly whistled a strange tune is threatened, attacked and appears to have suddenly disappeared from view. |
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Dreamily or jocosely harmonious in the late Renaissance and the Baroque Age, ancient sculpture had to be severe or melodramatic at the time of the Revolution and the Empire, in tune with the sound of incessant war. |
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