The earrings had been masterfully shaped into three ivy vines that wove around each other. |
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The men also raised cotton and wove it into cloth, robes, blankets, and textiles. |
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Then as he walked, he wove the splits into a basket to be traded at the store for whatever provisions the family needed. |
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Her fingers carefully twisted the strands together, and wove her long red hair smooth so it looked like silk. |
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During the night, a number of spiders came and wove their webs all across the mouth of the cave. |
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The northern tribes on the Northwest Coast, such as the Tlingit, wove the most elaborate textiles. |
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The pair soon wove their magic around Thom Yorke's haunting vocals and were promoted to the ranks of producers. |
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A cool breeze wove its gentle fingers through the flora, then through each of my chocolate locks and down my spine. |
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After they wove through the crowd, he continued to be a gentleman and handed her a champagne flute filled with a sparkling, bubbly liquid. |
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Servants wove their way through the crowd, dressed in the palace livery and offering refreshments on platters. |
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With her shoes strings tied together and the soles slung over one shoulder, Haley wove through the crowds on her rollerblades. |
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Abe wears his signature field trip hat that he wove with juncus and deergrass. |
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He wove a web of deceit to cover his violent past and duped the entire community into believing he was a war hero and former CIA operative. |
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I would be the only one fully clad on the jetboat as we wove in and out of the harbours along the Riviera. |
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In the cotton industry, for example, most firms either spun yarn or wove cloth, which was in turn sent to an independent dyer and finisher. |
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They were farmers of arid land who built adobe houses in cliffs, grew miniature sweetcorn and squash, wove baskets and made beautiful clay pots. |
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I wove the Cinderella Fairy Tale into this story so you'll be seeing quite a few things from that fairy tale altered to fit my story. |
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The vegetation also provided splints from which the Indians wove baskets, which were considered vital for religious use. |
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Maori scraped it with mussel shells, wove it into fishing nets, made eel traps and tukutuku panels to decorate whare. |
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The city benefited enormously from but refused historic equality to Africanism that wove itself so thoroughly through New Orleans culture. |
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Then she took a tangle of rope, tied all their legs together, and wove a long cord through those bonds. |
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Many of the second and third generation of settlers grew flax and spun and wove yarn in addition to tending a small farm. |
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Applying orange paint with a small roller, he wove a continuous, scribblelike band of color throughout the 25-foot-high space. |
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In his concerts abroad he held his aristocratic, cultivated audiences enrapt as he wove his piano improvisations. |
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Flying in, I had been mesmerized by sinuous curves of sloughs and streams which wove together, then apart, meandering toward the gulf. |
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We know that they hunted animals with bows and arrows and that they wove textiles using looms. |
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And in conversation he wove a fantastic tapestry of myths about his personal life. |
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Jennifer wove her way through the crowd and guests, to the other side of the rather large cabin. |
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Balloons, posters and ribbons decorated the vehicles as they wove their way through the area. |
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Earlier generations used sennit grass or pulled the fiber from the shells of coconuts and wove them into rope. |
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This system wove together firms sold off in the 1980s, such as Havas, a marketing group, and Paribas, a bank, through cross-shareholdings. |
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Like a magician waving his magic wand, McGrath took on the guise of Merlin as he wove his magic, enrapturing his team-mates, opponents and adoring masses. |
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Women habitually baked bread, churned butter, brewed beer, sewed clothes, knitted stockings, spun yarn, and even sometimes milled flour and wove cloth. |
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We set out for the neighbouring village of Kethan, where simple weavers wove the delicate fabric of cotton and silk embroidered with gold and silver. |
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Laid paper is formed on a surface made from thin parallel wires held together every inch or so by chain wires whilst wove paper is formed on a woven wire cloth. |
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Konah watched as his mother's deft hand wove in and out in an ornate pattern, transforming even the beautiful soft rose-coloured silk into something far more lovely. |
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A few mills had looms on the property, but most weavers wove at home. |
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The government's working group on chronic fatigue syndrome and myalgic encephalomyelitis wove patients' assertions into the scientific research in its report. |
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After a few other steps, women put the flax fibers on the spinning wheel, bleached the thread with water and ashes, wove it on a loom and bleached the linen again in the sun. |
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Queen Victoria, six pence sterling, green, imperforate, wove paper, 7?d, from the Pence Issue. |
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Queen Victoria, one half penny, lilac rose shade, imperforate, wove paper,?d, from the Pence Issue. |
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Queen Victoria 1ยข paler green, imperforated pair on vertical wove paper, without gum. |
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He wove the cotton cloth, which he wore as a dhoti and made the leather sandals he wore on his feet. |
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A mating pair wove in the current above a redd, braiding the water with their bodies, releasing eggs and milt as if pollinating a flower. |
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The two plays he wove around this loner who yearned for love and happiness are masterpieces of profound theatricality. |
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Men kept bees in hives made from logs and women collected raffia and wove mats. |
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Keeping close behind the guide, Allie soaked in the beautiful surroundings while they wove their way through the a beaten path in the thick forest. |
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In the Latin American program, a salsa or meringue beat wove through any gathering of the project's Community Kitchen. |
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They wove huge mats of willow poles and laid them down in cutbanks as revetments. |
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Salish groups near the Georgia Strait wove robes of mountain goat wool and also of wool from a special breed of shaggy dog. |
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Women of Athens wove the peplos or robe to be presented to the statue of Athena Polias on the Acropolis, embroidered with a scene of the battle with the Giants. |
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In this way they wove a cat's cradle of cross-claims on each other: one bank's liability was another bank's asset. |
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He allegedly wove the funds into the party's account by writing receipts to party supporters for donations they never made. |
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She took a deep breath and awkwardly wove the unfamiliar implement between her fingers. |
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So Mr Finder wove those titbits into a political thriller instead. |
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A new Sound and Light Show for 2005 featured music and songs from different cultures and languages and wove them into a tapestry of multicultural sounds. |
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To compensate, my hand wove a defensive echelon, drawing proto-matter from the vcast generator to create a floating shield. |
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While these projects focused on capacity building and institutional development, at the same time they wove these elements into components that had a direct conservation emphasis. |
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His plots were carefully constructed, and he often wove elements from topical events into his narratives. |
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Patience is needed, as is the continuing security provided by the coalition forces, to give the Iraqi people the time and space they need to unravel the evil web Saddam wove so skilfully around them. |
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Stones are daintily chiseled as women wove them. |
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The most important author from whom a considerable body of work survives is Cynewulf, who wove his runic signature into the epilogues of four poems. |
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Describers then wove those reflections into a comprehensive description, incorporating contextual and historical information to present a rich, verbal picture for blind and partially sighted people to enjoy. |
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So he wove a net which was infinite in time and space and encompassed all possible worlds, and at each intersection of this net he placed a little jewel. |
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They also wove spruce roots and cedar fibres into waterproof hats. |
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India still grew cotton, but Bengal no longer spun or wove much of it. |
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Early looms wove a fixed length of cloth, but later ones allowed warp to be wound out as the fell progressed. |
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In 2014, Classic Alice wove a 10 episode arc placing its characters in the world of Macbeth. |
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And I'm glad I did โ I saw no one else as I wove through pine and larch trees, the secretive Gastern Valley to my right, the clank of cowbells all around and Kandersteg's Belle Epoque Hotel Victoria waiting just ahead. |
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People are looking for a vision consistent with the Canadian story where we together wove a safety net of basic income, health care, education, unemployment insurance and pensions for all. |
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The Moors in Spain grew, spun and wove cotton beginning around the 10th century. |
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During this time, they might entertain each other with stories of Tanabata, the heavenly weaver, who pined for her husband Kengyu until the birds of heaven wove a bridge of their wings to unite the lovers. |
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Then they jumped and stepped and jingled and bobbed and wove in a visual array that combined natural fur and feathers with the colors of every crayon in the box. |
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The Q flaw in the oval below the O of one plus line in cross-hatching and weak entry of choss-hatching at lower left corner, wove paper, 1ยข, from the First Cents Issue. |
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Original color etching and aquatint printed on Arches wove paper. |
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Then I wove different themes, the Minotaur and the animal rituals from Crete, Narcissus, Pygmalion, the Amazons, Athena, figures from Greek temples and ceramics, Dyonisos festivities, love, war, the Olympic birth of sports. |
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But his use of the Phrygian mode in the final movement of the quintet wove a striking East-West tapestry of sound. |
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The Paiutes wove tall wild grasses into baskets and collected obsidian rocks from the nearby mountains to shape into arrowheads. |
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They grew the plants, gathered the crop, carded the fibers, spun the thread and wove it into yardage for blouses and long underdresses. |
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Using an upright loom, the Navajos wove blankets worn as garments and then rugs after the 1880s for trade. |
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Mountains rose quickly, sheets of late-season snow at their crests, and the autostrada wove around and straight through them with an invigorating sinuousness. |
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They wove mats from the leaves of bulrushes, which they used for the walls of their summer homes, as mats on the floors and to cushion the bottom of their canoes. |
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As a novelist Greene wove the characters he met and the places where he lived into the fabric of his novels. |
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These are separated from each other by double borders in black wove. |
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The dances themselves were often called 'maze' or 'garland dances' as they involved a very intricate set of movements in which the dancers wove in and out of each other. |
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Were weaving and spinning and singing aloud, Were broidering my bride-veil of lace, But the lowering three sisters they wove me my shroud As death kissed me cold in the face. |
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I played against a guy yesterday who mana wove in CASUAL games. |
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As a result, many people wove cloth from locally produced fibres. |
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