Last year, Kansas City employees assembled 193,000 F-Series supercabs and 198,000 Contours and Mystiques. |
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The plant built 643 preproduction Contours and Mystiques and put more than one million road miles on them to assure product quality. |
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The Cuautitlan and Kansas City plants will have the capacity to produce 360,000 Contours and Mystiques a year. |
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By early 1995, we will be selling Mondeos, Contours and Mystiques in more than 70 markets worldwide. |
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Contours are one of several common methods used to denote elevation or altitude and depth on maps. |
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In a statement issued to the press, Ford announced that it plans to sell nearly 800,000 Contours, Mystiques and Mondeos annually in 59 markets around the globe. |
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Like all the best old towns, it folds into its landscape, the grid of terraces like contours girdling the hill. |
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Events may have been shaped to fit the contours of a film script, but the emotional truth of the situations is vividly authentic. |
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He was so perfectly shaped that all she wanted to do was trace the contours of his musculature and well formed face. |
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We want to shape the contours of the research setting, by presenting the latest developments and by mapping the terrain of future exploration. |
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Open linear shapes are the contours of nurses' stations, curved forms the sine waves of various organ-function monitors. |
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Triangles provide stability and curved shapes soften the contours of objects. |
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The images were precisely to scale, the contours actual traces of the plants themselves. |
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It's the shapes rather than the contours which attract us in Piero's painting. |
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I traced the contours of it for a moment, wondering how much longer their dewy, life-like coloring would last. |
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One of the things he most loves about that landscape is the way the stone walls that thread across the hills pick out the contours of the land. |
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Lesson number two was how easy it is to be led away from your course by old tracks and the natural contours in the land. |
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The greens, all of different shapes and contours, all have an excellent putting surface. |
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The job might be considerably easier if the driver could don a pair of glasses that superimposes the contours of the map right on the ground. |
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In many cases the scale is not given, and in the littorals the bottom depth contours are not identified. |
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It is noteworthy that this map closely matches the petrographic contours of the geological map. |
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The propulsive contours Liszt assigns to the left hand all but vanished, thus attenuating texture and the work itself of its internecine dramas. |
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Mathews brilliantly traces the precise contours of her mood swings, their pace and imagery, their irrational, irresistible force. |
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Well, one sure way to butcher Scarlatti keyboard music is to use the piano to smooth over Scarlatti's sharp contours. |
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Kom can have as many as eight phonetic tones including contours, or combinations of tones. |
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On the contrary, many compositions strive for more elaborate contours, rhythms, and harmonic structures. |
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To be more precise, his phrase-final pitch contours range from slightly falling, to level, to sharply rising. |
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There are plenty of interesting things to say about these pitch contours, but irony and sarcasm are not an essential part of the discussion. |
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The router is used to cut contours in wood for edgings and moldings or for more complex relief panels and inlay work, dovetails, and mortises. |
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Boston's weirder early '80s contours, like the snaky lunacy of The Freeze, get limned as well. |
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The first movement's contours, both its main motive and its overall shape, do suggest climbing. |
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The irregular thick-and-thin contours of each tube brought to mind a boa constrictor digesting several small meals. |
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There can be room for each one of us to act within overall contours of fate and destiny. |
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The course provides a stern test for competitors as it features sharp, rolling contours, mini-lake water hazards and sand bunkers. |
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Shaped like a stylized step pyramid with highly irregular contours, the fountain sends water cascading down a series of narrow troughs. |
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A place where the contours of the land itself forms a kind of sinewy poetry. |
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For the past 20 to 30 years, companies have been required to reclaim and restore to the original contours the area they strip-mine. |
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Another layer of fat, deeper under the skin, called the scarpus fascia controls the contours, bulges and bumps in our body. |
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The creator has shown particular parts or the whole of female bodies putting the accent on gentle contours and shades. |
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The switches are large and solid, and the bold shapes and contours give the impression of utility without ever approaching the austere. |
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In the south of France is a house whose tent-like form follows the contours of the land and mimics the curvature of a nearby ancient stone wall. |
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Figure 1 is an isoseismal map of the earthquake zone, showing the distribution of intensities of shaking, with contours of equal intensity. |
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Proportion we say is these outlines and contours positioned in proportion in their places. |
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Electron microscopy revealed polygonal tumor cells with round nuclei having slightly irregular contours and prominent nucleoli. |
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Go through the gate and take the path which heads west and then northwest following the contours of a small hill. |
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Bathymetry is an arc coverage of prominent bathymetric contours in the Gulf basin water area. |
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He paid meticulous attention to the warmer sonorities without letting the tinkly orientalia obscure the predominantly smooth melodic contours. |
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The very contours of the yard change with each garden book that I page through. |
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It is molded to the contours of the vehicle floorpan, and installs as a single unit. |
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Sometimes Reygadas overexposes the film a bit to lend a glaring intensity to the contours of the wilderness. |
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Roads kept as close as possible to topographic contours encounter fewer difficulties with erosion. |
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The flowing contours reflect and resolve the different scales of the various parts of the building. |
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A snake slithered over its flowing contours, settling into a small hollow beneath the mound. |
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The salient features defining his creative contours are the cascading planes of colours and the broad brick strokes applied with a palette knife. |
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In designing the luminaires, the students used parametric surface modeling to produce contours, patterns, and templates. |
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The contours of a series of colonies of different cell lines and tumors were morphometrically analyzed to calculate their geometric dimensions. |
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Each was completely by itself in a sun-sparkled immensity of ocean, each had contours and particularities as distinctive as a face. |
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This finely rendered male Ibibio marionette is relatively naturalistic in form, with rounded muscular contours. |
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Incline dumbbell presses develop the contours of the middle and upper pectorals. |
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From what angle should the picture be taken to best disguise my untoned contours? |
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Every distillery has a still that is unique in shape, its contours imbuing each single malt with its particular, individual taste. |
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A map drawn with contours contains all of the information that a map with hachures and tinting has, plus it contains elevations. |
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You may be able to work around the problem by turning off the hachures for all contours except the innermost closed contour. |
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If you look at G-H and E-F you can see that this is true for both hachured and unhachured contours! |
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The tabernacles framing the niche, for instance, are formed by bells whose contours define inverted ogival trefoils. |
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The DCW supplemental point hypsography layer represents locations and values of collapsed contours. |
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Sure, a number of trees remain, but the emphasis is back on the bunkering and the dramatic contours of its fairways and greens. |
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The harmonious, balanced contours of reliquary guardian figures convey a sense of tranquility highly valued in both art and life in Fang culture. |
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Natural fibres in cool lightweight fabrics, teamed with slightly shaped shirts to skim the body's contours, will be de rigueur. |
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The rooms have shapes and contours that seem determined to disorientate, although the overall effect is striking and seductive. |
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No independent existence for women outside of the patriarchal system that shaped the contours of their lives was possible. |
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We take for granted the unique shapes and contours of ourselves, as easily as we forget, or perhaps don't consider, our ancestry. |
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On a map without contours, two communities cut off from one another by an impassable mountain may appear as close neighbours. |
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When I buy a house I get out the maps and study the contours, rejecting anything where there's the slightest chance of flooding. |
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Near the ground the winds are deflected across the contours, or isobars, towards the low pressure, due to friction. |
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Others might come up with reasons like the earth's magnetic field, or meteorological patterns, or terrain contours. |
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The meaning of human life would be reduced to the physical, base animal instincts, trapped within the contours of the body. |
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A confusing dynamics of humanization of animals and animalization of humans follows, framing such a decadent process with paroxysmal contours. |
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No two cartographers, of course, will produce exactly the same set of contours in unsounded portions of the mapped area. |
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Suction lipectomy is a form of plastic surgery in which an attempt is made to improve the contours of the body by removing fat through suction. |
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Federal copyright law is positive law, the contours of which are determined by Congress. |
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Money, social status, talent, opportunity and chance all define the contours of our inequality. |
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The arrival of mass consumerism has clearly contributed to more distinct contours of European society in several ways. |
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Geographically accurate topographical maps with close contours to show the drainage pattern at micro level are not available. |
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The all familiar contours and figures in black and white come with the fresh smell of newsprint and stay forever fresh in the mind. |
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Travel millions of miles to space above the remarkable contours of Venus and Mars. |
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This type of superstructure could be erected on foundations with either round or quadrilateral contours. |
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The bilobate living area has quadrilateral contours and is partly flanked by some horizontal logs and a vertical slab. |
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While Odita's works have roots in patterned geometric abstraction, their choppy contours suggest both turbulence and organic growth. |
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I stare down into valley, whose steep contours are covered with bushy, broccoli-like clumps of kiewe. |
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More impressive still is his quicksilver dexterity in following the ever-changing contours of Sibelius' form. |
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The seats also can be fully inclined to be virtually horizontal but with a curved shape that better moulds to the body contours. |
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Narrower and thinner than a funboard, with aggressive rocker and bottom contours. |
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Stepping inside he tried to see any lines any contours that could tell him it was a safe room. |
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Taoists skillfully built temples that conformed to the contours of the land. |
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These are shaped to the desired contours and are usually made of hardened tool steel ground and lapped to a mirror finish. |
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A flexible tape measure is the only tool to accurately measure the human body's curves and contours. |
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A tall headdress of purple-and-gold kitenge cloth hid the contours of her hair and head. |
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Wood uses the rectangular areas that have been partially plowed to draw added attention to the simple contours. |
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The contours show combinations of mimic phenotypes that are attacked by predators with equal probability. |
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Yet once the drawings are transferred to sheets of Mylar or aluminum panels, she carefully fills their contours with enamel paint. |
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The polymer grip assembly has sharp checkering for a good grip, with contours on both sides that accommodate the thumb and trigger finger. |
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The terrain is shallow valleys, the route follows the contours, enough to make walking easy. |
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This box's contours are also unevenly matched and fit together like warped pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. |
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There are quotes from him, often obscured by the broadest contours of his myth, which question the consumerist thesis. |
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The first lagoon is situated at the top of the hill and the system of lagoons progresses downwards along the contours of the land. |
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But here he distils horror by showing it in slow passage through the ageing, reptilian contours of Michael Caine's face. |
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Its golden hilt had a crescent emblem in the middle shaped like the full moon, shining brightly with golden carvings on its contours. |
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They snaked with the contours, curling and buckling, even twisting vertically in places and splaying like the back plates of a stegosaur. |
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Due to the necessity of following the contours the length of the leat was seventeen and a half miles. |
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The engine brackets, oil-pan and bonnet were all handcrafted to fit the new engine's contours and there were other modifications required to the subframe and other items. |
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It wasn't really meant for me, considering the contours of my own midsection. |
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A device on a mobile agricultural machine for contactless scanning of contours extending over the ground, such as the contour of a swath of crop material. |
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I had to struggle with the intricacies of the washing machine programmer, learn the contours of an ironing board, co-ordinate the different ingredients of a cooked meal. |
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Age also looms as a wildcard, with a generational divide further shaping the contours of the contest. |
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Groups of round burial mounds known to archaeologists as barrow cemeteries, often aligned on contours below ridges, are common in Wessex and the Thames valley. |
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So I certainly don't need to know the contours of her mammaries. |
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The selection of the points of reference on the patella for the second line can be complicated by the fact that the contours of the articular surface of patellae vary. |
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Conceived and executed by Jean-Guillaume Moitte, it is strongly architectonic, its contours angular and rigorously vertical, with limited forward thrust. |
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Danny produces a highly stylized mock-serious interview, replete with such features as exaggeratedly elevated diction, sing-songy intonational contours, and slow, deliberate pacing. |
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If combined with the airborne laser scanner, the data can be used to develop digital terrain models, contours, intensity images and other elevation representations. |
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These are represented by utility contours which indicate increased levels of happiness as we move away from the origin to higher levels of consumption of both goods. |
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An internal retaining rod allows simple picket attachment without welds or screws, while permitting panels to follow the slope and contours of your property. |
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The contours show that the steepest gradients surround the Earth and Sun, with the five Earth Lagrange Points located in equilibrium regions with relatively gentle gradient. |
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The solid lines represent the contours where there are increase in electron cloud and the broken lines show regions with decrease in electron cloud. |
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For example, an upholstered piece measures up if the inner padding and springs aren't discernible, and if taut, unwrinkled fabric smoothly wraps the contours. |
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He followed the contours of my ears and felt the bristles of my beard. |
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Each sentence we speak has a pitch contour associated with it that can be broken down into smaller sequences of elementary contours associated with linguistic phenomena. |
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I learned the contours of the strip-mined land as the pines grew. |
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As a general orientation, its broad contours may frequently be discernible in social research, but it is also the case that we often find departures from it. |
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Now speaking of tone languages and just absolute pitch, it involves relative pitch and noticing intonation contours and all sorts of other complicated things too. |
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The contours of African life through the relatively quiescent decade after 1963 were moulded by demographic and social change as much as by repression. |
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Slowly the eulogies began to take shape, common themes woven through the contours of their extraordinary individual lives. |
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In apprehending and responding to contemporaneity, Shahryar emerges as a poet who sharpens the contours of modernism by asserting the establishment of new poetics. |
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Petite baton hands and four baton indicators adorn the dial, which is set in a square goldtone steel case with gentle contours and a beautiful polished shine. |
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A thick fluffy pillow was shaped to the contours of her head. |
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All of the curves and contours of her torso seemed to fit right into mine. |
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Little or no mound fill was added to the westernmost edge of the mound with the contours of this area remaining essentially the same as the natural bluff ridge. |
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On Monday night the contours of a deal to defuse the ticking fiscal bomb emerged in the Senate. |
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With a chassis marked by smooth lines and streamlined contours, the vehicle presented an appealing sight with its cladding, grille and wrap-around lamps. |
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From below, it appears as a truncated wedge that broadens and flares out in response to the contours of the site, and is cantilevered off three slender columns. |
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Wagon teams spread out laterally like a buffalo herd on the move, grazing cattle on a wide front, following the contours of the land and roughly paralleling the courses of the rivers that led west. |
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Barely a regular structure, road or building broke the contours of the mountainsides, whose ragged, stony slopes rose straight from the shore to a thousand feet. |
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If necessary, grinding should be done to maintain smooth flowing contours. |
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His Grozny, delicate as a doily, shows the ruins of the bombed Chechen capital dissolving in quavering sepia contours like an 18th-century capriccio. |
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Regardless of how anthropologists define religions, the institutional contours of this space often determine how the practitioners label their own activity. |
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The idealized grid of fairness cannot limn the contours of these deep existential debts. |
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He traces the trajectory of the city's industrial growth and its rising immigrant population, describing how these processes in turn shaped the contours of class formation. |
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But Rosa's life is also a very modern one, its broad contours shaped by global economic forces and its details modified by individual needs and personal enterprise. |
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Seidl's paintings, with their blunted contours, blending chroma and reticulate brushwork, are all about flux, immanence and the mutating visual field. |
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One of these formal tracings is color-coded according to the materials employed, and it details the contours and regulating lines for a silver-gilt ciborium. |
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As feminist theorists in the 1980s and 1990s proliferated differences in order to better represent the contours of twentieth-century life, science kept pace. |
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The painter believes that he is going beyond shapes, contours and colours. |
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His contours are beginning to sag, his muscles to loosen and droop. |
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The ultra-thin design and super-grip base ensures this universal Sat Nav Mat contours to your dash to stay put. |
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The outcome of this debate over the Posse Comitatus Act may prefigure the contours of our society for a generation or more. |
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Hunting rifles with their light barrel contours should shoot three rounds per group. |
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Cut into the cliffs by hand, this narrow, winding route hugged the contours around both steep headlands. |
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He depicts the contours, imperfections, and beauty distinct to an individual face by gradating the color and dripping the paint. |
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Those bands following the less commercial contours of the scene were increasingly referred to by the label indie. |
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The Rendulic contours in principal stress space showed that the stress paths taken were members of a family for both drained and undrained tests. |
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Why did Time so ill bestead That I heard no voice of yours Hail from out the curved contours Of those lips when rosy red. |
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In contrast, adenocarcinomas show small and variably sized glands with angulated contours. |
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Hillseams form by stress relief, and therefore tend to parallel topographic contours and ridges. |
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The contour mining method consists of removing overburden from the seam in a pattern following the contours along a ridge or around the hillside. |
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A topographical presentation of these contours was used as a game-time decision aid by the UCLA 1972-73 Football Coaching Staff. |
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I started with a basic flat and round file and, once I had the contours of each scale accurately shaped, switched to coarse sandpaper. |
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Some scholars believe that he used a mechanical device to help him trace the contours of his subjects' faces. |
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It is noted that the colored oil paste may cover a portion of the surrounding area of each high-point contour and connect the vicinal contours. |
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Harter Fell appears in most views as a conical hill, unsurprising given its broadly circular contours. |
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Terminal reaves tend to run for great distances along contours or watersheds and served to divide the enclosed areas from the higher open moor. |
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Depth contours, shoreline configurations, and interactions with other currents influence a current's direction and strength. |
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It was not the days of drudgery in the rice fields but the hours of off time that most shaped the contours of slave culture. |
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Products are produced by taking an impression of the ear by a technician so that the earpiece exactly matches the contours of the ear canal. |
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The configuration of these contours allows map readers to infer relative gradient of a parameter and estimate that parameter at specific places. |
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Landscapes of the outer world interfuse as one with the contours of his mind and spirit. |
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In any case, the name implies pallor, an absence of light, the diffusion of contours into shadowy indistinction. |
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The output of a computer noise modeling can be isopleths as presented in color sound level contours. |
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Alternatively a map key can be produced associating the contours with their values. |
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The isohyetal method involves contours of equal precipitation are drawn over the gauges on a map. |
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Visually, the algorithm moves from the lowest J isoline up to higher contours. |
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The depth contours, the shoreline and other currents influence the current's direction and strength. |
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According to the court, it was not apparent that the contours of a prisoner's right to reasonable dietary and meal accommodations extended to the use of a succah. |
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Through close framing and attention to surface, Bailey presents the figure's brown, grainy contours with immense sensuality, again evoking a tactile engagement with surface. |
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Dubbed Ouchless Flex, the line of pressure-free headbands, comfortflex updo barrettes and comfort-flex claw clips to the market contours to the curve of the female head. |
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The memory foam main pillow moulds to any contours, and the inflatable side supports can be inflated and angle adjusted to suit your comfort requirements. |
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From these contours, a sense of the general terrain can be determined. |
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I draw contours first, gradually shading in midtones and shadows. |
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Inspired by the parallel rows and rolling contours of a hilly vineyard, Vintry Fine Wines, New York City, establishes a new typology of wine store. |
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This is a typical harrier, which hunts on long wings held in a shallow V in its low flight during which the bird closely hugs the contours of the land below it. |
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This choice is made based upon the least intrusive form of contours that enable the reader to decipher the background information in the map itself. |
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Direct true lateral radiographs of the femur were taken paying special attention to the conjunction of the contours of the posterior femoral condyles on one another. |
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The aim of the stochastic watershed Angulo and Jeulin is to estimate for each point of the contours of a standard watershed a probability of detection from random markers. |
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The true prominence is estimated by visualising the three dimensional surface in the neighborhood of the col and interpolating between the enclosing contours. |
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The Avensis test vehicle was the two litre T-Spirit Tourer and the subtle contours of the estate immediately signal swish, upmarket shooting brakes of the Germanic variety. |
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In 2010, former British distance runner Steve Cram inaugurated the Kielder Marathon which is a circuit around the lake taking in the surrounding gentle contours. |
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From north east of England, the cliffs become lower and are composed of less resistant moraine, which erodes more easily, so that the coasts have more rounded contours. |
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