Canales is at ease within a flamenco vocabulary, but his choreographic forays into contemporary dance are sadly cliched. |
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Writing the letter and putting it under Angel's door, Tess felt much more at ease, knowing that he would know all there is of her past. |
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She rightly says that being at ease in standard English is essential if you wish to communicate widely and easily with others. |
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Bluffly outgoing, infallibly at ease in large groups, he seemed inhibited by screen intimacy. |
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We want the Minister to take a call to put our minds at ease that this amount has not been paid out. |
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But this doctrine that souls are acquired by heredity carried more physical implications than at least some Platonists could feel at ease with. |
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On the eve of her wedding journey, she has a swanky supper with her father, a bank manager ill at ease with his daughter's high-flying tastes. |
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During the interview, the former governor of Vermont appeared at ease handling questions that hopscotched across global trouble spots. |
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Familiar, logical BMW instrumentation, switchgear and cabin layout put you instantly at ease. |
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The dark elf seemed ill at ease among the buildings, and clung close to One Nine's shaggy thigh. |
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His knack for putting his subjects at ease is reflected in his photographs of the Fab Four. |
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They turned me to face downwards and I had my head in a vice, but the surgeon was ever so nice and set me at ease straight away. |
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She had become very uncomfortable and ill at ease when visiting her parents and suffered chronic tension. |
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It would have been hard to find a man more suited to putting everyone at ease. |
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Worse than that, everybody felt ill at ease and unsure how to behave in front of the former enemy. |
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It made him uncomfortable and ill at ease, and he felt she was trying to keep him there in the pilothouse. |
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Why did he seem so ill at ease, so uncomfortable with the role he had to play? |
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She sits isolated, straining at the boundaries of the picture, thoroughly ill at ease with her space. |
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Also, he confessed he is not fully at ease with factional wrangling inside the party and has no intention of joining any faction for now. |
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He didn't seem put off or nervous, and the fact that he was so collected helped put Lucas more at ease. |
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She forced herself to refocus on what was going on in front of her and suddenly felt at ease. |
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But he seemed ill at ease in Liszt's flamboyant Spanish Rhapsody, which in his hands wanted for inflection, contrast and affective intensity. |
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With Will it's so easy not to feel intimidated because he puts you at ease. |
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The world depicted is a fascinating one, and we gaze upon it with rapt attention, even as the disquieting mood of the film keeps us ill at ease. |
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They were bright young men, at ease in Western society and with an interest in engineering and aeronautics. |
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The only way to set your mind at ease before purchasing a supplement is to check out the facts first. |
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This is inevitable, and a reader may be ill at ease at the scarcity of evidence that underlies many of these reconstructions. |
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You may find yourself feeling at ease, happy and relaxed by the cheerful non-threatening atmosphere of a gay venue. |
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The experienced safari guides seem to have an innate empathy with the nature all around, and all at once you feel at ease. |
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On the other hand, among friends with whom you feel at ease, you are expressive, witty, and quite charming. |
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The taxi driver spoke decently good English and said he had been to Toronto, something that curiously put me at ease. |
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I could tell by our team's attitude that they seemed to be totally at ease when they took the field. |
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There is an easy elegance here, a fluid readability, and a lucid, completely unaffected, eloquence of one who is at ease with herself. |
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Most Protestants, certainly Anglicans, would be quite at ease with these words, and so they should be since they mirror their theology. |
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Lilian, tall and slim and intellectual, seemed ill at ease among the debs and toffs. |
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Educated in India, he feels equally at ease speaking Dari to tribal elders and English to the Council on Foreign Relations. |
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Kathy fidgeted beside him, studying her nails, ill at ease among these obvious geeks and losers. |
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To my surprise, he was standing at ease, talking to an old lady who was seated on one of the chairs in the alcove. |
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Mr. Rochester was a princely and heroic master, and, despite his ireful frown and brusque, moody manner, Jane felt at ease in his presence. |
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Despite the size of the sharks, she felt at ease in the underwater environment and helped clean the tank and feed the aquariums other fish. |
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Despite the contrast of materials and color, the home's skillful siting puts it elegantly at ease in its rugged environment. |
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As a married woman, Mrs. Darcy retained the brightness and the unshakable ability to be at ease in every situation of her maidenhood. |
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Never at ease when alone, bachelor males routinely seek the company of other species of monkey. |
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We felt quite at ease as the naturist section was a good distance from the main 'textile' beach and as a result there were very few passers by. |
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In the 1980s and 1990s we were ill at ease and unable to get a hold on things as we faced a big black hole and a slow drift to oblivion. |
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Both girls ceased their jitters and tried to stand at ease, gnawing away at their lips. |
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The soldiers at Micklegate Bar are not marching but are stood at ease, and may well have been from the Army Cadet Corps. |
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The door slammed shut behind him and I jumped, but Mother seemed perfectly at ease. |
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Now vulnerable people can feel more at ease knowing that recruits are signing up to stop doorstep con-artists. |
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A man gifted with his hands, he was content and at ease building walls and making timber panels. |
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In contrast, Harrington was all smiles, perfectly at ease with himself and the situation. |
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With a sprinkling of new players still bedding in, they looked ill at ease in the face of a familiar, and formidable, United side. |
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I halted in front of the sentry box, turned to the front and stood at ease. |
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As I made my way to the taxi stand at JFK, I felt at ease for the first time in over a month. |
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And in fact she does seem more at ease with herself than I've heard she was, and very content with her life. |
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He joined Neal, Arlyn and Lori, standing at ease on the other side of the stage. |
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You wouldn't believe it watching her work, because she looked so consummately at ease, but I think performing took a lot out of her. |
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The diarist John Evelyn describes Bacon at ease in his garden accompanied by a servant with inkhorn and quill to record his thoughts. |
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Bureau is an excellent draughtsman and painter, gracefully at ease on both large and small canvases. |
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The idea behind the renovation in the city is part of OUPs recent drive to provide greater visibility of books and set bibliophiles at ease. |
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They could then be more at ease with themselves afterwards and their information could form a vital piece to complete the jigsaw. |
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His characters tend to be laid back and fairly at ease, meandering shiftlessly and still accomplishing something. |
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Equally at ease in English and French, Smith was very much a success story of Trudeau's vision of a bilingual country. |
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Now at ease by the fireside, his feet are shod in narrow velvet slippers with a monogram embroidered in gold thread. |
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By the time I came to work for Michael and Jan, their eighty acres had cast such a spell on them that they did not feel at ease anywhere else. |
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It turns me on that a man can have the talent and power to make me laugh, loosen up and feel at ease. |
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The three bleary-eyed women did not see the beauty in the brightening when they looked up at the sky and only felt ill at ease when they did. |
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Usually they become more and more at ease, if you start asking questions about them. |
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As they ate, he put her at ease with his uncontrived interest in who she was and what she was about. |
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She is so at ease on stage and has tons of great material on every subject under the sun. |
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I remember a man ill at ease with his height and fearful that his profound musical abilities were undervalued. |
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Although she was convinced early on that she was born to be an artist, she was rarely at ease with herself. |
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So it's a debate among scientists whether human-like bots are repulsive or if machines that mimic our mortal movements put us at ease. |
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The ship's navigator stood there, tall and smiling, hands behind his back but completely at ease by all other appearances. |
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Russians, for historical reasons, can be acutely ill at ease with the idea of expounding uncomfortable truths in a formal setting. |
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After visiting the kitchen and disposing of the disposables, I headed back out to see what tasks I might do to make customers feel at ease. |
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Keeping the performer at ease is usually entrusted to the agent and concert promoter. |
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When he is told that he was adopted at the age of four, he realises that his spirit will not be at ease until he knows more about his parents. |
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Unusually for a British sovereign, George was at ease with intellectuals and country people alike. |
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But this MTV veejay has taken it as a challenge to prove that he can be equally at ease doing programmes on serious issues. |
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The musical sound of the water bubbling over the streambed put his troubled mind at ease. |
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Oddly, this fond remembrance didn't seem to put Pietro at ease. |
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Thanks to breathable fabrics like linen and comfortable details like drawstring waistbands, this summer's trends are aimed at making you feel at ease in the summer heat. |
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The sadness from the mass mood had lifted and everyone felt at ease. |
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Indeed, it is understandable why health care staff dealing with anxious patients should employ friendly forms of address in order to put them at ease. |
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Can images arising from a self apparently at ease internally and at peace with its environs ever produce images that surpass mere visual reportage? |
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Here's someone who's lived his whole life in a little town in Wales, and he's more liberated, inquisitive and at ease with the world than most people I know half his age. |
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Content, my mother was at ease that her first-born would not fall into the ranks of picky eaters. |
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Then your luck is in and they tell you it's the operating theatre in the morning and next day you get the pre-med to make you feel drowsy and at ease. |
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Each rider is matched with a horse of the appropriate weight and height, but they are all at ease with teaching people who have never ridden before. |
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She also seems more at ease than ever while delivering her songs. |
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He is a teenager at ease, relaxed and self-confident, never too excited. |
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Anyone would be ill at ease at having to tighten their belt by 30 percent. |
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They were a bit nervous when they sat down, but leary soon put them at ease with his soft-spoken charm. |
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Despite the severe physical demands of his work, Tse said that he at least found his heart at ease because of the genuine contentment he derives from his work. |
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Equally at ease with singing in Punjabi, Hindi, Gujarati, Bhojpuri and even Arabic, Harjeet says he learnt to survive early on in his career by never saying no. |
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But discarding a few outmoded shibboleths does not create a society that is at ease with itself and free of class anxieties, frictions and divisions. |
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Oddly though, once my brain internalized my surroundings as a surreal stage setting, removed from what would be normally acceptable to my senses, I felt at ease. |
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Usually, I meditate during sleep, when my brainwaves are at ease. |
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Cleo is open and at ease, reflecting some new-found maturity. |
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Any white person expressing such ideas is obviously a buttoned up racist, ill at ease with the realities of multicultural Britain and its vibrant black youth culture. |
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He is disarming, humble, genuinely and immediately friendly and has a way of carrying himself, in front of a camera or in the flesh, which immediately puts you at ease. |
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I just shifted in my seat, feeling very nervous, and ill at ease. |
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Every table has views over the loch, and the renovated croft and ferryman's cottage is decorated in a light, breezy way that immediately puts you at ease. |
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Young was so at ease with his power and patriotism that the former deputy head of MI6 once ordered, between pink gins, the assassination of the president during the crisis. |
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People before our fact-obsessed centuries were fully at ease with the made-up fiction, and so I see myself as a traditionalist rather than a conventionalist I suppose. |
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Wits's haircut went by smoothly without a flinch or complaint though as Finn began to feel more at ease with the scissors she became more and more careless. |
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The goofy footer looked completely at ease and together with fellow countrymen Mick Lowe and Parkinson, was one of only three from the top 10 to survive the day. |
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The comfort zone is the area in one's mind where he or she can feel at ease performing familiar jobs proficiently. |
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Unlike Wilson, he was not at ease on television, and came across as less spontaneous than his opponent. |
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The two English players scarcely spoke and, as Faldo was the senior partner, it was suggested that he should have done more to put him at ease. |
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One post was typically filled by four men, one sentinel and the others at ease until a situation arose or it was their turn to be sentinel. |
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If the policeman was not present, or was standing at ease, this indicated that there was an obstruction on the line ahead. |
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And indeed, the man who figured most prominently in hyping the issue seemed particularly ill at ease discussing it. |
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Surinamers are an open and welcoming people who go out of their way to make foreigners feel at ease. |
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His latest collection, Wowsers, is a tour-de-force of erudite allusion, equally at ease with traditional forms and free verse. |
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As long as the egoic mind is running your life, you cannot truly be at ease. |
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When I was given methotrexate, the medical staff explained everything to me, which helped to put my mind at ease. |
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If the column be composed of a considerable number of battalions, the commander can march it at ease, as a column of route. |
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When marching at ease, you must march in orderly ranks in silence, but you need not keep step or march at attention. |
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Imlach's task on ITV is as a linkman, a task with which he is equally at ease. |
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Doing bold scenes in The Guru helped me feel at ease with the raunchier Strictly. |
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Perfectly charming and at ease on stage, he's equally rambling and yakky in an interview. |
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Yet even though unvexed by this gruesome knowledge, after two or three days I noticed that Cookie was ill at ease. |
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The 21-year-old brought her signature hairstyle, her high ponytail, to this glamorous show too and looked completely at ease as she was surrounded by skimpily dressed models. |
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But Josh Gad, plopped in an armchair next to Crystal and kibitzing with him about the excruciatingly pepper-obsessed restaurant they visited recently, looks very much at ease. |
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While Bob was ill at ease on the religious-right circuit, Elizabeth became a more familiar figure in America's pulpits than fellow North Carolinian Billy Graham. |
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The new safety data really put my mind at ease over buying this car. |
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In a Florida town, the sight of a boulevard lined with live oaks can quickly set a stranger's mind at ease, conveying a subliminal, yet powerful, impression of the community. |
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Apparently put at ease, the Emperor went to his desk to sign some decrees. |
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The driver was a stalwart woman who sat at ease in the front seat and drove her car bareheaded. She left a cloud of dust and a trail of gasoline behind her. |
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