It's an epic, but at the heart of it is an extremely detailed and microscopic view of human nature. |
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As they here suggest, unease over who moves the planchette is at the heart of the Ouija Board experience. |
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The microprocessors at the heart of computers employ sets of tiny transistors in silicon chips to represent information. |
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In 1999, he found himself at the heart of Government when he was invited to cater for an Anglo-Italian summit. |
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Trust is not only at the heart of leadership but forms the essence of all relationships. |
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A stunning garden at the heart of the city's European Flower Festival stopped workers and shoppers in their tracks. |
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A monarchy which strives to avoid political controversy now finds itself inadvertently at the heart of it. |
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No matter how many biographers elucidate his character, he remains a mystery at the heart of the American experience. |
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Such questions lie at the heart of all biographical work, but are seldom explicitly acknowledged, or deeply explored. |
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The moral vacuum at the heart of the economic and social imperatives of the winners in the last quarter century is now exposed. |
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Far from debasing his models, Newton places them at the heart of a deep and complex drama where they rule like errant queens. |
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But he didn't just quit, instead he became a mole at the heart of the movement, passing information to the anti-Fascist media. |
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Such emphasis on the quality of the open vowels, achieved by years of assiduous practice, was also at the heart of Gregorian chant. |
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The joys of local soccer and many long lasting friendships developed in relation to it will be at the heart of the silver jubilee event. |
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Clarity, simplicity, honesty and trust are at the heart of what the business is going to be about. |
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Such shallow and untenable reasoning lies at the heart of many sexist, racist and elitist dogmas. |
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Large-scale systematic patterns of variation lie at the heart of organismic biology and have interested biologists ever since the beginning. |
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That mixture of pure science and unadulterated humanity lies at the heart of Clarke's fiction. |
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It strikes a blow for democracy and human rights at the heart of the present US Administration. |
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It is the unavoidable and serious consequence of non-submission which lies at the heart of coercion. |
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Ten years of hapless fixes by Littlechild and his successor have failed to stem the tide of rip-offs at the heart of this unfixable system. |
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This is because a strangely named religious institution was at the heart of the scandal. |
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It is the allocation of these costs and benefits which is at the heart of the ongoing negotiations. |
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Sweet and savory dainties packaged in appealing canisters, baskets and bags are at the heart of the Christmas bazaar. |
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With each passing year, it becomes increasingly difficult to unearth examples of the sheer unrepressed fury at the heart of rock 'n' roll. |
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The event is at the heart of a masterplan to create a fresh image for the city. |
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Implicit visions of human rights often lie at the heart of socio-political demands for empowerment. |
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The complexity of modern Britain which put at the heart of New Labour is just not reflected in the fine grain of this new movement. |
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So far 260 people have signed a petition against the plans because they feel development would destroy a green space at the heart of the town. |
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These differences are at the heart of the newly emerging field of nutritional genomics, or nutrigenomics. |
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The most compelling argument, and the issue at the heart of the liberal perversion of liberalism, is in the area of humanitarianism. |
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Why not write a book in praise of the obsession, celebrating the neurosis at the heart of all literature? |
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Sievwright, in particular, had a fine match at stand-off and was at the heart of much of Boroughmuir's best work. |
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Churchill was right to say that a fair and equitable penal system lies at the heart of a healthy civilisation. |
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All of this serves to illustrate an extraordinary double standard that exists at the heart of public life. |
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The tendency to define and standardize product quality lay at the heart of the commodification process. |
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England and Wales are at the heart of this drive so let's sound a word of warning for them. |
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Again, modern science's intrusion into a realm where it tends to sow confusion lies at the heart of the matter. |
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The freedom to dismiss such codology comes from his respect for and knowledge of the forces at the heart of life. |
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My party has been at the heart of it, at the centre of the peace building process. |
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One sometimes suspects that the thing lying at the heart of Victorian attitudes to life was the idea of illusion. |
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The television network was forced, calamitously, to admit that the memos at the heart of the story were probably forged. |
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But, at the heart of this argument, I have reached the conclusion that I'm a slightly clumsy, rather ineffectual speaker. |
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The quenching of idealism in the pursuit of monetary gain and world domination were among the core theories at the heart of John's case. |
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After all, what lies at the heart of European absolutism or Russian autocracy? |
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This sense of enchantment, of utter absorption in a moment, is fundamental to the lyric and lies at the heart of what it has to offer. |
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The cliff-like structure at the heart of the old town rises directly from the sea and causes it to resemble a stone boat at anchor. |
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But at the heart of this collection of treaties, compacts, laws and court decisions are two sets of documents. |
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An elongated entrance hall leads past the library into the double-height void at the heart of the house. |
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She responds by pathologizing rather than exploring the mystery at the heart of her subject. |
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The radiant beauty of the score, and the warm tenderness at the heart of it, are very moving. |
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One of the world's largest and most established automated clearing houses, it is at the heart of the UK payments industry. |
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Acclaimed Australian composer Moya Henderson reveals the process and the poignant story at the heart of her new radiophonic composition. |
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And at the heart of the book lies one of the most marvellous depictions of an adulterous affair in fiction. |
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This battle for God was an attempt to fill the void at the heart of a society based on scientific rationalism. |
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Standing at the heart of the village and next to the busy road, it was a risk the parish council could not afford to take. |
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The modest brick building at the heart of Europe's biggest military base has become refuge to thousands of raw recruits. |
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Still, at the heart of this mania for things American, perhaps more unconscious than conscious, is a deep disquietude. |
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I can assure people that value for money and high quality services remain at the heart of our approach. |
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Germany and France share a common civil law outlook and geographical position at the heart of Europe. |
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Forced marriage is very often at the heart of honour crime, according to the head of a national review of honour killing in Britain. |
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So, at the heart of it all, are the sun-kissed and sexy television presenter's life experiences really any different to that of other women? |
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The scene brilliantly encapsulates the humour and humanism at the heart of Rosenthal's work. |
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The cinematography is astonishing, almost monochrome, capturing the darkness at the heart of the story, using close ups to great effect. |
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This looks out through a glass wall over a ramp which leads down one level to the small gravelled courtyard at the heart of the place. |
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Lairds may come and lairds may go, but the long-running BBC series Monarch of the Glen has retained its setting at the heart of Badenoch. |
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Under Margaret he walked in openly and planted his jurisdiction at the heart of the kingdom, though not without opposition and remonstrance. |
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Released on two LPs, these discs were instant classics, establishing Bartok at the heart of concerto repertoire. |
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The problem lies at the heart of the cultural economy and the home video market. |
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The Two Reconstructions explains a puzzle that lies at the heart of America's development as a political democracy. |
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It is a place that has allowed reason to be at the heart of all these things, that has allowed genuine dissent without resort to violence. |
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For the above reasons, measurements of gas exchange, using infrared gas analysers, remain at the heart of studies in plant ecophysiology. |
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For much worse than professional disclaimers of interest in Shakespeare's life is the ugly social denial at the heart of the Oxfordian pursuit. |
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You find semiconductors at the heart of microprocessor chips as well as transistors. |
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Inevitably, with an actor of his dark good looks, there is a love story at the heart of the film. |
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It will also help keep hands-on skills at the heart of cheesemaking, a big factor in preserving our cheese's renowned taste. |
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The band's natural rhythm and fast tempo is likely also at the heart of its loyal following. |
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It places income redistribution at the heart of service provision and delivery, and taxes citizens according to ability to pay. |
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The Belgian band encapsulated the friendly spirit of fraternity that lies at the heart of folk. |
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It's the coming together with a common purpose of two such different men that lies at the heart of his novel. |
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This could be pioneered in Scotland and patients' rights placed at the heart of the matter. |
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Imaginary resources, in the form of sovereign rents and aid flows, lie at the heart of the impasse. |
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That is why I find so welcome Mathewes's stress on the importance of memory as at the heart of my concern with liberalism and modernity. |
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It seems that at the heart of the Universe there is a steady, insistent beat. |
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Yet, in days past, these issues were at the heart of wars between and within denominations. |
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The paradox at the heart of modern adoption is that it both naturalized and denaturalized kinship. |
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It is within the Bolgheri appellation, at the heart of which are the Sassacia vineyards. |
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It is not sugar-coating its message, and that is really at the heart of the matter. |
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The centre will be at the heart of the regional network and aims to transform the training of both primary and secondary school teachers. |
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He said the computer networking architecture at the heart of the system needed more time for development. |
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We have just seen an excellent example of the rot at the heart of this Government. |
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Given that the very gathering of such intelligence is at the heart of the dispute, how could such information be rendered politically neutral? |
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Second, the personal connection at the heart of private charity cannot be reproduced by government. |
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I think it would be presumptuous to offer a guarantee, but what I can say to you is that it is absolutely at the heart of our thinking. |
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Whether the invention is a catfish lure or a piece of software at the heart of the web, the inventor has to pay the same fee. |
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The social media company's new digs sit right at the heart of the island's central business district. |
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They are also at the heart of practical technologies, such as optical character recognition and speech recognition. |
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It is not an image which instils much confidence in the future success of the vital relationship at the heart of government. |
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The vital service is at the heart of the work of The Carers' Resource and will now have to be withdrawn. |
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It is this deeper problem which lies at the heart of the breakdown of marriage and family, or of any authentic human, loving relationship. |
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The authors of the article don't even bother to address the constitutional question at the heart of the case. |
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Over that time frame, the European Union's eastward expansion will place Berlin at the heart of the continent. |
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Originally given an administrative appointment, he used his new position at the heart of the party to build up speedily a personal power base. |
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The historic market, at the heart of town life for centuries, will be leaving the town for good to make way for redevelopment. |
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Some of this is done through sharing experiences, but frank and honest discussions and observations are at the heart of the relationship. |
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He's a New Economy technocrat, raised at the heart of government, with a privileged education. |
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There's a healthy irreverence at the heart of the movie, as well as plenty of dry Mancunian wit. |
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To that end he offers a structured argument whose central metaphor or image is the spinning well that lies at the heart of Mande tradition. |
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Poor communication and failure to take account of the patient's perspective are at the heart of most formal complaints and legal actions. |
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This uncomfortable contradiction between form and content lies at the heart of both their work. |
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A conflict raged at the heart of Europe which posed all manner of seminal questions for the nature of humanity. |
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The argument over assimilation versus separation is at the heart of the matter. |
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Priced between these two extremes is Jubilee Court at the heart of Cheltenham, which resembles at first sight a small terrace of Georgian houses. |
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The Executive's proposals are at the heart of a fundamental review of NHS dental services in Scotland. |
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There's clearly a market for movies with troubled, hunky young priests investigating Satanic cults at the heart of the Vatican. |
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It's a 15-room guesthouse, bang on the waterfront and at the heart of all local goings-on. |
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For the first time, environmental issues are at the heart of widespread popular activity. |
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The florid old actor-manager at the heart of Forkbeard Fantasy's Shooting Shakespeare is effusive in his bardolatry. |
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Either way, she just doesn't grasp the core principle at the heart of this entire matter. |
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It is neatly ironic, but it also exposes the paradox at the heart of this solo show. |
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A fatal mistake was choosing to colonise land at the heart of the Spanish empire. |
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That each and every person can be freely and fully self-determining is at the heart of her writing. |
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High self-image and low self-esteem, according to one theory, lie at the heart of the stand-up comic. |
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This is the root of the fundamental dishonesty at the heart of the euro debate. |
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At its heart it is an observational film about a family, at the heart of which is physical abuse, and it's not done sensationally. |
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So all of those things are very comforting and delightful and poetry is at the heart of them. |
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The answer to this conundrum can be found at the heart of the society that he lived and work in. |
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This means rediscovering the centrality of the working class and the internationalism which are at the heart of the genuine Marxist tradition. |
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In the nineteenth century, it was the moral at the heart of a story which led to critics belabouring certain writers. |
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The kitchen has service hatches linking it to the conservatory and living room and it is at the heart of the house. |
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They are also at the heart of what American conservationists have fought to preserve for more than a century. |
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Manchester is a major city at the heart of a large urban conurbation. |
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These affinities are arguably at the heart of the 40-year dalliance of Iranian and Syrian despots. |
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One specific kind of emergency is at the heart of this, such as when an airplane suffers a loss of stability at night. |
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Many prominent Congolese human-rights activists consider minerals to be at the heart of the perpetration of atrocities. |
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Because it is at the heart of the war, ending the FDLR must be a centerpiece of the peace process. |
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While their chart career has been on hold, they've remained a highly respected live act and one with all five of the original quintet at the heart of the performance. |
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It may be, however, that after years of working in an office he is enjoying being at the heart of his home, aware for the first time of the comings and goings of his family. |
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While the lack of dialogue has many roots, the dehumanizing rhetoric at the heart of the revolution is one of its main causes. |
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Despite this concern, the duo remain extremely adept at creating lacunae at the heart of their music, spaces into which you can project your own feelings and memories. |
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That is the question at the heart of this disquieting story from the most-talented E. Jean Carroll. |
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Really, sortition strikes at the tension at the heart of elective representative democracy. |
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Lucky Break pierces the superficial surface of acting to reveal the enthralling, authentic drama at the heart of the business. |
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Respect and reverence for all religious and philosophical traditions is at the heart of democratic civil society which makes student newspapers possible. |
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But you have to have been a witness to that history to appreciate the farcical beat at the heart of it all. |
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Similarly, our comedies season is not just about laughter, but the yearning for harmony and reconciliation which lies at the heart of Shakespeare's great comedies. |
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In brief and limpid episodes French director Alain Cavalier bares the masochism, eroticism, and purity at the heart of Therese's self-enclosed crusade. |
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One of his graphics shows that at the heart of the storm the roiling clouds rose to 20,000 feet above the flight path. |
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Had you forgotten that you were right at the heart of Rogernomics? |
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Instead it was to force him, and us, to grapple with the bigger question at the heart of the series. |
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Of course this gets at the heart of why some attacks on black Republicans inspire a shrug. |
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This component is actually a magnetically controlled thermostat which is at the heart of a portable gas catalytic glue gun newly developed by the company. |
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Nearly a century ago, in 1920, a horse-drawn cart blew up at the heart of Wall Street. |
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For all his manifold flaws and for all the persistent rumours about his drinking, his approach mirrors the fundamental problem at the heart of his party. |
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This tension between outcast and overlord is at the heart of our sweeping change into a tech-driven, spiritually infused economy. |
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Paul will argue that such military force does little to combat the issues at the heart of instability. |
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Marauding warriors with horned helmets who slaughtered monks and carried off treasures are at the heart of the popular image of the Viking invasions of the British Isles. |
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A fair process for appointing candidates on merit must be at the heart of the new system, based on advice from the Equal Opportunities Commission. |
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This call to perfection is at the heart of the Sermon on the Mount. |
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He simply lays bare a series of contradictions that I as a leftie know are at the heart of my life. |
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It is dubbed the Affaire du Carlton, after a four-star hotel at the heart of the scandal in Lille, northeast of Paris. |
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This here is tectonic heat, a contrast hitting at the heart of why we love sport in the first place. |
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Another one of those meaty roles is that of Maggie Swann, the woman at the heart of Fort Bliss. |
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With so much else crumbling, the transponder lies at the heart of this great mystery. |
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Half of the proposed new homes will be shoehorned into the current school site which is a protected recreational site in the centre and at the heart of our village. |
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This mind-set is at the heart of the brilliant work of Pixar Animation Studios. |
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These are the true blue supporters who are at the heart of the scene. |
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The vampire at the heart of A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night neither sparkles nor sleeps in coffins. |
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This, you could say, is the tension at the heart of much of the West's performative art. |
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That calculated literary solecism of mixed tenses is at the heart of the essay, enabling Michaels to convey the simultaneity of his different times, a back then and a now. |
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The admissions prove for the first time that phone hacking was widespread at the heart of the Murdoch media empire. |
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Perhaps the existential angst of one man is also meant as a reflection on the moral vacuum at the heart of a country partly known for its kidnapping, crime and corruption. |
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But as interest grows, South Woodham Ferrers could find itself at the heart of British speed skating because of plans to build a state of the art racing track in the town. |
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This is, I think, the moral calculus at the heart of the argument, a calculus that folks on that side of the cultural divide very much want to preserve. |
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In doing so, it reflects the manner in which Kafka himself has gradually become indistinguishable from the obscure fascination at the heart of his writings. |
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Now the objector to all of this is charged with being captious, with seeking to impose restraints on activities which lie at the heart of democratic processes. |
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Rabat and Sale were the twin cities at the heart of this Republic. |
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There is now a central paradox at the heart of political life. |
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The Murray and Murrumbidgee rivers, their tributaries and catchments are at the heart of a national research project to improve water sustainability. |
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Influence within Europe is at the heart of this debate and those opposing our membership of the euro must understand clearly what they are campaigning for. |
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Because iron has an affinity electronegative atoms such as oxygen, nitrogen and sulfur, these atoms are found at the heart of the iron-binding centers of macromolecules. |
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A Scotland Yard investigation into the extent of honour killing in Britain has identified that forced marriage is very often at the heart of such crimes. |
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Since the patristic era, theologians have taught that at the heart of the eternal divine dynamic is the relationship between the first and second trinitarian persons. |
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Proteins' maddeningly intricate and all too permutable chains of peptides and amino acids were at the heart of the challenge of creating their new approach. |
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The utterly fallacious idea at the heart of the pro-war argument is that it is the duty of the anti-war argument to provide an alternative to war. |
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That at the heart of it is an international comity, reinforced perhaps by international law, that we respect each other's right to govern the internal economy of their ships. |
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This tradition is still at the heart of their music, with the female voices front-lining the instrumental textures of fiddle, guitars, accordion, bass and percussion. |
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The six-cylinder in-line engine has been a BMW speciality since way back when, so it should come as no surprise that the six-cylinder remains at the heart of the power chain. |
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This problem is at the heart of several conundrums concerning time. |
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Financial institutions can benefit by converting what was once thought of as a cost center into marketing opportunities at the heart of their customer's e-commerce activities. |
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The answer is that the clubs lay at the heart of industrial Lanarkshire and football was pre-eminently the game of steelworkers, miners and shipbuilders. |
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The striking of a fair balance lies at the heart of proportionality. |
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Both the IOC and FIFA have embraced and proselytised the central tenet that a belief in the positive values of sport is at the heart of their purpose and their success. |
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I do believe video games are sort of at the heart of a cancer that's eating away at this culture, turning every popular art form into a pure service industry. |
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Much as he deplores the disembodiment he finds at the heart of dying-to-know narratives, some kind of self-denial, he decides, is essential for the good, if not the true. |
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There was public disquiet about the private finance decision but Mackie says improving the educational experience is at the heart of all his proposals. |
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Surely a grown-up modern democracy should put debate at the heart of its responsibility, rather than devote precious parliamentary time to anecdotes and eulogies? |
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The art of banter, which is both a workplace and television writer's art, the true insider's patois, may be at the heart of The West Wing's success. |
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Basque cuisine is at the heart of Basque culture, influenced by the neighboring communities and the excellent produce from the sea and the land. |
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I particularly like the internationalism at the heart of Ed Miliband's approach. |
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The Microfilm is an extremely versatile cooker that sits at the heart of many Baker Perkins AutoCook systems. |
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Former Newcastle United academy player Andrew Ferrell was at the heart of a massive plot to supply cocaine and amphetamine. |
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The pursuit of wellness, increasingly tied to the pursuit of beauty and agelessness, stands at the heart of the current zeitgeist. |
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In 1962 the Duveen Gallery was finally restored and the Parthenon Sculptures were moved back into it, once again at the heart of the museum. |
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North Parade has also seen several new themed bars open and is at the heart of the Independent Quarter of the city. |
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Industry, frugality, calling, discipline, and a strong sense of responsibility are at the heart of their moral code. |
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The Ceremonial Archway, which was built in Shanghai, China, is located at the heart of Liverpool's Chinatown. |
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The Mosfilm studio was at the heart of many classic films, as it is responsible for both artistic and mainstream productions. |
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Moscow's road system is centered roughly on the Kremlin at the heart of the city. |
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It also figures in Confucian writings as at the heart of moral action, including in the Mencius and the Doctrine of the Mean. |
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By 1854, the old Laboratory Square had been roofed over to serve as a vast machine shop at the heart of what was now a munitions factory. |
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Ironbridge is a village on the River Severn, at the heart of the Ironbridge Gorge, in Shropshire, England. |
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Insight is given through the eyes of the Morland family into the religious, political and emotional issues at the heart of the struggle. |
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This aretegenic function of theology was at the heart of theology prior to modernity. |
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Henceforth, Tsarist autocracy and despotism would lie at the heart of the Russian state. |
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The British had responded to the French challenge in North America by striking at the heart of New France. |
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Philip moved south around the new defensive line and struck upwards at the heart of the Duchy, now facing little resistance. |
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Parliament Square is at the heart of Scotland's legal system, being the home of both the High Court of Justiciary and the Court of Session. |
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In Chu's interferometer, lasers not only precool atoms but also lie at the heart of the device. |
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Poundland is perfectly positioned to serve the needs of consumers who place value for money at the heart of their purchasing decisions. |
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For he's a short-sighted, tippling company rep at the heart of the action when he double-books a Portuguese time-share villa. |
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Historically, Ulster lay at the heart of the Gaelic world made up of Gaelic Ireland, Scotland and the Isle of Man. |
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That revolving-door thing is a cancer at the heart of American democracy. |
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Such techniques, however, lie at the heart of the government's use of extraordinary rendition. |
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The monuments at the heart of Neolithic Orkney and Skara Brae proclaim the triumphs of the human spirit in early ages and isolated places. |
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Culinarily, it sits at the heart of Cantonese cooking, one of China's eight great cooking traditions. |
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Located at the heart of the old city, it was known in medieval times as the caularia, or cabbage market, in Occitan, the local dialect. |
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Our pack definitely took some stopping down in the capital, with David Fa'alogo and Luke O'Donnell right at the heart of the success. |
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Britain has a great new political leader and tough-minded fairness will be at the heart of the work of the new generation. |
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The streets around the park at the heart of Queens Park are a conservation area. |
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Sociolinguistics is at the heart of Anna Rinaldin's study of Ernesto Calzavara's positions on writing poetry in dialect. |
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Network cabling, found at the heart of every network site, impacts signal transmission, intermodulation and attenuation. |
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Popper's account of the logical asymmetry between verification and falsifiability lies at the heart of his philosophy of science. |
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A version of the golden rule is at the heart of every religion. |
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The curative power of the written word is at the heart of bibliotherapy, but can books really help us get better? |
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But at the heart of the transformation may be the electability issue. |
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The four islands at the heart of the diplomatic row are known as the Northern Territories in Japan and southern Kurils in Russia. |
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Analyzed correctly, the numbers reveal a subtle structure that reflects the simple equations at the heart of random number generators. |
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Vibrant, zingy, spicy barbecue dishes are at the heart of a great new cookbook with its roots in Brazil. |
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This result indicates that it's pitch, not timing, that lies at the heart of severe musical ineptitude, sometimes referred to as amusia. |
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What's exciting about Snaps is it puts our brands at the heart of the conversation, helping us move from interruptive advertising to interactive brand engagement. |
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The TAD centre has also put itself at the heart of the community, supporting charitable causes such as funds for baby Kyle Sheekey, who suffered from meningitis. |
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That's because this critter is at the heart of Antarctica's food web. |
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Pluralism, consistency and vertical and horizontal coherence, universalisability and the principle of institutional choices, are at the heart of his view. |
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This guiding principle lies at the heart of a country's progress and The Government Summit revealed its alignment with this principle with commendable seamlessness. |
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The bomb went off by a cenotaph which was at the heart of the parade. |
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Benicio Del Toro is perfect as the lycanthrope at the heart of it all. |
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The use of honey, beeswax and propolis is at the heart of everything we do and each plays a very important role in achieving and maintaining skin health and vibrancy. |
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In the summer of 1521, Luther widened his target from individual pieties like indulgences and pilgrimages to doctrines at the heart of Church practice. |
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Cardiff Castle has been at the heart of the city ever since. |
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The city of Novokuznetsk is located at the heart of the Kuzbass region. |
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You won't be astonished to hear that Robbie Savage was at the heart of it, though this time, it was his backside that got a good kicking from Gorka Pintado. |
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This is clearly at the heart of our Jeremiah and Lucan pericopes. |
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The mosque has been at the heart of al Shabb's attempts to radicalize disillusioned young Kenyan Muslims over the past couple of years, security sources say. |
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As prime minister, David Cameron wanted to put family policy at the heart of the Conservative Party claiming British politics in the past had got it wrong. |
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The city of Antwerp, in the Spanish Netherlands, lay at the heart of European commerce and its bankers financed most of Charles V's and Philip II's wars on credit. |
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However, at the heart of it, and often overlooked, sits the Grade II listed signal box on Navigation Street, which houses the centre of all rail operations of the station. |
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Barcelona remained the second largest city in Spain, at the heart of a region which was relatively industrialised and prosperous, despite the devastation of the civil war. |
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Buddhists believe that suffering is right at the heart of all life. |
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Bliss and later served as the headquarters for the Whale Oil Company, sits at the heart of the neighborhood's new 22-acre Sunset Park Waterfront Park. |
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Located just above the Equator, between the Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean Sea, Puerto Rico is part of the Greater Antilles right at the heart of the Western Hemisphere. |
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However, Stephen Greenblatt has argued that the coincidence of the names and Shakespeare's grief for the loss of his son may lie at the heart of the tragedy. |
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The Nuance engine is at the heart of Charles Schwab's VoiceBroker service, which employs the largest active vocabulary for business transactions over the telephone. |
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This sense of unsafety and instability is at the heart of the books. |
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Mythology was at the heart of everyday life in Ancient Greece. |
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Greater Manchester lies at the heart of the North West transport network. |
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Despite Cambridge's delay in admitting women to full degrees, Cambridge women were at the heart of scientific research throughout the 20th century. |
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The Dubliner, in her early 20s, was at the heart of a social media storm after messages she sent boasting about a threesome with two rugby stars found their way online. |
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The conceptual link between transcendence and otherness, captured so deftly by the Rubaiyat, lies at the heart of Emmanual Levinas' treatment of exteriority. |
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Today, agriculture still plays a part in the economic life of Stirling, given its focus at the heart of a large rural area, but to a much lesser extent than previously. |
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Norwich's attack centred on a front pair of Steve Morison and Grant Holt, but Younes Kaboul at the heart of the Tottenham defence dominated in the air. |
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As well as numerous parks, open spaces, and extensive riverside areas, puzzlingly the report also overlooked the 1000 acre Town Moor at the heart of the city. |
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