The fair was like the crazy opposite of the academy, turning its demonstrations and its messages into a chaotic babel. |
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Though the Liars' cuts are supremely inaccessible, moody pieces, their chaotic, indecipherable babel plays against Oneida's monolithic tower. |
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Her reverie was broken by a babel of voices, the approach of running feet, and suddenly her vision was filled with Theo's aghast features. |
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Worse, the babel of messages from amateurs produced conflicting news about whether the ship was safe. |
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What is left is a babel of talk, of contrasting idiolects delineating the diverse characters, again well illustrated by Miola. |
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And yet he has been rejected by a polyglot babel of 25 countries, and the will of the people of Italy has been frustrated. |
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With songs in Spanish, English, Mayan, and Zapotec, it reflects the babel of voices that is our ever-expanding border region. |
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If we turn to various explanations of how these incidents come about and how to prevent them, we face a babel of opinions. |
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Out of the babel of writers' voices offering their services, one dominated, that of Peter Nichols. |
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Scottish accents could still be heard amid the Australian babel, but the immigrants were far outnumbered by the Australian-born claiming Scots origin. |
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Each of them a million cities, a babel of troubles, secrets, losses. |
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This man's message is this, that amidst the babel of voices in our world, there is another word-and the essence of wisdom is to listen to this word. |
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Larva echoes this multiplicity of tongues, a babel of aliens. |
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People are likely to become confused by the babel of tongues, and to be misled into thinking of what keeps men apart rather than what brings them together. |
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This time, the debates have more closely resembled the political theatre of continental countries: a babel of voices seeking your attention and your votes with the specific intention of taming a Labour or Tory regime. |
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The myriad disjunctions that fractionalize and disunite cultural discourse in our period made all our forums a scene of babel. |
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So great was the conflux of torches, the flash and gleam of weapons, and the babel of sounds that it wrought on the mind the impression of a fire blazing up in the night. |
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What hope is there for the general, curious reader when the cognoscenti are inhabitants of this Babel? |
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The congress is the industry's very own Tower of Babel and more than 50,000 joined in the techno-speak gabfest this year. |
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However, within the context of the Biblical record of human history, this individual is likely to post-date the dispersion from Babel. |
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Up to the time of the tower of Babel and the call of Abram from Ur of the Chaldees, there were just nations, or Gentiles as later called. |
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It is a port built on successive waves of immigration from a Babel of nations. |
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The illusion of easy communication disintegrates, the curse of Babel reasserts itself, English collapses into translationese. |
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The Tower of Babel, the great ziggurat beside Babylon's temple of Marduk, dates to this era. |
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Writers who refused to change, such as Babel and Pilnyak, were executed or died in labour camps. |
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Graybill argues that the Tower of Babel presents an alternative to what she calls the Sinaitic model of understanding language, law, and interpretation. |
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Voronin and Babel might be dead losses but they're surely more use than Fowler. |
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Everything was a labyrinthine amalgam of languages, a towering Babel of puns and glossolalia. |
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Ormuz was said to be a Babel for its confusion of tongues, and for its moral abominations to match the cities of the Plain. |
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Our scientist-kings and our brave new age of biotechnology are the latest in giant steps that will take this Babel drive to a new level. |
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Roy Hodgson will offer Dortmund Anfield benchwarmers Ryan Babel or Milan Jovanovic plus a cash adjustment in a January. |
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In Babel Tower, Byatt implicitly questions Bull's overpainting and Frederica's verbal laminations, juxtaposing and comparing their semiotic strategies. |
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If there is any analogy for our predicament, it is the story of the Tower of Babel, but of course the analogy is not understood outside the dwindling Judeo-Christian remnant. |
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