The process depersonalizes participants and blurs the precise nature of their roles. |
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Perhaps he blurs fact and fiction a little in places but then again I guess that's forgivable in his line of work. |
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Fox further blurs distinctions between news and opinion by having anchors and political commentators switch roles from one day to the next. |
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The stars turned to streaking blurs as they were hurled forward, Maia pushing the steering handles as far forward as they would go. |
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His fingers were blurs over the touch-screen and his eyes seemed to never stop moving. |
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We are progressing towards a landscape which blurs the line between the mediascape and material reality. |
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At other times, the multiple images meld and contrast in a polysexual stew that blurs interpersonal boundaries. |
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In place of the spokes in all four wheels he inserted odd markings that read as blurs. |
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Time often blurs memories but I can't recall many times when Rush endured a barren spell. |
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The story is pretty generic and the action scenes vary in quality, some were crisp and exiting, others were muddled, digitally-enhanced blurs. |
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Some filmmakers shine a bright light that blurs the intimate, the indistinct and the fugitive. |
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Party allegiance itself has become a more slippery concept, as political cross-dressing blurs the lines between the parties. |
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This gimmick blurs the clarity of the storyline without adding any appreciable benefit. |
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Its definition blurs any distinction between organised violence against civilians and anti-government protest. |
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Drop it down to second with some clunking from the sequential box, the revs rise, press the pedal to the floor and the world blurs. |
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If pre-emption replaces deterrence as the fulcrum of global engineering, then the boundary blurs between the forces of civilisation and terror. |
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Paradise Lost blurs harmonious sound and music and speech together, and they are all a synecdoche for the divine. |
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The opening scene from Casablanca, featuring a rotating globe and newsreel voiceover, blurs fictional and documentary forms. |
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The show further blurs the line between advertising and entertainment in an age of celebrity pitchmen and scripted product placement. |
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The windows seemed like blurs of light streaking and painting the walls. |
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Each face is conjured from eloquent pencil lines and blurs of paint against a virginal white swath of satin, hung vertically like an iconic banner. |
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She ran without effort, the world reduced to formless blurs of color. |
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Crowdsourcing blurs the lines between what constitutes work and play. |
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Soft-focus effect blurs away imperfections for the most flawlessly natural finish. |
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The repairing clarifying night cream repairs, lightens the complexion and blurs away the brown marks. |
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The disconcerting realness of the dolls blurs the distinction between the real and the unreal, as well as between life and the inanimate. |
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Cars continued to zoom past, mere blurs of colour and noise. |
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I don't know what I'm looking for so I just go through the pages pretty quick, and his handwriting is tiny and angular, and it all blurs together real fast. |
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He cracked his knuckles and his fingers became blurs over the keyboard. |
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The film then blurs space-time boundaries as it sends the two filmmakers on assignment to interview the key characters surrounding the hero's life. |
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Impressionism, on the other hand, blurs appearances thoroughly, but it doesn't indulge in any dematerialisation effects. |
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A composition of soft-focus horizontal and vertical bands by Adam Henry blurs in the central area as if obscured by a foggy cloudlet. |
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We must help the skin to reprogram the hydration process to assure a perfectly hydrated skin and blurs the signs of aging. |
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Documenting her own life through staged reenactments and narrative, Sophie Calle blurs the boundaries between art and reality. |
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A warm, moist south wind blurs the boundary between Lake Superior and the sky. |
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Motley blends, vibrant blurs, and impressionistic pointillism are broken down on all grounds from tweeds to satins, wool voiles to faded silks. |
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Her whole body blurs in the dim light as the platform beneath her vibrates rapidly, its droning buzz filling the room. |
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Like M-Pesa before it, the company blurs the lines between telecomms and banking. |
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The report contains the telling line that the fight against terrorism blurs the traditional distinction between foreign and domestic policy. |
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The focus on market share as advocated by TBEA and EBIA blurs in this particular case the results of a proper analysis. |
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In Peru, a new form of security arrangement blurs the lines between state, local and private security. |
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Google identifies and blurs the faces and the licence plates in Street View. |
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Survivorship is a complex concept that blurs boundaries between treatment and post-treatment. |
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Widespread cross-subsidization blurs the identification of unprofitable operations and hampers the development of profitable activities. |
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Ensure the clubhead is moving both up and out as it blurs past the ball or through the impact zone. |
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The global terrorist threat is part of the risk society and blurs the distinction between internal and external security. |
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This is possible, although not likely: there are reformers as well as democrats in both camps, which blurs the dichotomy. |
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They jabbed, parried, charged and riposted with such speed that the blades were indistinguishable blurs of reflected light now that the sun had risen over the horizon. |
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It will be noted approvingly that the prose poem blurs boundaries. |
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The door flew open suddenly and two naked blurs streaked past. |
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This violence is manifested in different ways in different contexts. The various ways in which it is described, however, often tends to blurs its essential nature. |
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The wavefunction describes just how wave-like a particle actually is. Normally, the microscopic wavefunctions of the electrons in a material combine in a way that blurs out their waviness on a macroscopic scale. |
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In his view such a conjoining not only blurs analysis and diagnosis and thus weakens responses and strategies, but, in a still more disquieting manner, reinforces a dynamic of conflict of culture and religion. |
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As he batters his acoustic with his hands and blurs the strings, he's set the bar high for Kanye for the most stirring performance of the evening. |
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Actinic chelitis is an SCC involving the lower lip that presents with redness and scale and blurs the border of the lip and adjacent skin. |
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This blurs the previous good record to some extent. |
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Claerbout blurs the line between the still and the moving image, digitally manipulating analogue images to create works that invite a reconsideration both of the image and of our perceptions of space and time. |
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Collins shifts the slide, and the trumpet phrase gets faster and faster until it blurs into a buzzy pitch. |
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On average, jitter noise blurs a measured signal and reduces its power in the spectral domain. |
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In La guerra d'amore, using madrigals by Claudio Monteverdi, Schlömer developed an experimental, intensely emotional piece with no plot, which crosses and blurs the boundaries of song, dance and poetry. |
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For example, EUFOR's use of white vehicles in some towns and two white helicopters in Goz Beida blurs the distinction between humanitarians and military. |
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A plus lens blurs image to determine extent of hyperopia. |
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Google blurs these images at an incredible scale, and although our software is very good, it is not always perfect, and it occasionally generates a false positive. |
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But the traditional image technology of oil painting, with its super-dilute suspensions of pigment, its elusively gradual blurs, can handle dematerialisations masterfully. |
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As LTE blurs the picture, that vision is having to be redrawn. |
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Using a unilateral process to bestow responsibility on institutions expected to encourage multilateral participation is not only contradictory, it also blurs roles. |
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Some, however, see such editorial extravagance as dubious prescriptive overkill that objectionably blurs the line between authentic and spurious. |
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Furthermore, we are all aware that terrorism blurs the distinction between internal affairs and external policy and that today, whether we like it or not, it appears to be directly related to immigration problems. |
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Broadly speaking, these problems can be classified according to whether they are eminently physical or social, although the obvious interrelation between the two blurs the border of such a classification. |
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He blurs the boundary between landscape and architecture, to the point of using plants as building materials, with the help of botanist Patrick Blanc. |
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The weakness of Handy model is that it blurs culture and structure. |
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His novel is based on historical occurrences but it blurs the line between fact and fiction. |
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Some his work blurs the boundaries between architecture and art. |
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We saw about three times performance increases on Blurs and Glows, and are ravingly happy with the new color balance functionality in the ICEfx software. |
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