There's nothing fancy about him, despite being the country's first black person to break into the elite, white-dominated sport of showjumping. |
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Back in Scotland, she modelled for ten years and worked as a make-up artist before making the break into media. |
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They are not a million miles away from being good enough to lift a trophy or break into the top six or seven in the league. |
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You didn't have to break into abandoned swimming pools, or build insanely expensive half pipes. |
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They ride around on pretend horses while knocking coconuts together and often break into spontaneous song. |
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In this country, town governments issue passports, so thieves frequently break into the town hall and steal blanks. |
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They watch the blips on the screen representing the planes break into two and fly off. |
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There are others who break into vehicles and steal other people's property and make residents feel unsafe in their own community. |
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Thieves break into parked motor vehicles and take away anything they can lay their hands on. |
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Sarah gets hundreds of CVs a year from graduates desperate to break into event coordination. |
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His charm is low-key and genuine, a wideness about the uncrumpled eyes, a readiness to break into a straight-toothed smile. |
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They themselves will be among the players bidding to break into the reckoning for Cardiff. |
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Opportunities to break into the first team at Preston appear to be slim, with five other players ahead of him in the pecking order at Deepdale. |
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Skillfully, they chasse out, uniformly break into deep contractions, then spiral down to the floor. |
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After he smashed the Bolton Association record for runs in a season, Bazid Khan is now looking to break into the Pakistan cricket team. |
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They can offer advice, support and expertise to help companies break into overseas markets. |
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It is hoped that information gained from the three-year project will be used by other farmers who want to break into the organic market. |
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But there is a lot of competition in that area, it's difficult to break into a market when you only have a few customers. |
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Chinese companies attempting to break into overseas markets are desperately trying to buy or build global brands. |
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The door was closed, so the wolfhounds would not even see him, and the room that he had happened to break into was a full pantry! |
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English has a daunting inventory of phrasal verbs, such as break in, break out, break away, break into, break through, break up and break down. |
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She pulled open the door and felt her mouth break into a rather large grin. |
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I expect him to break into a strangled stutter as I wring his neck, to beg for his life. |
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The leak occurs when animal rights activists break into the lab and free the lab's chimps. |
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Repeatedly dubbed the most common virus ever in recent reports from on-line newsmongers, it has yet to break into print in any interesting way. |
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There are also concerns that hackers could break into those voting machines and vote more than once. |
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But one deeply entrenched demon I would like to exorcise is my tendency to break into a cold sweat when dealing with things financial. |
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It was only then I discovered they had, in fact, been trying to break into the vestry. |
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Witnesses said officers used hydraulic rams to try to break into the building's heavy front doors. |
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I don't think Friday's incident was a serious attempt to break into the shop as they had just used a crowbar to jemmy the shutters apart. |
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He has also freely and generously helped young people break into the business. |
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Some people say if a burglar wants to break into your house, he will get in no matter what you do. |
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The pictures showed that when the water reached a certain speed, it began to break into eddies, waves and cross-currents. |
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But having to break into America certainly is annoying, and it is sort of something I've got a chip on my shoulder about. |
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There is also some sage advice for females wanting to break into what is still essentially a male domain. |
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She would cry, break into a cold sweat and suffer severe panic attacks at the gates every time she attempted to return. |
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Officers wearing breathing apparatus used hand tools to break into the injured man's flat and rescue him from his bedroom. |
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Crimeware can enable remote access into applications, allowing criminals to break into networks for malicious purposes. |
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I break into a vague hummed rendition of a Viking drinking song and kinda rock back and forth holding up the glass. |
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A gifted French locksmith managed to break into the post room before the Germans discovered the radios had been mailed to the castle. |
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Stand outside one for long enough, and you'll hear the proprietor break into a fado, the equivalent of an Irish folk song. |
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The English art scene in the 1950s was clannish and especially difficult for a woman to break into. |
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Wearing the famed swoosh on its jerseys has allowed the club to break into the 130 countries that Nike reaches. |
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In response to each new sally of witticism, the Indians would break into uncontrollable fits of merriment. |
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We will break into teams to meet with our senators and representatives to urge them to co-sign the Act and other pertinent legislation. |
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Some dirty little tea leaf tried to break into my flat on the weekend whilst I was stood by the front door. |
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It is not easy to break into the cinema circle if you have no background of movies. |
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After all, the ex-offender could break into their homes or sweet-talk a child while his or her parents are not around. |
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Thieves are posing as bailiffs to break into people's homes to steal TVs and furniture. |
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People have to be scraping the barrel when they have to break into a charity shop and its very sad. |
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The lowering clouds develop into thick fog, then break into dazzling sunlight. |
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Often base jumpers have to break into buildings, evade security and climb hundreds of feet before leaping into space. |
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For the ham, boil in water with thyme, garlic, bay leaves, onions and leeks for two hours then break into largish pieces. |
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Although I doubt crackers are attempting to break into your PC as you read this, there's always the possibility. |
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That's also why smart goverment agencies and companies hire tiger teams to try and break into their own systems. |
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The band is trying to break into the massive Continental market after a string of UK gigs were axed because of poor ticket sales. |
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I agree with the policeman who came round to break into the downstairs flat when the old lady first fell and refused to go to hospital. |
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Newcomers trying to break into politics in Kerry must be having second thoughts, given the way the old political dynasties continue to dominate. |
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With that project under its belt, the company was able to exit the tract housing market and break into the expanding school construction arena. |
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I could feel the strain of her effort to be gentle, like I was going to break into pieces any minute. |
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He's still waiting for his big break into films, and moonlights in any movie project that may help him make connections. |
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Laughing Boy is apparently his attempt to showcase his talent and break into the big time. |
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This is a good way to break into the big time of reporting on things and not just commenting on them. |
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Or simply another small bike company trying to make us think while they break into the big time almost unnoticed? |
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Now, according to Aussie legend John Newcombe, Hewitt is about to break into the big time on grass. |
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Unconcerned that the provincial German bank did not carry the clout of her previous employers, she set out to break into the big time. |
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Once in a while the stall-keeper in her housecoat and dyed-black hair will, almost accidentally, break into a pleasant expression. |
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He could barely contain his glee and seemed about to break into a jig at any moment. |
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I'd tried hard to break into show business with a record pantomime act in junior high school. |
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My good buddy Katie is dry-eyed but looks like she's about to shatter into a million tiny pieces, like a mirror with a crack, threatening to break into a thousand shards. |
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His used to steal beer and break into empty properties for all-night drinking parties. |
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At the music studio, Brinsley would arrive by train or bus to break into the music scene. |
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When the left of the old guard is clear of the ground on which it stood, the guard will break into quick time, and the new guard will shoulder arms. |
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They battle in boardrooms, break into nuclear facilities, and contend in Ironman competitions. |
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There is no promise that the players will break into song to culminate the show ... but one can hope! |
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Their night takes an unexpected twist when they break into a home and discover a young girl is being held captive inside. |
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It uses all the languages of South Africa, running subtitles in English when cast members break into Zulu, Xhosa, Sotho, Afrikaans, Tswana or any of a dozen other tongues. |
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The lady of the middle-class house wasn't expected to break into a sweat. |
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As more and more bugs in server implementation are discovered, they are promptly used to break into online systems and gain access to restricted information. |
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As dawn breaks on a misty Welsh morning, the earliest birds to break into song are likely to include European robins, followed by blackbirds and song thrushes. |
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The only thing missing from this cringe-worthy portrait is for her to break into a freestyle rap. |
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Three men stole a ladder to break into the grounds of a mental hospital next to the prison, and then used a rope ladder to scale the 20 ft prison wall. |
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Print and broadcast outlets both operate on fixed schedules, but broadcast outlets break into regular entertainment programming to offer saturation coverage. |
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I want to break into his flat and Sellotape his hands behind his back. |
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I read that you went to Harvard and wrote for the lampoon there, but how did you break into professional comedy? |
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This process could not go on indefinitely, and in 1908 Schoenberg made the break into atonality, abandoning the attempt to fit atonal harmonies into tonal forms. |
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Low returns to the mid tempo rock of the title track and yet still manages to fit a percussion break into the most U2 sounding like track on the record. |
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You don't need to be suited and booted to break into business. |
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The series regulars sang original songs in her imagination, but did not actually break into any unexplainable dance routines. |
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Despite having an alarm system, window and door shutters, plus several heavy security doors, thieves still managed to break into his shop on Saturday. |
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People with no identifiable singing ability would break into tuneful song. |
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He moved to Memphis, birthplace of rockabilly, an earthy blend of country music, bluegrass, blues, gospel and swing jazz, hoping to break into the local music scene. |
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Sheriff's officials have testified they used a sledgehammer to break into Mr Miller's office in Beverly Hills and seized videotapes and files related to the case. |
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Kaitlin nodded, finally seeing a chance to break into the conversation. |
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They were all trying to find a way to break into the conversation. |
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She is petite, blonde and quick to break into a sunny smile. |
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The prosecution case is that the three acted in concert to break into the cafe, Mike and Tony breaking and entering and John driving the getaway car. |
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Police believe she may have heard thieves trying to break into two high-value cars, including a stretch limousine belonging to her husband, outside their house in Wembley. |
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Hexameters, for example, are difficult to handle, and heptameters are apt to break into two lines of four and three stresses each, the so-called ballad metre. |
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There were another few moments of silence on the phone line, each girl trying to outwait the other, wait for the other to break into some sort of conversation or hang up. |
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They either have to settle for stealing your car stereo and air bag, towing your car all the way to the chop shop or they break into your house and steal your keys first. |
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I just read an interview with a pretty successful comic book penciller where he says that for years he worked to break into comics and be successful in comics. |
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But he might simply shatter, break into irrecoverable pieces. |
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Lines as corny as this can have someone in the audience break into laughter, and the thin crust of magic that keeps the film afloat will fall into splinters. |
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So, naturally, the site community has yet to break into double figures. |
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A DRUNK teenager who used a garden gnome to break into the house of a disabled couple has been spared jail. |
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He captured the Constable outside the castle and he and his men captured the outer ward but could not break into the inner defences. |
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The worst thing they do is break into a zoo and ride the merry-go-round. |
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A pair of cat burglars run into trouble when they break into a home to get their hands on a priceless masterpiece. |
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From the 1990s alternative rock began to dominate rock music and break into the mainstream in the form of grunge, Britpop, and indie rock. |
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He was eager to break into the highly profitable spice trade between Europe and Asia, which was conducted chiefly by land. |
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Wolves mainly attack livestock when the animals are grazing, though they occasionally break into fenced enclosures. |
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The story is about unsavory and underdog outsiders who break into a fat-cat insider's game. |
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They used an axe to break into 68 sheds and took expensive items, including strimmers, generators, rotivators, drills and flame guns. |
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They relied on excellent communication systems, which enabled them to break into a position and exploit it before the enemy could react. |
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Police are convinced the robberies were the work of the same gang, who use pickaxes, drills and flamethrowers to break into banks. |
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The band attempted to break into the United States once more with Equally Cursed and Blessed. |
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Many artists from the Mainland and Taiwan have learned Cantonese to break into the market. |
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Perhaps next he will suggest that school staff should break into a daily chorus of the scouting movement's Ging Gang Goolie. |
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Get ready for the Bleeding Love singer, 28, to break into random song with random people and have bunny rabbits follow her down the street. |
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Proteins, made of long chains of amino acids, start to break into individual acids. |
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Once cool, break into small shards and use for garnishing the tarts. |
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The couple in question, John and Mia, are plagued by supernatural phenomena after two Satanists break into their home in a random attack. |
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It's hard enough for Afro-Caribbeans to break into the media in front of camera, but harder still to get into the production side. |
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The mention of marriage causes Zama to break into a belly laugh. |
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Preliminary investigation at the crime scenes indicated that the culprit took advantage of the homeowners' absence to break into the houses and cart off their valuables. |
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Using Bohr's liquid drop model, they showed how uranium atoms bombarded with neutrons can break into two roughly equal fragments, a process they called fission. |
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Rioters killed a security guard while they were trying to break into the Na'erbage police station, Xinhua quoted Ablet Metniyaz, chief of the police station, as saying. |
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This 'boys' club' attitude that girls can't be geeks is still a major stumbling block for feminerds and girls who want to break into geek culture. |
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He had downloaded an antitheft app called Lookout, with a feature that uses a phone's frontfacing camera to take an image of anyone who tries to break into it. |
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The waves break into spray, dash and rumble and thud below your feet. |
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A BURGLAR who had second thoughts while trying to break into a house because he had made a promise to end his life of lawbreaking has kept his freedom. |
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Instead, he uses a geometrically strict raster to transcribe it, composing a surface in nuanced shades of white that occasionally gently break into gray. |
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Wearing a black t-shirt, tracksuit and flip-flops, he had a five o'clock shadow, dark circles and his attire made you wonder if he was going to break into a sprint any minute. |
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Craftsmen attempted to emphasise their importance and to break into disputed areas of economic activity, setting prices and standards of workmanship. |
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