She frowned and tried to bring to mind the family tree that had hung on the wall in her father's study, the generations of spidery black lines. |
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They bring to mind trees, flowers and branching foliage breaking into bloom before our eyes. |
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Their self-deprecating wit, aw-shucks harmonies, and obsession with intoxicating spirits bring to mind Texas roots rockers the Gourds. |
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Additionally, her characters have exotic and sometimes grotesque attributes that bring to mind the Surrealist tradition. |
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The costumes range from ethnic outfits to more abstract modernist affairs that bring to mind Picasso's involvement with the Ballet Russe. |
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The thought of measles may bring to mind the red, blotchy rash that often accompanies this disorder. |
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For instance, azurite, chrysocolla, and turquoise bring to mind vivid images of various shades of blue. |
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Taken together, they bring to mind the Sunday paper comic-strip characters of Jiggs and Maggie. |
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They bring to mind the pop of Champagne corks, the confetti, the giddiness, the hubbub. |
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We therefore bring to mind Pentecost, the descent of the Holy Ghost upon the apostles, as a highly significant event. |
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He certainly doesn't bring to mind the stuffy polo and shooting image of British royalty at play. |
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The bare feet are beautiful, elegant and feminine but bring to mind the bastinado, the terrible flogging of the feet. |
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The experiences of the project team with Hussain in Pakistan bring to mind similar cases in other countries. |
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But the implications of his conviction bring to mind broader considerations. |
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They even bring to mind the word oligarchy where a powerful few are in control and are accepting of and tolerant of the sight of hungry children. |
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The monumental fireplace and the glazed floor tiles bring to mind a room such as a harbour master's office. |
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Permit me to bring to mind a few of my own memories, which I hope will elicit some of your own. |
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The curve of the building is meant to bring to mind the flexibility and the transformational possibilities of aluminium. |
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These scenes may have Dionysiac associations and bring to mind the amorous encounters between satyrs and maenads. |
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For the Olympic Games in Atlanta in 1996, the modes of transport that were used bring to mind great moments in American history. |
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In the United States, however, these two beasts of burden bring to mind the country's two major political parties. |
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Why is it condemnable to craft songs with harmonies and choruses so finely constructed they immediately bring to mind some of modern rock's best and brightest talents? |
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Seating and circular oak tables reminds visitors of barrels and round chairs bring to mind large pebbles. |
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Anyone past the age of 30 can bring to mind youthful enthusiasms which pushed him or her over the brink of disappointment. |
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What does this anniversary bring to mind for you? |
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What's more, the special transparency of the material and the sheen of the colours bring to mind a soap bubble, iridescent with reflections of light. |
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As I speak to you, I bring to mind every community and every Sister who, in various parts of the world live out their consecration in communion with other religious in an authentic evangelical spirit. |
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Opinions such as these vividly bring to mind the attitude of leaders of the former Eastern Bloc countries, which was that people could not catch infectious diseases in their countries. |
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That's why his pictures can bring to mind movie stills. |
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Some of her comments bring to mind the Oversoul of the 19th century Transcendentalists. |
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A system of this kind does tend to bring to mind scenes of medieval forced labour, but this system was reprehensible for its excesses not the principle. |
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This ornamental motive could alternately bring to mind a galloping horse. |
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The above examples from Southern Sudan and Uganda bring to mind the usefulness of the IMS as an emergency response tool in emergency prone contexts. |
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The recent events in southern Lebanon bring to mind the dangers caused to the civilian population by explosive remnants of war, especially cluster bombs, and the difficulty and expense of clearing them. |
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My father decided to call me Jermaine, after Jermaine Jackson, thinking it would go well with his own name, Michael, and bring to mind some association with the Jackson Five. |
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In the Middle Ages, the thistle was an emblem of the Virgin Mary because its white sap would bring to mind the milk falling from the breast of the Mother of God. |
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A bold use of texture is demonstrated in the ragged edges, the indentions and ribbed and rippled surfaces, which bring to mind the combustion of a Voulkos work. |
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