The video transfer captures those colors nicely, and there are no marks or digital flaws to detract from the enjoyment of the film. |
|
As one enters though, it is not the beautiful lamps or the dazzling pictures on the wall that captures the eye. |
|
It captures the effervescence of the Essex personality and the county's famously vibrant business scene. |
|
A vacuous, empty space is present in almost all locations throughout the film and successfully captures the enormous lack of love Barry feels. |
|
The section on overindulgence captures the well-known observation of drunken robins that have ingested too much overripe fruit. |
|
The pair is soon joined by Jesse's brother Miles, who throws a hissy fit and captures Winnie. |
|
The film's dialogue is minimal and often earthy but it accurately captures the rebellious mood of the youth. |
|
National Geographic has found the girl who posed for this haunting picture that so perfectly captures the horror of war. |
|
In a state of financial desperation, the camera captures Christophe hocking his musical instruments, the things he loves the most. |
|
At touchdown, the platform securely captures the landing gear and then lowers the fighter to the mother ship's backbone. |
|
It chemically captures, or chelates, excess iron but must be given intravenously or by injection. |
|
It captures the overwhelmingness, the exhaustion, the excitement, the isolation, the joy, the sense of being other than what you are. |
|
Unfettered by the strictures of plot, the movie homes in on local talent and captures the attitude towards taming the islands' cold waters. |
|
The image captures a personal moment, one that links the soldier with the home front and the wife he left behind. |
|
Few Americans think local news coverage fairly captures the essence of daily life and progress in their hometowns. |
|
In fact, Walker's capsule summary of the movie captures exactly what I dislike about it! |
|
The play also captures something of Beckett's absurdist tragicomedy Waiting for Godot. |
|
If an e-card captures people's imagination, within seconds they will forward it and so the message goes on around the world. |
|
The chlorophyll captures the energy of light, and makes it accessible to the plant for photosynthesis. |
|
Nevertheless, he captures the music's masculine swagger right from the very first chord. |
|
|
It also features a hyperkinetic outro that finally captures the galvanization we could've used from the outset. |
|
The unimpeachable morality and impeccable conduct of the shootist who never killed anyone still captures imaginations today. |
|
A visual feast, it brilliantly captures the perilousness of being an animal, and an outsider, in a cruel bipedal world. |
|
Her rich, clear soprano captures infinite shadings of mock-hauteur, pertness and good humour. |
|
A jar of precious moskonfyt, the dark amber syrup made from hanepoot, captures time and craftsmanship. |
|
Take Two captures a sideways look at the life of a single mother as she tries to run a small PR firm in the midlands. |
|
The tale of the Basque hotelkeeper Lyda Esain captures graphically the challenges and drudgery of owning and operating such an enterprise. |
|
Prior to the big night, Higgins tests his handiwork at the Ascot races where Eliza captures the heart of Freddy Eynsford-Hill. |
|
Another along the McNeil River in Alaska captures the world's largest congregation of brown bears fishing for sockeye, silver, and chum salmon. |
|
The cinematography captures every freezing detail of Lake Tahoe's cold, clear water and crisp blue mountain skies. |
|
He captures some important changes, but downplays the constraints on choice. |
|
His bondage art often captures that exact aesthetic I previously described, which I consider nearly a fetish in and of itself. |
|
It captures honest moments of weirdness, but it also manipulates images and music to evoke emotion. |
|
It effectively captures the tragedy and comedy of this scene as the emigrants, blonde and bewigged, scamper across the hills. |
|
Barnes accurately captures the cliches, lack of punctuation, and poor syntax that reveal his derivative mind. |
|
I'm not sure whose translation he used, but this one by Dudley Fitts captures the malediction Wright so relished. |
|
His voice is strong and steady and captures all the emotion laced in his music. |
|
It captures the simmering rage and imaginative poverty that was part of the Thatcherite psyche. |
|
Guest's camera captures all of these things with unblinking, unflinching honesty. |
|
The film is funny, and sweet, and captures that earnestness that goes so well with teen angst. |
|
|
More than most of Shakespeare's other comedies, Much Ado has a touch of tragedy about it and this production captures that element very well. |
|
Once attached to the window of a moving vehicle it captures a stream of images similar to a video camera. |
|
Some players also allow the ace to be worth one or fourteen at the discretion of the person who plays or captures it. |
|
This is music that perfectly captures the surreal emptiness of everyday life in a digital world. |
|
Bro also gets degraded by other schoolchildren, something pop captures on film as it helps boost his ratings. |
|
Musically, the group captures a pressing sense of urgency devoid of anything trite or gimmicky. |
|
This newspaper article captures some sense of the excitement being built up around the Socceroos. |
|
The film captures an essential truth of adolescence, its simultaneous gawkiness and glory. |
|
It is a fluent and largely anecdotal account, which captures the woman and her work most vividly. |
|
While anecdotal, the narrative captures what is probably a common experience of those participating in discipline-based PFF programs. |
|
The wind plant captures and transforms wind energy into direct current electricity. |
|
The new animation done specifically for this release captures every nuance of the series. |
|
Scanning at the maximum optical resolution captures as much detail as possible without making your file too large. |
|
Typically, an attack begins when a single hornet captures a lone bee nearby the hive. |
|
He wrestles crocodiles and captures all breeds of dangerous animals for a living. |
|
The film captures monkeys in the Nariva wetlands, golden tree frogs housed in bromeliad plants and blue-backed manakins in Tobago. |
|
Primarily a carnivore the wolverine captures most of its prey, though it is also an extensive scavenger, eating quantities of carrion. |
|
The spacecraft's point of view now captures the shadowed side of the comet's nucleus. |
|
This setup captures only light from the focal plane, while out-of-focus Raman light and fluorescence background is strongly rejected. |
|
Using a psychoacoustic technique called binaural cue coding, MP3 Surround captures the spatial image information of multi-channel sound. |
|
|
Read only as a biographical primer, Houdini's Box captures the arc of Houdini's life. |
|
The six-storey tall screen captures the demoniac fury of the falls in such realistic detail that you cringe with fear as you watch it. |
|
His philosophy of arithmetic captures little more than simple sums and differences, what is learned in elementary school. |
|
This 1897 story harrowingly captures the nastiness, brutishness, and shortness of life in a village of the time. |
|
If you play a numeral card whose value is equal to the sum of the values of some cards on the floor, then your card captures that group of cards. |
|
The movie is terrific and really almost perfectly captures the feeling of what it was like to sit in a theater and watch the show. |
|
The documentary also captures the archetypal South African war dance, the toyi-toyi. |
|
She easily captures this grasping floozy, with just a curl of her bee-stung lips and her eyes alternately vacant and cunning. |
|
There were a number of live blogs for the award knocking around, but this one probably captures the ceremony best. |
|
The music captures the damp chill of the Scottish air and the fog rolling off the moors. |
|
Instead, it captures the delicate state of a country at its most vulnerable. |
|
The oil-on-canvas scene captures the town's main thoroughfare when it was still a two-way street. |
|
He wittily captures the psychology of the situation without actually showing many of the faces. |
|
In the previous episode during the first dance Claire captures Nate's image as he contemplates a seagull picking at the wedding cake. |
|
The documentary captures the vibrant music scene in Lagos and reveals the major young Nigerian Afrobeat, hip hop and fusion artists. |
|
He harks back to his earlier manner, and captures all the awe and freshness of seeing a view for the first time. |
|
You realise how much when he returns and effortlessly captures the spotlight, turning the crowd from content to jubilant. |
|
The author masterfully captures the narratives by using humor, raw language and thought-provoking descriptions. |
|
Naming is important in rap and in Afrocentric music in general, where it is an act of invocation that captures the essence of one's being. |
|
Tenderly, observantly, incisively, Edith Pearlman captures life on the page like few other writers. |
|
|
While the petition may win this battle, I don't see the war being won by the post office unless it captures more business. |
|
Frasier invites her home for drinks with hopes of kindling a romance, but is miffed when Martin captures her attention instead. |
|
His recognition that her novels scrupulously avoid retrospect captures something fundamental about her departure from 18th-century narrative. |
|
The home that architect David Coleman designed isn't literally a series of outbuildings, but his plan captures that rustic spirit. |
|
The upward tilt of the camera captures the perfect equipoise of the acrobat featured against a dull grey sky. |
|
A reconnaissance satellite, placed into orbit years ago, captures the entire scene in its computer memory. |
|
By night, these spots glow from within and by day, the mesh captures muted reflections of changing light and weather conditions. |
|
Table 4 captures this metamorphosis in major party support in a different way. |
|
The national folklife collection captures the unique heritage in Ireland and is now preserved to pass on to future generations. |
|
It is the story of one of Ireland unsung heroes and the sad occasion of his execution captures the atmosphere prevailing at this loathsome event. |
|
The text reads smoothly most of the time, yet occasionally an awkward construction captures the reader's attention. |
|
The six-storey tall screen captures the demonic fury of the falls in such realistic detail that you cringe with fear as you watch it. |
|
McBurney captures precisely the lonely oddity of individual lives that characterises Murakami's work. |
|
The album with 16 songs captures the torment, pain and frustration the prisoners undergo after separation from their loved ones. |
|
The appearance of naturally aged wood captures the signatures of all of nature's own artists. |
|
Each group faithfully captures the swinging lilt of Ory's bands, his sense of dynamics, and the essence of his robust trombone tones. |
|
Delightfully conceived and beautifully shot, the video captures Peter's carefree frame of mind perfectly. |
|
The saxophone also captures a great pitch and tempo that blends well with the slightly electronic sounding keyboards. |
|
This painting captures the height of the grassy climb, looking down over the white chalk cliffs to the water. |
|
But then, what if the spyware captures your keystrokes and stores them for later retrieval? |
|
|
Reisz's camera captures the drama of this specific event, but the film also presages a new mentality and a new freedom that won't be restrained. |
|
Piper's work gets inside the mentality of today's risk culture, and captures the crazy contortions that sensible people are ending up in. |
|
The last and only known portrait of the actor captures him as an intense, brooding young man, a distant, troubled look in his eyes. |
|
The acting in Candida is realistic and accurately captures the trials and tribulations of courtship. |
|
If they have a favourite place or have a picture that they think captures the area we would like to see it and they could win a prize. |
|
The different meaning of these two words captures something of America's view of itself. |
|
Reilly's story, one of loyalty, brotherhood, and dogged determination, captures and holds the reader's attention. |
|
Whenever one stream captures a portion of the drainage of a neighbouring stream, certain results are produced. |
|
He discounted arguments that the secrecy would withhold news of the captures from other terrorists. |
|
In those poems he captures so completely the familiar ritual cadences of Akan. |
|
We also included data from some additional captures in areas immediately adjacent to the YSG plot. |
|
We're up to 699 captures because we don't trace calls and tap calls and a lot of people are afraid to call the police. |
|
The camera captures Rico's observant nature as he gazes in envy at a mob leader's jeweled cravat, diamond pinky ring, and stock of fine cigars. |
|
The film captures these accumulating defeats tenderly and forgivingly, and makes each moment feel authentic and real. |
|
The IDF later announced that there had been no captures, though its soldiers remained in and around Nablus and the adjacent refugee camps. |
|
Similar captures have been reported from other waters such as Damph and Shiel over the last few years. |
|
He had twenty registered captures in those three years while teamed with a partner. |
|
The capture of these key members has led to additional captures throughout the Mosul-based AQ-AMZ network. |
|
Its jazzy recreation of fast London life played on Soutra Gilmour's shiny steel set captures the impulsive raciness of contemporary living. |
|
Wilkins captures our attention by provoking combinations of topics or case examples throughout the book. |
|
|
The chip captures light that enters the eye, and generates an electrical signal that is transmitted to the overlaying neural cells of the retina. |
|
Never too clever for its own good, it captures that wasted youth vibe competently enough. |
|
Curtis captures the angst of first love, the rhapsody of a first kiss and the intricacy of families. |
|
Wilder captures the childlike adoration of the father and absorption in the way the world works. |
|
There is a chance of winning a digital camera for taking the photograph which best captures the spirit of the challenge. |
|
This forms a striking demonstration of that paradox of oil painting whereby the thickest impasto captures the most fleeting highlights. |
|
The strongest hand of The Cincinnati Kid is that it captures the highs and lows and natural rhythm of a marathon poker game. |
|
For a more detailed walk-through, including more screen captures and expanded examples, check out my web site in the Resources section. |
|
The massive bronze statue of Richard in Westminster Palace Yard captures superbly the Ricardian qualities admired for centuries. |
|
He very proficiently captures the innocence, the pathos and the pluckiness of the character. |
|
One boy's picture captures perfectly the blocky angularity and monumental presence of Lawrence's three ironing women. |
|
Alias captures the look and feel of the hit ABC TV show, with players battling the forces of insensate evil. |
|
The stunning cinematography captures the beauty and remoteness of this mountain retreat. |
|
It also captures the spirit of both the old pirate movies, imparting a sense of heroism and roguishness within the player. |
|
The light-dependent reactions begin as chlorophyll captures light energy, which causes one of its electrons to move to a higher energy state. |
|
She regularly blows up cars, her captures always include some element of mayhem, and she has some serious man issues in her life. |
|
The advantage of a higher megapixel camera is in the detail it captures and the size you can blow the pictures up to. |
|
This captures the very earliest stages of fall in a way few games even attempt, blending serotinal greens with the slow incursion of rusty reds. |
|
Got some wonderful captures of Chino the other evening, which will get the LOLcat treatment eventually. |
|
With stop motion the camera captures images not in continuous moving shots but in one single frame at a time. |
|
|
It captures the essence of a short drink, and develops the brand without betraying its long-standing values. |
|
The lion roaming in a field with Manhattan as a backdrop really captures the dichotomous feeling of the record. |
|
The term diaspora has come into vogue in the last decade because it captures the ambiguities of contemporary social belonging. |
|
Another poignant shot captures the delight of machine operator Fritz Hummel after hearing by radio of the birth of his first son. |
|
The album is a lushly produced, 11-song disc that captures the group's British-influenced pop with loving attention. |
|
Her analysis captures the problematic nature of the self in late modernity and presents it in stark and provocative relief. |
|
Thursday's Astronomy Picture of the Day of the Moon and Jupiter even captures the Galilean satellites. |
|
The company brilliantly captures the feel of the master's writing without having to resort to big dresses and gleaming samovars. |
|
Another deft bit of prose, this one by Shakespeare, also captures the optimistic spirit of the season. |
|
He captures the endless grind of urban progress with background noises such as busses and television dominating the soundscape. |
|
The result is an eminently readable account that captures the spirit of those heady days. |
|
Admittedly, this is a simplistic analogy, but it captures the essence of the issue. |
|
This film captures the claustrophobic feeling of people struggling against violence and poverty. |
|
Pursuit of blockade runners often ran them aground, costing officers and crew the prize money awarded for captures. |
|
The painting of the sixth stage captures the network of sinews and muscles that appear under the parched skin. |
|
This does not exclude the possibility of a schematic representation which captures the commonality of the various uses. |
|
He captures with equal panache the drag-queenish vanity of Amalfi and the witty heroics of Count Sirocco. |
|
The spider captures summaries, which is all the engine searches, which gives you easy breadth, but not depth. |
|
The work captures O'Hara in repose yet with the suggestion that he would be ready at an instant to bounce into action. |
|
This title cutely captures the magic of the movies while doing justice to the fun of Lego. |
|
|
The idea smartly captures the banality of the relationship, highlighting the central idea by juxtaposing it against the action. |
|
It effortlessly captures the colour and magic of that region of south-west India. |
|
The frozen fluidity of blown glass captures something of the organic dynamism of plant life. |
|
She captures the seediness, deprivation and violence on the mean streets of Bradford well in her assured but frill-free prose. |
|
It captures city life with a deliberately gritty touch, showing the lives of street vendors, street kids, and farmers. |
|
Yes, the film appeals as a pitch-perfect period piece that captures the anti-style and anti-authoritarian ethos of the Seventies. |
|
But there is also a meatiness, a tenacity of grip, and, finally, a grandeur, which this production captures. |
|
It's a great little place that captures the energy of a university coffee house where a wide range of cultural activities take place. |
|
He painted them with big brushes, on giant canvases, working in high positions opposite the peaks he captures. |
|
He captures the Jamaican dialect in this early verse and valorizes the speech patterns of the working class. |
|
I have never been more amazed by a work in my life. Fagles' translation captures a lot of the feel of the original. |
|
The whole of the custody suite is covered by a video and sound recording system which captures every word or movement. |
|
The gap between the corrupt ruling class and the poor is wide and deep and he captures the unrest both too heavy-handedly and incredibly subtly. |
|
This wandering visualization captures the sense of family as a unit, an organism unto itself, with the lovingness and annoyingness such inseparability entails. |
|
One shot captures him pouring a bucket of money over his head. |
|
The design captures the spirit, character and verve of Chinese culture. |
|
For captures of 100 or more flies, numbers were estimated by weight. |
|
For Blackwell, folk art perfectly captures the nature of his company. |
|
Simmons, 50, captures the greed of the eighties with biting wit. |
|
With a wide and varied selection of events, displays and performances, the festival captures the spirit of Yeats's works and the imagination of Sligo audiences. |
|
|
Sanjay Talwar's stage direction captures the distance that has grown between these characters by never letting them get within 10 feet of each other. |
|
A satellite TV system consists of a dish that captures the TV signal broadcast from a satellite, and a receiver that amplifies the signal and sends it to a television. |
|
It consists of an interdependence between the electronic and protonic captures, which results from electrostatic interactions between redox and protonatable groups. |
|
There is an anecdote in the most recent book about the Bush White House which neatly captures how Europeans misjudge the President, and why they are wrong to do so. |
|
Like the Bonsai trees in the classical gardens of Suzhou, it's China in miniature that captures the imagination, every bit as much as its grand monumental flourishes. |
|
Using the most direct video methods, Auder captures such quotidian rituals as shaving, applying makeup, dressing and undressing, nursing, bathing, etc. |
|
The well-made film captures its target audience and amuses adults as well. |
|
I have even heard stories of captures of the migratory form of the rainbow trout, the steelhead, having been caught from rivers in the North West of England. |
|
He beautifully captures the Lord of the Flies cruelty of insecure adolescents grasping for their place on the ladder, mashing the faces of those below them under heel. |
|
I've come across such a picture in the tenth-century Irish tale Adamnan's Vision, in a curious scene that captures the sociability of the beatific vision. |
|
Photographer Kurt Wenner captures these ruins before vandals erase them completely. |
|
The excitement and live energy he creates on stage, captures the imagination of all who see him and his fans hang on his every note when he sings. |
|
Each work is a pithy marvel that captures the languorous excitement of a summer day to remember. |
|
No issue better captures the dysfunction of Washington than the trumped up debate over the Keystone XL pipeline. |
|
Don's picture captures the listless, boarded-up feel of the place better than mine does, but I fell too much in love with the lifts and wanted to make them look beautiful. |
|
Just one exhibition of more than 20 that make up this year's Mois de la Photo, World Press Photo contains no shortage of similarly dismal captures. |
|
The decrease in the number of fall captures could reflect natural mortality of overwintering adults and losses due to two prior removal-trapping sessions. |
|
His captures were mostly alive when he brought them into the house and we would have to rescue them, lock him in a room for an hour or so and take them back outside. |
|
The result, a 13 percent decline in illegal alien captures in Arizona. |
|
Nothing captures the exuberance and sensory experience of Havana quite like this. |
|
|
The film is a hard-to-find creature, a smart rom-com that captures the exuberance of falling in love, and the inevitable letdown. |
|
Her growing rapport with the von Trapp children, coupled with her generosity and spirit, gradually captures the heart of the stern Captain and they are soon married. |
|
A new biography captures the unflinching life of war photographer Tim Hetherington. |
|
It perfectly captures the state of excited, nervous, somewhat bewildered optimism that can accompany the first stirrings of attraction to someone new. |
|
But it captures the love-hate relationship people have with the press. |
|
According to company officials, Owen has gained widespread recognition as a Western painter of fine art, and his work in gouache captures present-day working cowboys. |
|
White captures how lonely people get trapped in a vicious circle, shunning social events because being alone is more comfortable. |
|
The actress perfectly captures the boldness and charm of Hepburn. |
|
He captures the seas as well as the tranquil horizons in his works. |
|
Himalaya, a new film by author, documentarian, and National Geographic photographer Eric Valli, is finally a feature that delicately captures raw Tibetan culture. |
|
Each member is an accomplished and polished musician in their own right, yet together the sum of their parts captures and expresses a more rugged aesthetic. |
|
Sheetal is a first generation Indian-American who captures perfectly the dichotomies of growing up Indian in America with her three dimensional portrayals of real women. |
|
It hardly captures the mood of the whole thing but tough merde. |
|
Yet even when, as here, he captures the light with such sensitivity, Cameron does not use paint for its vivid colour, but as a means of expressing tonal change. |
|
Here the figure of the dog captures the tension between holding on and letting go, particularizing the struggle to comprehend what love isn't and is. |
|
This approach captures the essence of the classical liberal tradition concerning the rule of law and individualism, while avoiding some of its own ambiguities. |
|
The climax forces the audience to challenge their previous judgments and provides a short sharp twist in this story that captures the imagination. |
|
Anderson captures the coal-black essence of the film magnificently. |
|
The terse contemporary feel of the line, unhampered by translator's awe, captures Virgil's character, his no-nonsense, patrician contempt, perfectly. |
|
The bowerbirds represent one of the high points of avian evolution and as such they deserve a book that fully captures the wonder of their fantastic natural history. |
|
|
The speaker wakes up to find swallows etching his walls with shadow, and captures a big thing or two about solitariness, if that's not too juicy a word for loneliness. |
|
Leonard captures the essence of the nightingale's song in this piece, with layered beauty, utilizing a couple of unusual instruments in the process. |
|
It is a bleak picture of society, but it captures that which is terribly bleak about contemporary life in urban America-its narcissism and nihilism. |
|
He captures and entertainingly exaggerates the earnest devotion to bizarre identities and activities that undermine small-town New Zealand's dull reputation. |
|
It captures the familiar sight of memorials in the shape of crosses erected to road accident victims, decorated symbolically with ephemeral flowers. |
|
In Across the ravaged Land, Nick Brandt captures the stone remains of wildlife that Africa is losing. |
|
On the other hand, the oriental exoticism of the Buddhist temple captures the attention of most Americans and fits into the American imagination of what is Chinese. |
|
This reality series captures the exploits and escapades of life on the road with the world's most unusual troupe of performers, The Jim Rose Circus. |
|
The dizzying array of instrumentation, including handclaps, accordions, strings, and horns, faithfully captures the quirky energy of their live shows. |
|
Right away what appeals to you about director Rakeysh Mehra's new film is the fact that it so accurately captures the spirit and mood of the current generation. |
|
This formulation again captures the floating nature of the exchange rate which immediately responds to supply and demand side shocks to the economy. |
|
Footage shot by a future director in the early '70s captures the great man getting stinko on an airplane before ambling in front of an auditorium full of fans. |
|
Huxley captures this perfectly in the antiphonal chant of the priests on Belial Day hailing that brief period in which mating is spontaneous and allowed. |
|
The book also captures all the pangs the editor of a letter collection encounters. |
|
In an opening moment in the rockumentary, a solitary video camera captures the band leader trying to schedule a recording with his longtime musical cohort and friend. |
|
This plethora of Rise with the Prize events captures the fortitude of women as they stand together. |
|
Halici captures all the quiet desperation of his character, but the unvaried delivery can be monotonous and the acoustics of the space are not sympathetic. |
|
This new translation by Adriana Hunter fully captures the elegance and frivolity of its era. |
|
The dialogue is quite profane, but it perfectly captures the mood of era. |
|
The astral captures the cozy pleasures and messy troubles inherent in contemporary social networks. |
|
|
A Florida native, Russell ably captures her state's wonky blend of natural beauty and carny effects. |
|
Summerville captures this ambiance with a mix of ready-to-wear couture pieces and original creations. |
|
He captures Ramone and his second wife, Barbara, together in the studio in one photo, him on bass, her on guitar. |
|
A smart new documentary from HBO, The Jazz baroness, captures the many sides of the jazz pianist. |
|
There is a beautifully simple slapstick moment between Pedro and Javier on the tennis court that perfectly captures the cheeky buffoonery of the movie. |
|
She perfectly captures the jaunty, businesslike hooker enjoying the absurd side of her job. |
|
He captures all the different issues a president deals with and moves from one to the next. |
|
Amanda Reiman, policy manager for the California branch of the Drug Policy Alliance, captures the complex research problem well. |
|
I'm not talking about quickie paperbacks, the kind that publishers toss off in a matter of weeks in response to an event or news story that captures the popular imagination. |
|
The tape captures the band and frontman Ronnie James Dio being unable to erase the misery of Ozzy's departure, and to make peace with the democratic revolt of their audience. |
|
He also vividly captures the exhilaration and the danger of wire-walking, and most of his main characters are completely convincing in their eccentricity. |
|
He captures the gaucheness, but he's just too enthusiastic for my liking. |
|
But, while Hare's play captures superbly the spirit of the 80s, it leaves you unsure whether Isobel is a priggish pain or a symbol of transcendent virtue. |
|
My journal entry for December 16, 2002, captures my decrepitude. |
|
Anyone who captures a pangolin is encouraged to alert game wardens, who take the pangolin and its discoverer to the local governors or chiefs. |
|
The charming black-and-white art captures the essence of cartoon felinity in this wonderfully entertaining collection. |
|
It also automatically captures High Performance, Complex and Tailwheel time based on the type of aircraft flown. |
|
Though majestic, the view also captures the history of mountains under siege since the first axmen invaded the pristine forests. |
|
He spies a native canoe, captures the two Indians on board, and brings them back to ship. |
|
That's because this moving and hilarious memoir captures day-to-day military life as experienced by countless young enlistees and their families. |
|
|
Anda intercepted and redirected the Manila galleon trade to prevent further captures by the British. |
|
An effective wave power device captures as much as possible of the wave energy flux. |
|
Illicit trade was carried on by collusive captures arranged between American traders and British officers. |
|
The AutoScroll feature captures the entire contents of a scrolling window, such as the contents of any web page, regardless of length. |
|
The third captures the mean squared wealth and the lower semimean squared wealth. |
|
She understands the messiness of the human condition and captures it in scintillating prose and apt metaphor. |
|
The Hubble Space Telescope captures a bevy of curvy galaxies 13 billion light-years, distorted by a gravitational lens. |
|
At the conclusion of this part, Eric, who plays Jesus and is now a soldier, captures Violet in the forest, fating her to a concentration camp. |
|
Keylogging software captures a user's keystrokes to gain access to account and password information and subsequently, their online accounts. |
|
The Recycle Bin captures files that are deleted from Windows NT Explorer only. |
|
First, the results presented here are simulated with a stylized market model that captures price impacts in only the sketchiest terms. |
|
An optical sensor embedded in the pen captures handwritten images on special digital paper and stores up to 40 pages in memory. |
|
The exhibition captures the spirit of art deco with important works from public and private collections all over the world. |
|
The play, written using material from former residents and members of the local Prefab Project, captures the spirit of that unique community. |
|
Daniel Pinkwater captures the essence of life in the 1950s for a beatnik teenager fed up with conformity. |
|
In this way the model captures the gradual continentalization of weather as air moves inland. |
|
Each dDS captures product parameters as a schematic and runs a live simulation to generate results on sophisticated visualizers. |
|
Ukrainian artist Yuri Shevchenko, who never set foot in UAE captures country's essence for F1 Grand Prix. |
|
This piece by D'Amico captures the anxiety and frustration that bedeviled the Roman Curia and the curialists at the outset of the Reformation. |
|
Then I read aloud from something that captures the Holiday Spirit. |
|
|
Mad City'' is well worth seeing since I feel that it almost subliminally captures the effects of the Louise Woodward case. |
|
No one doubts that these comedians will be killed if ISIS captures them. |
|
The clamshell phone captures candid moments with a VGA camera with 4x digital zoom and a dedicated camera key for easy access. |
|
Railway artist Steven, 42, lives in Esh Winning in County Durham and captures the beauty and drama of steam locomotives. |
|
This captures an idea that Callander refers to as proportional invertibility. |
|
Gyotaku is considered a type of nature printing, which means it captures the details of objects from nature. |
|
RiceAAEs recording of boreal chorus frogs captures a distant train, and if you listen carefully to the waves at Nye Beach, Ore. |
|
The CopyCam attaches to a chalkboard or whiteboard and captures all that is written on it. |
|
InCyte-Specify, designed for estimation and architectural optimization, captures and optimizes the initial chip specification. |
|
A packet sniffer is a program that captures data from information packets as they travel over the network. |
|
Such a topic easily captures the attention of the European and the Maghrebi or African public as both are directly involved. |
|
And cinematographer Affonso Beato captures the putridness of the place in ways that give shape to the accumulating dread. |
|
A new analysis of the lower 48 states captures details of the distribution of the nation's impervious surfaces. |
|
These captures secured William's rear areas and also his line of retreat to Normandy, if that was needed. |
|
And I laughed heartily at the Kopi Aunty video which captures so well an everyday slice of life here. |
|
The Sherman trap folds flat for storage and distribution and when deployed in the field captures the animal, without injury, for examination. |
|
The camera captures the image of each part, and the system measures the preprogrammed features and places the part in the appropriate bin. |
|
It captures the confusion that occurs when a group of actors decide to put together a sketch in which they will impersonate themselves. |
|
A similar expression is conveyed through the painting, which expressionistically captures the bottle. |
|
SwifTest-Monitor captures test results in real-time from the tester and preprocesses the parametric data. |
|