A copyist who believed in the authority of what he was copying is likely to have been more careful. |
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Berns studied classical piano as a child, and worked as a record salesman, music copyist and session pianist in his teens and twenties. |
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It of course took quite some months to copy a book, but a skilled copyist could manage a document much more quickly. |
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A copyist relies on imitation to ply his craft, but a great designer can evoke a much more powerful response through invention. |
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He is no mere copyist though, as he manages to create a sound all his own, rooted entirely in artistry. |
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He laid the foundations of a huge fortune working as a copyist and restorer of antique statues for the tourist market. |
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Their copyist also annotated the printed pages of the partbooks in a neat, careful hand, correcting some of its many misprints. |
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He is by no means a copyist, but paints chiefly from nature, thinking rightly that he can do more faithful work by following this course. |
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The copyist moves into the office, won't be dismissed, won't accept a gift of money to go away. |
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This specimen, whose copyist is unknown, belongs to the Almohad period and it contains 329 pages. |
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Suzanne Gasseau said that the dictation scales when using Dragon are not the same as those when using a copyist. |
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After his training he waited ten years, earning a meagre salary as a music copyist and teacher. |
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Three different copyist handwritings, aside from the hand of Weiss himself, have been identified. |
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This file shows the copyist in a number of different postures and at lecterns, depending on the epoch. |
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Since returning to Ottawa in 2000, Greg has been personal librarian for Pinchas Zukerman and a freelance music copyist. |
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It uses the same abundance of thematic unisons and is in the calligraphy of the same copyist. |
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The copyist records the date he completed making the copy, also 1373, and the place in which he made the copy which is Mount Qasyun in Damascus, Syria. |
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He, it transpires, was formerly the friend of the composer's copyist, who in turn discovered the journal describing the South Sea islanders while working for the composer. |
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Ledoux was no mere copyist even when he applied conventional details. |
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But the perceived dichotomy in styles may simply signal that the forger was an inexpert copyist or that the effect results from the vagaries of stone carving. |
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The name of the copyist, illuminator and the place of production does not appear. |
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After a short stint at teaching, she became a musical copyist in all genres, before specializing in film scores. |
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Marc Vallée said that the same scale should not be used for dictation using Dragon and dictation using copyist services. |
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He later accepted a position as a music copyist, further refining what would become his trademark calligraphy. |
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In fact, It seems that the copyist had no intention to indicate anything other than the general idea of a slur. |
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What a pleasure for the copyist to draw them with a nice pen! |
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An excellent copyist, Plamondon drew inspiration from such artists as Raphael, David, and Paulin-Guérin, and copied the works of such masters as Titian and Rubens. |
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Pseudonymy, as a modern institution, can thus be contrasted to the mere anonymity of the copyist. |
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It was a medieval sort of job — a copyist or scrivener — and I did it for only one year, which was lucky for everyone, because my handwriting is the second-worst in the office. |
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He was no mere copyist of the models he had seen in the East, but introduced many original details of his own invention into the stronghold. |
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He attended Westminster School and in 1676 was appointed copyist at Westminster Abbey. |
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Throughout the two decades that followed, he earned a solid reputation as both a portraitist of the bourgeoisie and a copyist of religious and secular paintings. |
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Vivaldi has circled notes in the upper left-hand corner and added a phrase intended for the copyist indicating that these notes were to be written an octave higher. |
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In contrast with printing, hand copying is an individual act by an individual copyist with ideas and a style of his own. |
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This is based on the assumption that neither Winchester Manuscript nor Caxton's first edition references to the author reflect confusion in identity by an early copyist. |
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The title Guest used derived from a mediaeval copyist error already established in the 18th century by William Owen Pughe and the London Welsh societies. |
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