He shoots the boardroom scenes in dismal office-grade lighting, showing every crease and crinkle on the stressed faces within the room. |
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Grasping the bag she felt the soft crinkle of old parchment beneath the worn cloth. |
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Or you can become really, really greedy, like any number of people we know, their desk drawers rustling with the crinkle of unshared sweets. |
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That's why the droop and crinkle of middle-age is the source of such gloom, particularly as it has a nasty habit of catching you unawares. |
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Take several more sheets and crinkle them up, as tight or loose as you like, and scrunch them up next to each other on your work surface. |
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It was a day when the fine hairs on your skin seem to crinkle up in the sun. |
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When I laugh, my eyes still naturally crinkle, but there aren't the ferocious, deep furrows I've grown used to. |
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Family obligations always did crop up at the worst of times, Kratos thought with a crinkle of his nose. |
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Metal fibres and silk-linen mixes, some with a crinkle look, liven up formal wear. |
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When the wallpaper is humid it doesn't bubble and doest crinkle at the edges. |
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A crinkle cut wedge with a corn meal batter with black and white pepper spice. |
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The diseases caused in certain cultivars are called mosaic and yellow crinkle of strawberry and yellow dwarf of raspberry. |
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Brightly-coloured fabrics make crinkle sounds for added sensory stimulation. |
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But best of all, its permanent crinkle texture means there's no need for ironing. |
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From straight or crinkle cut, to wedge and cube shaped, our products deliver great texture with every bite. |
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He delivered this all with a wet smile and a charming crinkle in his eye and only the veins standing out in his neck mirrored the hostility of his words. |
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The allusion, to a viral video, caused Huffington's face to crinkle with glee. |
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From the living room, I could hear the hum of the Volcano and the crinkle of the expanding plastic bag. |
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Further evidence of multiphase folding is given by crenulation or microfolding with hinge zones a centimetre or so apart which crinkle an earlier cleavage or schistosity. |
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To create the crumpled paper, antique the paper with the ink pads, crinkle it up, smooth it out and then dip it into a mixture of white glue and water. |
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She's always happy, and when a smile takes over Sally Hawkins's face her eyes crinkle, and she looks a little like Lily Tomlin in a goofy mood. |
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The educational toy comes with a teether, rattle, ribbons, crinkle paper and a mirror. |
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Symptoms can be rugosity, crinkle, rolling and brittleness of the leaves or dwarfing of plant, as with the severe mosaic or and the leaf roll disease. |
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The organism behaves as a latent virus, normally giving no obvious symptoms on cultivated strawberries except in combination with other virus diseases, such as crinkle, mottle, veinbanding or yellows. |
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Cauliflower, broccoli, crinkle cut carrots, red and green pepper strips. |
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Botulinum toxin was known chiefly as a deadly nerve poison: it took Dr Brandt to make it a household name, for in minute doses it is a boon, freezing the muscles that furrow and crinkle. |
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His solemn brown eyes crinkle with a small show of mirth. |
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Household noises including the jangling of keys and the crinkle of tinfoil can trigger seizures in cats, according to experts who have identifiedĀ a syndrome. |
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Whether it's a straight cut, crinkle cut, beefeater, or shoestring, a McCain French Fry is destined to outperform, overachieve and provide superior results. |
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During a survey on medicinal and aromatic plants, two field crops of V. officinalis in Emilia-Romagna and Liguria showed mosaic, vein clearing, leaf crinkle, chlorotic-necrotic rings and necrosis of veins and stems. |
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Because when her eyes twinkle and blinkle with excitement, her wrinkles crinkle up into a smile. |
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For clarity in this article the first crinkle will be taken as the southernmost top. |
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Bridesmaids wore pleated floor-length dresses of blush crinkle chiffon featuring strapless sweetheart necklines with softly sheer bodices. |
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Indirect climbs can also be made via Crinkle Crags, Esk Pike or Rossett Pike. |
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In his Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells, Alfred Wainwright describes Crinkle Crags as. |
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Between Cold Pike and Crinkle Crags, but generally included as part of the latter is the further Nuttall of Great Knott. |
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Two further ridges branch out from Crinkle Crags on either side of the summit, before turning south to run parallel to Little Stand. |
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The ridge of Crinkle Crags extends due south from its higher neighbour, Bowfell. |
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Across the gap of Esk Hause and enclosing the eastern side of Eskdale are Esk Pike, Bowfell and Crinkle Crags. |
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The latest project is the restoration of the Walled Garden, with a summer house and the locally famous Crinkle Crankle Wall. |
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From Crinkle Crags the first fells on this ridge are Hard Knott and Harter Fell, separated by Hardknott Pass. |
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The headwaters of the Esk and Duddon are separated by a ridge falling south west from the summit of Crinkle Crags. |
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Southward of Bowfell the ridge falls steeply to Three Tarns, the col separating it from Crinkle Crags. |
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Crinkle Crags is a fell in the English Lake District in the county of Cumbria. |
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South from Crinkle Crags, between Eskdale and the Duddon, are Hard Knott, Harter Fell and Green Crag. |
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Other notable Langdale fells are Crinkle Crags, at the head of the Oxendale valley, and Pike o' Blisco on the southern side of the valley. |
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Dating back to 1414, Hopton Hall gardens are a delight to visit with its famous Walled Garden and Crinkle Crankle Wall. |
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Most relevant to Crinkle Crags are the lists of Hewitts and Nuttalls. |
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The second series, broadcast in 2007, included Catbells, Crinkle Crags, Helm Crag, Helvellyn from Patterdale, High Street from Mardale and Pillar. |
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The only other Crinkle with a definitive name is Gunson Knott, the fifth. |
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The Helvellyn range is seen end to end, together with a panorama of high fells on the other side of the ridge from Crinkle Crags in the south to Blencathra in the north. |
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It also includes the Wastwater Screes overlooking Wasdale, the Glaramara ridge overlooking Borrowdale, the three tops of Crinkle Crags, Bowfell and Esk Pike. |
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There are a number of popular fell walking routes include Bowfell, Crinkle Crags, the Langdale Pikes and England's highest mountain, Scafell Pike. |
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