This is a dauntingly monumental volume, and it shouldn't be read in one gulp. |
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The testing equipment can also prove dauntingly expensive for relevant agencies. |
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He was promoted to the BP-Ford squad for his experience and knowledge of the dauntingly fast Finnish roads. |
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There's everything here from simple, sometimes amusing pieces, to more dauntingly experimental and harmonically challenging works. |
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Once banned, often excoriated, still dauntingly difficult, Ulysses has become the canonical twentieth-century novel. |
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To be the first foreigner to complete the dauntingly long and dangerous journey along the entire Brahmaputra river is quite an accolade. |
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Cut off from the world and supported by a private income, he composed dauntingly huge pieces which were regarded as all but unplayable. |
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With or without Britain's contribution, the task of cleaning up Russia's far north is dauntingly immense. |
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Despite her shorts and tee shirt she seemed dauntingly Edwardian and thick-skirtish. |
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As in most of Polanski's films, the world is so dauntingly evil the protagonist grows incapable of imagining an alternative future. |
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Unlike many recent fantasies, at 215 pages it isn't dauntingly long. |
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It's got one of the most dauntingly bleak and unhappy endings imaginable. |
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While that makes it cheaper than it has been for years for Britons to holiday abroad, it makes Yorkshire a dauntingly expensive destination for foreign tourists. |
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Taken as a whole, the criticism produced by the Men of Letters throughout the first three-quarters of the nineteenth century was dauntingly didactic. |
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It's a valid, though dauntingly huge question, and I'll try to begin to answer it here with reference to one subject which has been in my mind recently. |
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Very many people can quickly find themselves in a difficult financial situation, facing a dauntingly large number of monthly demands for payment from different creditors. |
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Mr. Cronin, Brad Fischetti and Devin Lima do seem fairly dateable, although more dauntingly handsome than most boy-band members. |
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This dauntingly aggressive city-state made itself the capital of Europe's biggest empire, and then became the seat of western Christendom. |
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That would require purpose-built facilities inside Syria. It would all be very costly and dauntingly, dangerously slow. |
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Not only did the jets slash the time spent on the more familiar routes, they made it feasible to go to places that were once dauntingly distant. |
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Respondents liked the notion of separating the dauntingly large disclosure documents we see today into more functional pieces. |
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The year 2006 started with the implementation of perhaps the most dauntingly complex fiscal reform to date: the introduction of the value added tax. |
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When a dauntingly technical lawsuit thumped onto the tables of a small district court in Wisconsin today, the global mobile phone industry sat up and took notice. |
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Some sceptics ask, to put it bluntly, why should we believe such models' attempts to describe changes in such a dauntingly complex system as Earth's climate? |
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For many organizations, the task of developing a dynamic, consumer-driven site, let alone maintaining that site, can prove dauntingly complex and costly. |
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Claire Harman proves sympathetically patient, though not passionate, about Burney, a controlling, self-revising biographee who left behind a dauntingly prolific paper trail. |
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True conservatism recognises that the world is a dauntingly complex place, that unforeseen harm can often overwhelm the benefits of well-meant action, and that we are never as smart as we think we are. |
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A bank that is not dauntingly large, always able to listen to its clients, the Banque Espírito Santo et de la Vénétie exists to advise, to provide the best financing solutions and to offer the widest range of services. |
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The Vice-Chair noted that with only 574 days left until the end of 2010, the time available to meet the 2010 universal coverage targets is dauntingly short. |
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The formalities of the Hague System can appear dauntingly complex. |
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In a dauntingly impressive flow of books and papers over 40 years he has done much to change both disciplines for the better, humanising the one, bringing content from the real world to the other. |
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Art is administered by sentimentally celebratory institutions, snugged into niche markets of dauntingly efficient commerce, and paraded through auction houses as a kind of glorified funny money. |
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