Its deeply territorial nature is incompletely accommodated to the disciplined consumption demanded of a truly global consumer system. |
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Yet despite its deeply inhospitable climate, the people of Wisconsin are full of the milk of human kindness. |
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The ancient waiting-woman bows her head in awe, and a flicker of unfamiliar happiness crosses the deeply wizened depths of her face. |
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It was directed at those same teachers and bourgeois parents whose sanctions and strictures many of us young whelps so deeply resented. |
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So he would go to children and try and worm these names out of them in a way which is deeply shocking to me. |
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Several portraits feature beautiful faces, some with deeply lined, wizened countenances. |
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Nelson stated that people keep pretending that they can make things deeply hierarchical, categorisable, and sequential when in fact they can't. |
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My selfish desires had led me into betraying this withdrawn and deeply religious family. |
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Rowan Williams is a liberal Anglo-Catholic who cares deeply about the ecclesiological value of communion. |
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The categories and relations of evolutionist theory in anthropology expressed deeply held values. |
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He was deeply respected and had a wide circle of friends who regarded him with fond affection. |
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It just shows that you're a kind-hearted person, and that you care deeply about other people. |
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They have all the flair you would expect up front, but their defence is reckoned to be deeply suspect. |
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A most well liked and respected person, Marian's passing is deeply regretted by many. |
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George adores Tom and is deeply saddened and angered when his father sells him. |
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The book shows Washington not only as a man of resource, strength, and virtue, but also as a man with deeply held religious values. |
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Thus, at an etymological level, leaves and paper, and leaves and books are deeply connected. |
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Infertility was a deeply distressing problem and childless couples would go to great lengths to raise money to fund treatment, he said. |
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On the way, she grabbed a wine glass and drank from it deeply without breaking her stride. |
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It was a moderately brave act of which I remain immoderately proud, as a just and deeply felt tribute to a truly great player. |
|
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Dripping wet and deeply disturbed, the smartly-dressed man was discovered walking along a windswept road beside the sea. |
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We act on behalf of very high-profile clients who would, I consider, find a lap-dancing club deeply objectionable and offensive. |
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The next room is deeply wooded and leathered, luminously brown and opulent, gently mirrored and boothed and windowed. |
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We are deeply upset that an unruly element went out of their way to cause trouble but they have been dealt with by police. |
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A customer of a restaurant is deeply affected by the manner in which staff serve them. |
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The comforting, if deeply eccentric, typography and layout of the original are still there, along with a mix of photographs new and old. |
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When everybody else re-emerges only a couple of minutes later, matted in sweat and grime, we are deeply glad to have wimped out. |
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An article in the April 5 issue reminds us how deeply ingrained collectivist habits of thought are in this country. |
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But away from the printed page, this deeply studious choreographer is no wild man. |
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He delves deeply into the linguistics literature on anaphorically used pronouns, especially the Discourse Representation Theory. |
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They adapted a machine to check how deeply patients are anaesthetised before surgery. |
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There's something primal and deeply satisfying about sitting indoors, all warm and snug and listening to wild weather beating at the eaves. |
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She is deeply attached to symmetry, and thus to the repetition and change obtained when images are mirrored. |
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Even if one were to desist from reading too deeply between the frames, one conclusion leaps to the eye. |
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The French are also deeply involved, as are other European and allied nations in Africa. |
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Faith heard his door close and sighed deeply from the happiness welling up inside of her. |
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We are deeply moved by these loving hearts and want to thank them for their help. |
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There was no consoling this deeply troubled but well-informed and cultured man of letters. |
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A number of relatives, friends and well-wishers have deeply mourned her demise. |
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Her notes revealed that her liver disease had long been stable, but her deeply jaundiced condition proclaimed that something was now amiss. |
|
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The ground here was deeply cracked from a rainless month, a pair of courting brown butterflies climbed high into the sky. |
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A teenager has been left deeply shocked after being attacked by a gang of up to ten girls as she walked home. |
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Findings of the physical examination on admission revealed an emaciated, deeply jaundiced man, with orthostatic hypotension and marked dyspnea. |
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So far from jumping for joy, Eurosceptics should be deeply concerned by the maneuverings in the European Parliament over the new Commission. |
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As an admirer of Indian culture and music, he has been deeply influenced by Indian philosophy and religion. |
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I understand I think fairly deeply the losses that aging people experience as they get older, the loss of physical movement. |
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Nellie, who was aged seventy years, lived a quiet life and was a deeply religious lady. |
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When baby latches on, he will take a few quick sucks and then begin to suck a bit more slowly, deeply and rhythmically. |
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He could see his poem, deeply creased now as if it had been read over and over, lying on the floor by his feet. |
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Both were deeply but ambivalently bonded with their male sidekicks and, to both, women were simultaneously a lure and a threat. |
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Their photographs confirm it was frequent to find nests in deeply flooded reedbeds with water lapping the nest edges. |
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Herge, then aged seventy-one, was a gaunt figure, his face deeply lined, accentuating his sharp features. |
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He began to speak in a deeply accented, yet flawless English, and the last bits of conversation died from the room. |
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He has a romantic streak and, full of remorse and resentment, is deeply upset by the feud with his mother. |
|
In a professional army, the extent of deeply reactionary political sentiment is far greater. |
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All parents care deeply about their children's education and academic progress. |
|
The teachers have helped establish the school's orderly and serious atmosphere, and its culture deeply respectful of academic achievement. |
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So deeply did you touch me, it is no great surprise that I can still feel your embrace, the warmth of your soul. |
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A recent episode elevated this superior soap opera into deeply affecting drama. |
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A lilting, deeply accented voice spoke quietly, yet it cut right through the buzz of conversation around them. |
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In 1932 the SPD supported a vote for the deeply reactionary Hindenburg as German president. |
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The Times played a critical role in legitimizing this deeply reactionary campaign. |
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The family is deeply religious, and Reid's faith keeps him centered and grounded. |
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While it's true that religion is a deeply personal issue, entertainment is not. |
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The two souls, deeply attached to each other, stand aloof from other members of the family. |
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He was deeply involved in the attempt to whitewash and cover up the My Lai massacre. |
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I've always wanted to write a haunted house novel, and I've wanted to delve more deeply into the Afro-Caribbean magic systems. |
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Behind stretched a rocky plateau, the one pale cafe au lait in colour, the other of deeply rusted iron. |
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Films about yakuza, or Japanese gangsters, are deeply imbued with a code of honor and feature subtle moral questions. |
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His legs were deeply lacerated, but his life was saved when a stranger managed to pluck him from the waters. |
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Now continue and stop imposing realism on this deeply realism-resistant work. |
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He's not exactly acting very honorably in that role or as a man, and I think it's deeply regrettable. |
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He said everyone present was deeply regretful about the situation and had really wanted to see the radiotherapy unit become a reality. |
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His performance is deeply moving, but also crackles with his trademark ranting and raving. |
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We apologize for this error and deeply regret any inconvenience it may have caused to readers of the journal. |
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The Echo deeply regrets the error and sincerely apologises to voters and candidates. |
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Before that, before corporate man became a sexy thing, corporate America was a white-bread, repressed, deeply uncool place to be. |
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Diane touched her pen to her lips, her trademark sign that the guest has just said something deeply profound. |
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I'd like to say it was because we deeply believed in the Kurdish cause, but actually we just wanted some good stories for the college bar. |
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Incense burned near the altar, and pilgrims were deeply absorbed in their prayers in front of the statue. |
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The writer talked about her struggles to publicly affirm spiritual values in a culture that is deeply cynical. |
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I sighed deeply and took a seat on the grass, bracing next to a tall white oak tree. |
|
Feng Shui, which is deeply rooted in ancient Chinese folk culture, is an important element in architecture here. |
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I suppose it also had to do with the fact that my parents were messy folk, something of which I was deeply ashamed. |
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The Native Americans were big into age, deeply wrinkled old chiefs with long, plaited grey hair were figures of wisdom and respect. |
|
Yet it is deeply worrying that some of those whom he has offended appear to have taken the law into their own hands. |
|
A tall ash tree stood out from the rest of the trees that lined the crumbling brick wall, letters carved deeply into the trunk. |
|
They charm rather than irritate, because all their eccentricities and affectations are clearly so deeply felt. |
|
He is able to capture what's unusual and different and remains deeply enchanted by Asia. |
|
Performed without words, it is a deeply elemental, emotive and darkly comic piece of theatre. |
|
I wonder, Libby, whether there is something deeply therapeutic about beautiful things? |
|
The venison had strength of flavour, matched with a deeply glazed sauce of bacon, red wine, port, redcurrant and wild mushrooms. |
|
It is also deeply involved in our aesthetic appreciation of the world around us, and there are many examples to draw on. |
|
This is deeply insulting to our members, skilled and dedicated professionals who have worked above and beyond the call of duty to keep services afloat through difficult times. |
|
The idea that jazz has become a catchword for pomposity is painful for those of us who care deeply about this music. |
|
Despite Ellison's claims for the agelessness and timelessness of the novel's concerns, however, Invisible Man is a novel deeply preoccupied with time and history. |
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However, where Horowitz gives you mainly patrician elegance, Moravec seems to give you the lagniappe of something deeply felt as well, without wallowing in it. |
|
After a deeply traumatic childhood, where his father left him to rot in Newgate prison, Sweeney takes violent revenge against the gaoler who tormented him in prison. |
|
Each side has deeply seeded beliefs that are based on directly opposing ideologies. |
|
He was a deeply religious and holy man who was loved by the elderly people most of all, as he had a way with him that won over their deep sense of faith and warmth. |
|
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He saw no need to rebrand the image and it is unlikely that he could have done so even if he had since the persona he had assumed from the beginning was too deeply ingrained. |
|
It is deeply rooted in place and profoundly antagonistic to market values. |
|
I retired early and slept until evening, and deeply at that. |
|
I answered all who wrote to me and felt deeply humbled by their stories. |
|
But if there is something suicidal in Woolf's emotional attraction to this kind of loss of self, there is also something deeply readerly about it. |
|
Married life is not only deeply relational, but it is also unpredictable. |
|
But I am deeply concerned with the lack of progress in my case and feel that I must take some action. |
|
Behind the samba beat, the country remains deeply polarized at home, in politics, and in the pews. |
|
Desi, who we know is deeply in love with his girlfriend, clementine, passionately kisses her. |
|
Unfortunately, a lot of alternative medicine is indeed deeply unscientific, and deserves to be treated with skepticism. |
|
Lasers with wavelengths of 600-1100 nm penetrate deeply and are absorbed by eumelanin in the hair shaft and follicle, which is thought to be the target chromophore. |
|
Some of that composer's most deeply felt works are in minor keys. |
|
The Hunger Games franchise is already a deeply political saga, chronicling a growing rebellion against a tyrannical regime. |
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It was a very dark night, and a thin rain began to fall as we turned from the high road into a narrow lane, deeply rutted, with hedges on either side. |
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Here the affinities with the dance of death are most deeply encoded. |
|
The whole volume constitutes an effort to resolve a problem that must confront anyone who finds the world a deeply affecting yet intangible chimera. |
|
In view of this situation, his works required to be deeply studied afresh. |
|
This deeply engaged, argumentative monologue is an exercise in reaching, again and again beyond the limits of unbelieving. |
|
How deeply insulting to the true struggle for self-knowledge and self-repair. |
|
Jeff Sessions was deeply offended by the KKK's embrace of reefer madness. |
|
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We deeply feel the heart-touching good wishes of the people across the world of all caste, color, and creed. |
|
The last 24 hours was redolent of the wider campaign, uncertain, fraught, divisive, full of brinkmanship with deeply unreliable signals emerging from both sides. |
|
By delving into her own experience, Carucci was able to examine more deeply the universality of motherhood. |
|
The type of folks who care deeply about the poor, but also about deficits and debt. |
|
He is, after all, a navy veteran who whistles for his children, a widower withdrawn so deeply into mourning that he flees from the memories that possess his home. |
|
Wilde had to make equality the material precondition of freedom, and later Wildeans have insisted that Wilde was a socialist because he was so deeply an individualist. |
|
While this book reflects a fascination with how things work, it also is a memoir, replete with subjective, idiosyncratic and deeply nostalgic associations. |
|
His face was deeply lined and waxen, his jaw set determinedly. |
|
Koenig proceeds to deliver her deeply conflicted, sorta-kinda support for Adnan. |
|
Human evolution has left men as deeply wired for emotional connections to children as women are. |
|
Marriott, with its deep history in the Mormon faith, portrays itself as a deeply ethical institution. |
|
Was it that his age was such that his hormones were running amuck, or was he deeply frustrated with his life, or did he simply try to kick the pup because he could? |
|
It is not hard to see how this debate calls into question deeply personal religious and philosophical beliefs. |
|
Barnes and Harper talked deeply about hockey, a subject that the prime minister has written a book about. |
|
In the repetition of the performance, we entered more deeply into the material within the therapeutic gaze and the relationship that we had established. |
|
Despite these positive micro-trends, the big picture remains deeply troubling. |
|
It warms your heart more deeply than the standard holiday treacle, but this is, all the same, an intelligent, humane, funny and sorrowful Christmas treat. |
|
She would typically experience a period of mania and then suddenly become deeply depressed. |
|
The White House has portrayed the President as deeply conflicted over the matter. |
|
She had this extraordinary ability to be deeply involved and cleanly detached. |
|
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I want to make the reader feel that these two people really care about each other deeply rather than just, you know, wham-bam-thank-you-ma'am kind of thing. |
|
But blanco was perhaps too deeply ensnared in the drug underworld to break free. |
|
Bradley was a man who worried deeply and brooded over the lives lost among his commands. |
|
As a young man, Darwin was deeply religious and even considered being ordained. |
|
Cameron, the leader of the Conservative party, has become deeply entangled in the debate surrounding News Corp. |
|
The Sixth circuit offered not one but eight arguments to allow states to ban gay marriage in its deeply weird ruling. |
|
Nelson wrote a paper at Dartmouth on Standard Oil, which was about as defensive and as deeply researched as you would expect. |
|
The simple fact is that, outside of the South and a few other areas, Tea Party extremism and brinksmanship is deeply unpopular. |
|
Every e-mail, letter, brownie, and sandwich sent from William Poll has been deeply appreciated. |
|
This remorseless pressure drove a great number of peasants to the edge of subsistence, making them deeply vulnerable to periodic shocks in the agrarian cycle. |
|
Soba noodles, on the other hand, which are made out of buckwheat, are deeply flavorful. |
|
Manchester knew that you were a World War II buff, and that you were deeply interested in Churchill long before you met him. |
|
Some of my family are deeply religious, on my partners side. |
|
He also implicitly criticised the president for packing the courts and legislature with his supporters and for bringing the army deeply into political life. |
|
I have attended a few of his talks, which are blessed with cogency, wit, and deeply researched and clearly presented arguments. |
|
But unions representing the 1,500 workers at the service say they are deeply sceptical about the proposals and fear it is the thin end of the wedge in a privatisation drive. |
|
And the rising star still standing just might be in the best position to offer some elixir to our deeply ailing political system. |
|
They were all willing to wholeheartedly put themselves out there for this thing they cared deeply about. |
|
Yet the deeply intimidating impact that Dagan aimed to create in Iran seems to be exhausted. |
|
If the bulbs are planted deeply it is possible to leave them undisturbed for two or three years although acid or neutral soil will have to be limed. |
|
|
The more deeply your marketing connects with what people value and their sensibilities, the more receptivity there is to your product and the greater the response. |
|
Kahlo was deeply influenced by indigenous Mexican culture, which is apparent in her paintings' bright colors and dramatic symbolism. |
|
However, armed with Panzerfausts and deeply entrenched, a unit of Volkssturm could cause serious trouble for Soviet armor. |
|
This incident deeply saddened his father, who did everything he could to try to get the decision reversed, but without success. |
|
In the course of this complex and deeply personal work, he developed the principles underlying his ideal society. |
|
In the High Weald Gills are deeply cut ravines, usually with a stream in the base which historically eroded the ravine. |
|
An anticline that has been more deeply eroded in the center is called a breached or scalped anticline. |
|
Like Salt he was a councillor, JP and Bradford MP who was deeply concerned to improve working class housing conditions. |
|
She was chairman of the Dartmoor Preservation Association from 1951 to 1973, and remained deeply involved with the organisation until her death. |
|
If the illumination is steadily increased from sub-liminal to super-liminal values, the deeply saturated colour will come out from the blackness. |
|
The fossula of the cyrtometopinines slopes deeply down rearwards into the axial furrow joining the S3 apodeme. |
|
This acreocracy, like all Welsh social groups, was deeply riven with profound internal divisions. |
|
The Public Should Become Airwise. The whole question of accidents is a very tragic and deeply interesting one. The public does not understand it. |
|
How deeply ingrained capturing is in the mind of a chess master can be seen from this story. |
|
This happens through a demedication and deconditioning process and being deeply felt by our facilitator. |
|
At the time, I was deeply involved with the handsome embezzler who led a major telecom company into bankruptcy. |
|
He credits GamerGaters with organizing a revolt against a deeply unsatisfying marketplace by loyal consumers who deserve better. |
|
Since humans are deeply social beings, if you put 100 strangers together you will observe rapid groupification. |
|
The prospect of a union of the kingdoms was deeply unpopular among the Scottish population at large, and talk of an uprising was widespread. |
|
The deeply religious Gladstone brought a new moral tone to politics with his evangelical sensibility and opposition to aristocracy. |
|
|
Edward was deeply saddened by this news, but rather than hurrying home at once, he made a leisurely journey northwards. |
|
He had long been deeply involved in the affairs of his own Duchy of Gascony. |
|
Society remained deeply unsettled and radical demands continued to be suppressed such as those from the yeoman brothers John and William Merfold. |
|
The tombstone is deeply incised with a cross, and consists of a rectangular block of white Swaledale fossil stone, quarried in North Yorkshire. |
|
Despite his affection for Mary, Henry was deeply disappointed that his marriage had produced no sons. |
|
He and his sister deeply valued their intimate relationship as they didn't have much else to live for. |
|
The British Parliament's efforts to levy new taxes following the French and Indian War were deeply unpopular in the colonies. |
|
The deeply palmately lobed, ivylike leaves are light green and have an intense, sometimes unpleasant smell. |
|
The interference with localism and traditional liberties was deeply resented, although some modernising reforms took place. |
|
The Revolution deeply polarised American politics, and this polarisation led to the creation of the First Party System. |
|
George was deeply devout and spent hours in prayer, but his piety was not shared by his brothers. |
|
James, view Churchill's motives as honourable and disinterested, in that he felt deeply for the King. |
|
Very deeply buried shelters provided the most protection against a direct hit. |
|
Fukuda cares deeply about policy issues. He worries that Abe is a bit shallow on policy matters, and a bit knee-jerkish in his populism. |
|
Of course they fall madly and deeply in love, as Biker Dude learns to respect a girl who won't knock boots on the first date. |
|
Much of the immediate reconstruction of the city centre has been deeply unpopular. |
|
Because his views of religion were deeply tied to his understanding of nature, the text's theism rested on the argument from design. |
|
Despite his lengthy absences on business, Boulton cared deeply for his family. |
|
The cathedral slumped deeply into debt and in the 1850s services were suspended. |
|
The deeply personal religion that the Moravian pietists practised heavily influenced Wesley's theology of Methodism. |
|
|
By the time he returned to England in 1289, King Edward was deeply in debt. |
|
A governmental survey investigation shows that most teachers are deeply dissatisfied with controlled assessment. |
|
They are so deeply entrenched in both worlds that it is unclear whether they control fate, or whether they are merely its agents. |
|
He was deeply affected by Irish faerie mythology, which he knew from his home at Kilcolman and possibly from his Irish wife Elizabeth Boyle. |
|
Paine lived in France for most of the 1790s, becoming deeply involved in the French Revolution. |
|
During this time, Johnson's future was uncertain because his father was deeply in debt. |
|
By 1731 Johnson's father was deeply in debt and had lost much of his standing in Lichfield. |
|
They are a trust from Providence, for the abuse of which he is deeply answerable. |
|
His philosophy of poetry, which he developed over many years, has been deeply influential in the field of literary criticism. |
|
At this point in his writing career, Shelley was deeply influenced by the poetry of Wordsworth. |
|
Indeed, the French revolution and the Napoleonic wars had not been forgotten by the Tory spirited and deeply conservative girls. |
|
In the course of this journey, he met Mark Twain in Elmira, New York, and was deeply impressed. |
|
He routinely introduced her as his mother, referred to her as such in letters, and developed a deeply affectionate friendship with her. |
|
Huxley had deeply felt apprehensions about the future the developed world might make for itself. |
|
His fan base was strong enough to survive the incident, and it was soon forgotten, but Chaplin was deeply affected by it. |
|
Chaplin was deeply hurt by the negative reaction to the film, which turned out to be his last. |
|
He was deeply affected by her death and remorseful at not having returned to London to see her. |
|
This excuse was deeply upsetting to Surtees, and he immediately quit the team. |
|
Asquith and his followers moved to the opposition benches in Parliament and the Liberal Party was deeply split once again. |
|
Stonehaven lies adjacent to a deeply indented bay surrounded on three sides by higher land between Downie Point and Garron Point. |
|
|
In 1989 and 1990, the Conservatives introduced the deeply unpopular poll tax. |
|
The position of the Danish monarch as the head of the military is deeply rooted in tradition. |
|
But there is plenty of evidence, especially from his undergraduate days, that he did deeply examine his faith. |
|
Robert's death was deeply mourned throughout the country, especially since it happened just a few days after the death of Brunel. |
|
In opposition, the Labour Party was deeply divided, though its Leader, Harold Wilson, remained in favour. |
|
Despite his disgust, he feels unjustified in holding the natives morally responsible for a practice so deeply ingrained in their culture. |
|
Cleo McNelly Kearns notes in her biography that Eliot was deeply influenced by Indic traditions, notably the Upanishads. |
|
The band were deeply shaken upon learning of it and requested that appropriate safety precautions be taken in the future. |
|
It's deeply disrespectful to assume that we're either being misinformed or that we're so retarded we can't make these decisions ourselves. |
|
A deeply experimental and progressive artist, his influence can be found in the works of painters as diverse as Claude Monet and Mark Rothko. |
|
It's a version of events that 23 years ago The Sun went along with and for that we're deeply ashamed and profoundly sorry. |
|
Others argue that a moral theory that is so contrary to our deeply held moral convictions must either be rejected or modified. |
|
Wollstonecraft's Letters Written in Sweden, Norway, and Denmark is a deeply personal travel narrative. |
|
Ayer's philosophical ideas were deeply influenced by those of the Vienna Circle and David Hume. |
|
I am inclined to think that he was more deeply religious than are many people who correctly regard themselves as religious believers. |
|
Russell said he returned from the war a changed man, one with a deeply mystical and ascetic attitude. |
|
Many Saudis who did not support the Islamist terrorists were nevertheless deeply unhappy with the government's policies. |
|
Although legally proscribed in 1994, the procedure is still widely practiced, as it is deeply ingrained in the local culture. |
|
Although Knox had not targeted Elizabeth, he had deeply offended her, and she never forgave him. |
|
The Army was a deeply unpopular profession, one contentious issue being pay. |
|
|
The whole network was linked in many cases by dedicated telephone cables buried sufficiently deeply to provide protection against bombing. |
|
In contrast to his deeply religious, frail brother, William was powerfully built, redheaded, and headstrong. |
|
Carmarthenshire has a long coastline which is deeply cut by the estuaries of the Loughor, Gwendraeth, Tywi and Taf. |
|
The Unionist government had become deeply divided over the issue of free trade, which soon became an electoral liability. |
|
Mackerel typically have vertical stripes on their backs and deeply forked tails. |
|
The sinking claimed 1,198 lives, 128 of them American civilians, and the attack of this unarmed civilian ship deeply shocked the Allies. |
|
The first edition of The Three Railway Engines was illustrated by the artist William Middleton, with whom Awdry was deeply dissatisfied. |
|
Matholwch was deeply offended, but was conciliated by Bran who gave him a magical cauldron which could bring the dead to life. |
|
Matholwch is deeply offended until Bran offers him compensation in the form of a magic cauldron that can restore the dead to life. |
|
In the 1980s, the Mafia was deeply weakened by a second important campaign led by magistrates Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino. |
|
His credibility was so deeply undermined that the abolition of the monarchy and establishment of a republic became an increasing possibility. |
|
The Protestant Reformation dragged the kingdom ever more deeply into the mire of religiously charged wars. |
|
The Napoleonic War left Spain economically ruined, deeply divided and politically unstable. |
|
The manuscript is in an early, probably original, binding beautifully decorated with deeply embossed leather. |
|
Modern Le Havre remains deeply influenced by its employment and maritime traditions. |
|
Caesar was still deeply in debt, but there was money to be made as a governor, whether by extortion or by military adventurism. |
|
John was deeply suspicious of the barons, particularly those with sufficient power and wealth to potentially challenge the king. |
|
Indian influences came first with Shaivism and Buddhism penetrating deeply into society, blending with indigenous tradition and culture. |
|
It is a slender, powerfully built animal with a large, deeply descending ribcage, a sloping back and a heavily muscled neck. |
|
This book employs a panspiritual vocabulary to validate aging itself as a deeply intentional form of spiritual practice. |
|
|
Canals and rivers in Great Britain and the Netherlands were frequently frozen deeply enough to support ice skating and winter festivals. |
|
While my feelings are strongly enlisted in behalf of the latter, my sympathies are more deeply engaged for the former. |
|
Predator fish are usually fusiform with large mouths, smooth bodies, and deeply forked tails. |
|
Thus, a thrown hand axe would not usually have penetrated deeply enough to cause very serious injuries. |
|
Only one third of the Mary Rose was intact and she lay deeply embedded in mud. |
|
Newcastle was deeply reluctant to do this, but he saw that a Prussian collapse would be disastrous to British and Hanoverian interests. |
|
Miles Davis was deeply impressed by Hendrix, and he compared Hendrix's improvisational abilities with those of saxophonist John Coltrane. |
|
The French Revolution and Napoleon influenced Italy more deeply than they affected any other outside country of Europe. |
|
At the time of the 1917 Revolution, the Russian Orthodox Church was deeply integrated into the autocratic state, enjoying official status. |
|
This horrifying breakdown of civil control was deeply disturbing to thoughtful people on both sides of the religious divide. |
|
Under Colbert, the French government became deeply involved in the economy in order to increase exports. |
|
He deeply admired and wished to save his father's accomplishments and spent a lot of time proving his claim to the throne. |
|
Several buildings of the Chiado were destroyed in a fire in 1988, an event that deeply shocked the country. |
|
The cultural differences were staggering, fed with honey and cake, they spit them out and were deeply surprised with the sight of a chicken. |
|
Paraguay's culinary heritage is also deeply influenced by this cultural fusion. |
|
The pustules were deeply embedded in the dermis, giving them the feel of a small bead in the skin. |
|
The deeply buried Chicxulub crater is centered off the north coast of the peninsula near the town of Chicxulub. |
|
This means that many histories depict Philip from deeply prejudiced points of view, usually negative. |
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The deeply eroded old riverbed beyond the current shoreline, Hudson Canyon, is a rich fishing area. |
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This personal tragedy deeply hurt Ivan and is thought to have affected his personality, if not his mental health. |
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The claws are deeply scooped on the underside to assist in digging in the ice of the natural habitat. |
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Cause of this was the strong freezing and thawing of the bottom due to deeply thawed permafrost. |
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The environment has traditionally been deeply respected by Buryats due to the nomadic way of life and religious culture. |
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The Mesoamerican civilization, in particular, was deeply interrelated with maize. |
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During this period, the Wanli Emperor deeply respected Zhang as a mentor and a valued minister. |
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When the Spanish arrived in 1494, except for small agricultural clearings, the country was deeply forested. |
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Although reaction to conscription was favourable in English Canada the idea was deeply unpopular in Quebec. |
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The opposition to ritualism therefore had a deeply cultural and symbolic significance that extended far beyond purely theological concerns. |
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Bonham's Case met a mixed reaction at the time, with the King and Lord Ellesmere both deeply unhappy with it. |
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This view is related to prototype theory, which is most deeply explored in cognitive science. |
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For deeply personal reasons, Bright was closely associated with the North Wales tourist resort of Llandudno. |
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Asquith led a deeply divided Liberal Party as Prime Minister, not least on questions of foreign relations and defence spending. |
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By the late 1790s, Whitney was on the verge of bankruptcy and the cotton gin litigation had left him deeply in debt. |
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During summer, surface deposits could be worked, but some placer deposits were buried too deeply for surface placering. |
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Representatives of early Chinese Buddhism, like Sengzhao and Tao Sheng, knew and were deeply influenced by the Taoist keystone texts. |
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Ideological and political rivals for centuries, Taoism, Confucianism, and Buddhism deeply influenced one another. |
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The southern and eastern flanks of The Old Man are composed of rough ground, deeply pockmarked by slate quarries. |
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This process has removed several tens of square kilometers of overlying rock in many areas, exposing the once deeply buried batholiths. |
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Subduction zones burrow deeply but are imperfectly camouflaged, and geophysics and geochemistry can be used to study them. |
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Is it, that Congress shall resubject to their control those thousands of deeply wronged men? |
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