Mongolia also has gold medal dreams in Gundegmaa Otryad, who is ranked number one in the world in the women's 10m air pistol and the 25m pistol. |
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As the dreams unfold, we may start to recognize specifics of place, but the sense of Central Park as a lost Arcadia abides. |
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Suffice to say, much as I would love to be a wage slave again for the sake of my dreams of becoming a homeowner, I am not ready. |
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In ancient and aboriginal cultures, dreams were too important to he entrusted to mere dreamers. |
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The image of him on his deathbed, mouth partly open, half-lidded eyes staring up at me, haunted my sleeping and waking dreams. |
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Psychedelic drugs, or hallucinogens, produce the equivalent of waking dreams. |
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I have found personally that my visualisations are more akin to waking dreams, the type that can be superimposed upon my conscious sight. |
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I constantly had short, abrupt little pieces of dreams, but I never could remember what happened in them. |
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She wants none of him, and dreams that some day her prince will come, only to get a shock when Perseus appears and proves to be a wally. |
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Mr Kosword QC for Peter Jones compared these to the day dreams of a Walter Mitty. |
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The trainer must have destroyed the dreams of quadrella punters when his gelding arrived late on the scene. |
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She had imagined the moment countless times, both in her waking hours and her dreams. |
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My wanderlust had taken me on a circuitous route but, now I was ready to put down some roots and embark on new dreams, it had led me home. |
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Maple Leaf Gardens has been our town square and remains a repository of our dreams and past glories. |
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You know, how your big sis worked really hard and finally got accepted by the college of her dreams? |
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Low sibilant noises pulled me out of dreams of cold ocean waves washing on a shale beach. |
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The MBA is the acme of middle class parental ambition and student dreams, but as a post-graduate qualification it is a peculiar case. |
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They unexpectedly realise their dreams when they turn their jobs delivering free newspapers into an illegal racket. |
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His comedy timing is impeccable and he was equally at home as a man of action or a driven intellectual of thoughts, dreams and desires. |
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Chessington and Hook United Football Club has been thrown a lifeline to help recover from debts threatening to dash promotion dreams. |
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The Gilmores knew that dreams have to be actualized by hard work and diligence. |
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Francofolies, he is called, this special time when minstrels and jongleurs assemble to share their dreams and secrets in the tongue of Moliere. |
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As far as I'm concerned, dreams are just your mind filing away the things that passed through your mind and got jumbled up during the day. |
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Please, God, let him be ready to move back into his own bed before the wet dreams start. |
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I don't like it, but unlike you, I don't get paid to air my wet dreams in public. |
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When you think about it, crushing on a goofy cartoon kid was ten times less embarrassing than having wet dreams about this guy. |
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We share hopes and dreams for our kids and expect that we will be able to provide for them as they grow into adults. |
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It's the career path of a Hollywood young gun's dreams and yet to the critics, Reeves remains their favourite whipping boy. |
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A lone woman is troubled with such dreams and such thoughts that she's afeard of herself sometimes. |
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In my dreams, his hair and skin tone are the same as mine, except he has no purple pigments embedded in his pallid white. |
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But his big dreams land him in hot water when a great white lie turns him into an unlikely hero. |
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But Toronto welcomed Wilson's acoustic ramblings with a razz, and killed his musical dreams. |
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Wearing a beautiful, white wedding dress down the aisle is one of the many dreams of women of all ages. |
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Each song has been carefully chosen and represents feelings of unity, peace, love, and realisation of dreams. |
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Every circle is but a dim realization of some perfect circle every geometrician dreams of. |
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The play-offs seemed a certainty before Christmas, but a rapid turn around in fortune is needed if those dreams are to be realised. |
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You are just a few simple steps away from realizing your most sacred dreams and goals. |
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However, many barriers exist for exotic dancers to make their dreams a reality. |
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The nonschizophrenic patients had the shortest and least detailed dreams and the highest degree of reality testing. |
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He is reaming over with brave, bright dreams of what he would like to do in this world. |
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Through text she reanimates the dreams of her concierge, a widow obsessed with the memory of her dead husband, though her husband remains dead. |
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Indeed, my dreams usually had happy endings, involving successful intercepts that Saved Civilization. |
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Sometimes a title or a word will key me into the deeper store house of memories, dreams helping to project them into the music. |
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For now I would just say to handle your business and make your dreams real, aight? |
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Problems with vivid dreams, nightmares and rebound insomnia have also been reported. |
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We are a mixed bag of people, with different ideals, hopes, wishes and dreams. |
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In one of his dreams, we see him riding to work on the metro during rush hour and announcing that he is kissing his old life goodbye. |
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She has a remarkable likeness to an unknown figure who appears in his recurrent dreams, a fact that Paul takes as some sort of omen. |
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I think you should try some kind interpretation of the recurrent images in your dreams. |
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In the romantic comedy, Smith plays a New York date doctor who helps men woo the women of their dreams. |
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Donna has dreams of working the friendly skies of New York and Paris and isn't ready to give her heart to anyone just yet. |
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Fellow Koreans, now is the time to make our society a better place to live and to make all of our dreams and hopes come true. |
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Apart from the long hair and beard, he was none the worse for this prolonged sojourn in the land of dreams. |
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A volunteer searcher, who said she had had several vivid dreams of a wooded area, found the wrecked car in the trees. |
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It's those Germans again, those familiar wreckers of English footballing dreams. |
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We must not believe that the triumph of experimental science reduced to nought the dreams and ideals of the alchemist. |
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The hopes and dreams of thousands of teenagers hung in the balance on Thursday as they tore into brown envelopes for their A-level results. |
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The Wyandots believed in a complex world of spirits and paid close attention to individuals' dreams. |
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The book tells the great, all-American story of a second generation American who lived out his wildest adolescent professional dreams. |
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It because of her constant support and regular scoldings, that Niall could find the will in himself to go out and chase his dreams. |
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They were dreams of the night that he had formally revealed himself to her or the night that they had danced together on All Hallows Eve. |
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Celluloid dreams, heroes and heroines, get real with compassionate message, as who else know best that all that glitters is not gold. |
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It matters because it tells us of the yawning chasm between Labour's dreams and what happens when it tries to implement a policy. |
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My ears cannot stand the sound, especially when my mind is still in that ever so far away land of dreams. |
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This is a land of fantasy, adventure and discovery, a place where those dreams become reality. |
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My head is swimming with dreams and schemes and the overwhelming desire to hop a bus or a train or a plane and make this dream happen. |
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The amalgam of American idealism and rags-to-riches dreams is irresistible. |
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Watching the disintegration of a man's dreams is uncomfortable, however morally ambiguous he might be. |
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Most frightening dreams occur during REM sleep, and most REM-altering disorders and medications affect dreaming. |
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Patient reports of dreams experienced during REM sleep tend to be bizarre and detailed, with storyline plot associations. |
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She replays scenes from her life in dreams, trying to sort out her own self-identity. |
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For young boys and their ambitious parents, all of this is the stuff of which dreams are made. |
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One of the dreams I had is that it would inspire the interest of the media and bring about a renaissance of calypso. |
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They were first created by the North American Indians and were used to capture pleasant dreams and stop bad ones. |
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If encoding is absent, amnesia will follow, as in the case of many of our dreams. |
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The model or template here is taken from Freud's interpretation of dreams and the distinction between manifest and latent content. |
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Sonia spends the whole night in torment, replaying episodes of that night in her dreams. |
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Aspirations best represent the dreams of young women, while expectations reflect a realistic view of the world. |
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True, beyond lavish praise, Los Angeles has always been a place of dreams and metaphors. |
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Speck disagreed with my assessment of the dream and my theory that dreams are easily analyzed and interpreted. |
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Here the analysis of dreams and the analysis of the transference become indispensable. |
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Find out if the company of your dreams requires dancers to attend its school for a year or two before being offered a position. |
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I had always envisioned a sort of heroic rescue, but those were only dreams. |
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One held the world and all its people and all its furniture and all the angelic choirs to be dreams in the mind of God. |
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You will eventually become aware of your dreams without disturbing the restfulness of your sleep. |
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Well I gave it a try and quickly discovered that I had two left feet and my dreams went up in smoke. |
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Impending parenthood is a fertile time for dreams, no less for fathers than for mothers. |
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No ruins, but all my life I've visited and revisited the same city in my dreams. |
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I crawled rhapsodically back into bed and fell into some very vivid and memorable dreams. |
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As Gilman points out, in a short story this would be the moment where she'd realize that the idol of her dreams was in fact a lewd creep. |
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Imagine going out to dinner with a charming man who promises you riches and glory beyond your wildest dreams. |
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Christopher had dreams of becoming a professional motorbike rider and had been riding since the age of five. |
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His stories were dreams of technological utopias in which nightmares of personal and political dystopia were played out. |
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Unconsciousness happens in this state, as well as light sleep states, where dreams and hallucinations occur. |
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And while my dreams are never easy to analyze, I'm going to go out on a limb here and analyze what that dog represented. |
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These dreams led them to a lifetime of risk-taking adventure, and ultimately the women came to learn of each other's exploits. |
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Completing my nightly ritual, I kissed the paper twice, and then tucked it under my pillow to aide in good dreams. |
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It was too little, too late but the home support were appreciative of the late heroics even if their championship dreams were over. |
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A figure ran to me in a distance and as he approached waves of past forgotten dreams returned to me. |
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Yes, it's about dreams but also about mental incoherence, brain damage, aphasia, apraxia, agnosia. |
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He consumes memory pills and dreams of being the rock star of the Scrabble world. |
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Don had big dreams as a teenager, but they didn't involve running a liquor store. |
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Unfortunately, our world is infested by minds to whom lissome limbs only evoke dreams of amputation. |
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Walt Whitman dreams of the first jumpshot he will take, the ball arcing clumsily from his fingers, striking the rim so hard that it sparks. |
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When the business floats later this month, she and work partner will be rich beyond the dreams of even a rollover lottery winner. |
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The younger woman's unabashed romps arouse Sarah's curiosity, unleashing sexual dreams in her. |
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For the first time my dreams changed, I was stalking an antelope in the dry grass, approaching nearer and nearer until I killed it with my sword. |
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The organisation arranges events and holidays for disabled children with the theme of making dreams come true. |
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These are among the most powerful expressions of human dreams and hopes, ideals and longings. |
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And as for the Bonnie Prince, he died an alcoholic in Rome, his dreams turned to dust. |
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I'm afraid I will have to crush your dreams and creative aspirations, for your own good. |
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In his situation I imagined I would feel angry at lost years and frustrated dreams. |
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We are supposed to get a scalp-tingling rush of euphoria as the West Germans win big on the footballing field of dreams. |
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Your films tend to follow a theme of lower-class people with upper-class dreams, trying to escape their situations. |
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Buffalo has a legacy of dreams gone sour, and even today, surrounded by the horn of American plenty, we are still very much the rust belt. |
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Such acts invoke the asuras in dreams and visions and invite calamity in your life. |
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The old exhibitions may be long gone, but the dreams that inspired them continue to this day. |
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I myself have long hoped to be a minion to Cruella Deville, but sadly my youthful dreams have been to no avail. |
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After all, once Simon's dreams of playing pro soccer ended, they were replaced by an equal passion for a kicking martial art, tae kwon do. |
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Suddenly, the austerities of the past two months, as well as the glorious thoughts, dreams and visions all merged within my consciousness. |
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But it would be just my luck if the girl of my dreams took a dislike to me, had a big can of Mace and an itchy trigger finger. |
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You need to spend more time getting still and taking stock of your true feelings, dreams and concerns. |
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The same hopes, the same dreams, a shared humanity that transcends everything else that may set us apart. |
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Does the sandman bring you buckets of sweet dreams or are you still tossing and turning when he visits at 3am? |
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Its people became rich beyond all dreams of avarice, and in one generation not only have they blown it but they have blown their health, as well. |
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It might seem natural that merriment goes with wealth beyond the dreams of avarice but that, when you think about it, is hardly ever the case. |
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This work, however, saps them of the strength required to fulfill their dreams. |
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For the purpose of this paper we will concentrate on the types of dreams that are normally reported when subjects are awakened from REM sleep. |
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My own dreams seemed trivial before this tapestry of family plans and lifelong ambitions and children's college funds. |
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His books are saturated with mirrors, windows, diaries, memories, travels, dreams, narcissism, and gazing. |
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Like most of us, my dreams of setting foot on a major-league baseball field died a painful, inglorious death in youth. |
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From the sashimi creations menu came tataki blue fin red and yellowtail dreams. |
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This city is often described as one of dreams and fantasy, of tinselish make-believe. |
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Our Maker wants us to succeed, to fulfill our unique spiritual purpose, and to discover and cocreate the life of our dreams. |
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As a middle-aged baby boomer, I am certainly not exempt from the wishes and dreams of the anti-aging movement. |
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There was always background music in my dreams, and background music in my life really. |
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About half of Bulgarians believe in telepathy, the evil eye and black magic, and that dreams can be prophetic. |
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I can tell that he loves what he does, that all his dreams are busy coming true. |
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The thing that made him stand out to her was how he changed in each of her dreams, growing and maturing from adolescence to manhood. |
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The very idea of manifest destiny encouraged men and women to dream big dreams. |
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Stay strong, don't give up on your dreams, and never let your schooling interfere with your education. |
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She could think of nothing to do other than becoming a tender-hearted warm mother and marrying the man of her dreams. |
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One of the most memorable dreams involved me conversing with Lou as we took a shvitz together. |
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And it was written down that he would arrive at Heathrow airport in April 2001 with just a suitcase for baggage and a head filled with dreams. |
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Nothing is as sobering as getting elbow checked out of the way by a cane-wielding senior citizen as they scoop you on the item of your dreams. |
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In dreams, we can experience sights, sounds, and tactile sensations, in the real absence of the objects of sensation. |
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When he dreams his own impossible dream, Jack Abramoff is not so much Don Quixote as Don Corleone. |
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I lead a perfectly normal life, have dreams and ambitions just like the good children out there, and even realize some of those dreams every once in a while. |
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Champagne wishes and caviar dreams became a reality onboard the Concorde. |
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Resigned to his status as a lowly hospital attendant at the Whitestone Sanitarium, Jerome dreams of the day he can once again ply the Hippocratic oath. |
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When we were Middlesex teammates, he vowed that he wanted to play for England, and he was ready to listen, learn and put in the hard work to turn his dreams into a reality. |
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They spend their time discouraging Billy and Nick from pursuing their dreams, highlighting their failures. |
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Twentysomething women have turned the boss into an icon, the ultimate position to have dreams and then make them happen. |
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The eyes of one of the most feared men thrashed beneath their lids as his body rolled on its left side as if searching for something that only appeared in dreams. |
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He did so driven by passion rather than dreams of fortune and riches. |
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Did anyone else have bad dreams and nightmares about airplane crashes? |
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He calls his wise men, and he demands that they interpret the dreams. |
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As she reached the count of ten, Elliot followed Carl into his dreams. |
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It was a place of pebbled walkways, pagodas, stone lanterns, a waterfall, and a wishing well where families and courting couples could give voice to their dreams. |
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These scenes also show how sheltered they are from experiencing the world outside their plush self-created one, as the threats are mostly isolated safely in dreams. |
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Inside psychiatric hospitals, the schizophrenic architect is forced to confine his dreams to paper, or to minor alterations of his personal environment. |
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With the school's championship finals looming and Jimmy's confidence in tatters once more, his dreams of being spotted by a City talent scout look distant. |
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The disorder is thus characterised by involuntary, persistent remembering or reliving the traumatic event in flashbacks, vivid memories, and recurrent dreams. |
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Both girls giggled and returned to their work with dreams of weddings, white dresses, and handsome men sweeping them off their feet occupying their thoughts. |
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When their dreams are dashed, they hook up and turn into con artists, coming up with grander and grander schemes to milk some poor man of his hard-earned money. |
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Not every kid who returns home suffers from bombastic dreams matched only by their lack of direction and flabby self-discipline. |
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All but in the fevered dreams of power mad politicians and their deluded followers is a world without immigration possible. |
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Suddenly, Emma is taken ill and having horrible dreams at night. |
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Congenitally handicapped and crippled by severe schizophrenic tendencies, he sought refuge in his awesome drawings and in his strange world of dreams. |
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This Kristo's horoscope site had some interesting stuff on it that I want to come back and check out, about dreams, astrology, alchemy, intuition and some other junk. |
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Her fevered dreams and the many reflections arising from conversations with her sister travelers begin to help her unburden herself of her complicated past. |
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The foundation, which helps make the dreams of poorly boys and girls come true, arranged for Chloe to meet some dolphins at an aquarium in Benidorm. |
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What little sleep she managed to get the night before had been troubled by dreams of violence and talking animals, and she had awakened, time and again, wringing wet. |
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He then puts on a pot of coffee and the rich smell of hazelnut rouses the rest of the family from their sugar plum dreams. |
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There are a lot of great women out there just waiting to meet the man of their dreams but finding these available women can take a little creativity. |
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This inner world, as Freud and others had previously suggested, was a fiction of repressed fantasies, dreams, and visions. |
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Last week's story prompted wild dreams about him coaching the All Whites. |
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In a one-state outcome, both sides would have to forego dreams of exclusivist nationalism. |
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The sequence in the alternate dimension had a profound resonance with me, like I'd experienced similar places in dreams but couldn't quite remember the specifics. |
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Despite doing nothing to get the man of her dreams, he arrives at her doorstep as if she Ubered the heartthrob. |
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After confronting mum and dad, I have been able to get on with my life but I still bare the emotional scars and visual torments of dreams and visions. |
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May dreams of the fearless left-winger escort you to the land of Nod. |
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It's fashionable to turn a blind eye to the exponential growth of executive rewards beyond the dreams of avarice that bear no relationship to economic worth. |
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They knew his fears and best hopes, his wishes and his dying dreams. |
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I was told before my first trip that no city in the world offered the dreams you could have sleeping in Havana. |
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Like I said, in spite of or because of my circumstances, I was able to accomplish my dreams. |
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Her sensuous, penetrating paintings present an allegorical realm, where beauty is eternal and dreams come true. |
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Then, in late 1991, the dreams of reformist socialism crashed with the end of the Soviet Union. |
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As they now live out their wildest dreams, their barbarity has cost the U.S. far more. |
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Down here, the big-league dreams of the players are still just far-off lights on the horizon. |
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In my dreams he was a sensual man who also had a hard time moving his bowels. |
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Not only that, but one of my many dreams came true when I did a duet with the legendary buffy Sainte-Marie. |
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Like most poor men with dreams of making it big, Klondike begins at a card table. |
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Who would have known that big dreams can be lost and small worlds can crumble, hinged on the correct spelling of cephalalgia, hypsometer or logorrhea? |
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People with terminal illnesses living in the Sheffield and Peak District areas will be able to apply for bursaries from the charity to help them realise longed-for dreams. |
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Antin has made a career of storytelling in films, photographs and performances that present engaging narratives of quests, masquerades and waking dreams. |
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If you're awakened during REM sleep, you may recall vivid dreams. |
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Many may of course just dismiss Mike as yet another farang who has come here to retire, and reinvent himself, like a Walter Mitty, as the character of his fanciful dreams. |
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Santana gets into college on a cheerleading scholarship but wants to throw that away to pursue her artistic dreams. |
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He is so innocent but so smart, he warms my heart every time I think of him and I will do my best to make sure all his dreams come true as will his parents. |
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A selection of visual renditions of the ogre, which some people say can only have been seen in dreams and by sorcerers, shall further introduce the image. |
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I fell asleep sometime after that and had some very disturbed dreams. |
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The things that we used to romanticize and use as an escape have come back with a hard edge, as forces to be reckoned with rather than as dreams to lose ourselves in. |
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He had been drinking heavily as a way of escape since his dreams of going into the marines or the fire service were dashed due to injuries caused in a motorbike accident. |
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But 25 years ago my dreams were dashed as I grew too tall to fit inside. |
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Her image glittered in his mind, a radiant light that would guide him back out of the terror of his dreams and into the sane, rational world of the living. |
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The chapter demonstrates that fantasies and day dreams may have radical differences in both structure and content, depending on the use to which we put them. |
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Sally carried the dreams of her earthbound sisters with grace and good humor. |
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I had decided not to receive my confirmation, and had guilt dreams about it but, deep down, felt my decision was the right one. |
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I slowly awaken from a deep sleep full of strange dreams, and it comes to my sleep-muddled attention that I definitely should not be waking up right now. |
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Returning home I found the cold had got into my own old bones, so I ran a good hot bath and spent a half-hour dreaming happy summer dreams amid the steam. |
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In this gripping, deftly paced story, a runtish boy dreams of joining the older boys of his village in their raids on trawlers and yachts on the Indian Ocean. |
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The best-selling author delivers an absorbing and provocative new novel about the low-down schemes and broken dreams that follow a fractured marriage. |
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At least Prince Hektor always got what he wanted and the girl of his dreams fawned at his feet, despite her claims of being an independent, man-hating adventuress. |
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The astral body exists in the nonphysical dimension called the astral plane, which is also the world we are in during our dreams at night when we sleep. |
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And Putin might meet a certain special someone, without insignia and wearing a ski mask, with whom to share his hopes and dreams. |
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Saturn, the Greater Malefic and ruler of the 8th house, is stronger than the victim's significator, the Moon, and afflicts the 11 th house of hopes and dreams. |
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A man took the bus home from the graveyard shift, bone-tired but dreaming big dreams for his son. |
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They had more than enough to build fabulous new domiciles that surely at least equal their wildest dreams. |
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Reasons for my Gingrich blues No lunar dreams or Grecian cruise No credit line from Tiffany's No saintly wife, his former squeeze. |
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Especially in the age of postmodernism or the New Age, many people are eager to enjoy their present moments and realize their own individual dreams. |
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I look forward to the day when such dreams might be realized. |
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As they have been realised, the dreams themselves have assumed a peculiar character of sobriety, of the spirit of positivism, and beyond that, of boredom. |
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The students came in all forms, from 18-year-old freshmen to 50-year-old midlifers finally chasing their dreams. |
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This time around, GoDaddy chose puppets and dreams and Gwen. |
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The best known tradition connected to this night concerns matrimony and premonitory dreams. |
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Chris Mohr are sharing tips and recipes to help turn those dreams into reality. |
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If someone takes the plants in their dreams, that means the girl will marry soon. |
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An excited young man and eagle scout by the name of Paul Siple earned the chance to join Richard Byrd, making his dreams come true. |
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Aristotle also includes in his theory of dreams what constitutes a dream and what does not. |
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Staff at Tipton manufacturing firm BHJ UK Protein Foods have shaved off their hair to help make dreams come true for terminally ill children. |
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A practical man who refused to run from the dreams that always drove him. |
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Can you help me write the perfect small ad and land the woman of my dreams? |
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Lastly, the images of dreams must be a result of lasting impressions of sensory experiences had when awake. |
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Understanding my own dreams had a lot to do with getting me off the juice. |
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All manner of exploration are included from hypnosis and mediumship to ESP experimentation and using dreams for guidance. |
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It's a marriage of convenience because she needs to wed to keep the flat of her dreams. |
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We have been promised a number of tear-jerking surprises and dramatic family reunions as Holly and guests help make some dreams come true. |
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No more bad dreams at night, no more skollies under the bed with knives, no more fights with Jack. |
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Meerkats Don't Fly is a charming children's picturebook about Benny, a young meerkat who dreams of flying. |
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Countless professional golfers have seen their dreams of winning the Open Championship squandered by hitting their balls into those bunkers. |
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A self-harmer with a protective mother still living out her own dreams through her daughter, it's a dangerous beast to unleash. |
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In the same study, they characterized electrophysiological signals made by the brain during lucid and nonlucid dreams. |
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I want a dressing gown made from it, to inspire my opium dreams. |
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He's so creative, and I'd love to turn him loose in my garden sometime and see what he dreams up. |
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Last year's quarter-finalists, Stourbridge, had their dreams quashed by Newcastle Benfield Bay Plastics after conceding an 85th-minute decider. |
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For such searing, challenging dreams, we have only snark or smarm. |
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In the study, the researchers looked into the frequency of their lucid dreams and the age at which their first lucid dream occurred. |
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First she wished that Maelon be thawed, second that God meet the hopes and dreams of true lovers and third that she should never marry. |
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That's easy for you to say. You haven't had your dreams crushed like I have. |
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Who does not feel the passage of divine dreams over his troubled life when the infinite meadows of heaven are suddenly abloom with light? |
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The Boomers had been the ones who'd ushered in an era of inclusiveness, diversity, and Aquarian dreams for a more humane society. |
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I very unceremoniously hid her in my heart and took her to my room to blissen my dreams. |
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Such an appointment would realize my fondest dreams. But no, at any sacrifice, I must set bounds to my insatiable ambition! |
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And as other dreams come from the multitude of business, so from such like busyings of the mind, we shall pray but dreamingly and distemperedly. |
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They were the same winged messengers that out-run cashless debtors, and cut short lovers' dreams. |
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Had Nancy got caught with a child? If so she would destroy her parent's dreams for her. |
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Telemachus and Penelope receive their omens as well in the form of words, sneezes, and dreams. |
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Man, what a way to pop a balloon full of promise! It was like waiting to be with the girl of your dreams and you end up in the Crying Game. |
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Yet we are dismayed by the failures and forces that dehumanize and defeat the finest dreams and plans of this generation. |
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He went to sleep, lying there under a wing of his plane, and presently Bland himself drifted off into dreams. |
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All my dreams for him have been cut short in the twinkling of an eye. Why was my son murdered? |
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Their exploits are intermingled with encounters with maidens and hermits who offer advice and interpret dreams along the way. |
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For most of us, Dr Wilder Penrose was our amiable Prospero, the psychopomp who steered our darkest dreams towards the daylight. |
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But Cummins could not square his own dreams of ecumenicity with racial exclusivism. |
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Passionate pursuers are a challenge to guys because while other girls may be chasing them, the It Girls are chasing their dreams. |
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If we are not happy on earth, we should moderate our desires rather than live in dreams of something that may never be attained. |
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They gathered outside Macari's, the musical instrument shop that specializes in amps, guitars and dreams of head-banging rockstardom. |
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But any substantial imagination, the pen here seldsom dreams, gone the serious literary voice, one coiffed in the eternal verities. |
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First and foremost, howsever, gie that sleepy body, Dirdumwhamle, a shoogle out o' his dreams. |
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In that study, some of the subjects had dreams in which they were slaking their thirst, very much like the dreams of convenience Freud described. |
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The former poster girl for a million jailbait dreams went to work at housewares stores in Canoga Park and Thousand Oaks. |
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For all their collectivist upbringing, in other words, these kibbutzniks followed dreams that were distinctly private and idiosyncratic. |
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ViolyntFemme is a twenty-seven-year-old High Femme married to the Transguy of her dreams. |
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Before understanding Aristotle's views on dreams, first his idea of sleep must be examined. |
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In the end, he regretted only the words left unspoken and the dreams left undreamt. |
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And if anyone's entitled to such sweet dreams, it's Annie Lennox. |
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In dreams, sensation is still involved, but in an altered manner than when awake. |
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And I also have lots of apocalyptic dreams, including warfare. |
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She was drafted by the Orlando Wahoos during her senior season but declined the offer to pursue her dreams of earning an Olympic gold medal. |
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Since impressions are all that are left and not the exact stimuli, dreams will not resemble the actual experience that occurred when awake. |
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Indeed, the frequency, vividness, and scariness of her dreams increased when Yani was faced with an opportunity to begin a romantic relationship. |
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It was such a day as one dreams about, with that pleasant warmth in the air that makes for indolent content. |
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Her dreams of romance are always stymied by her shrewishly over-protective divorced mother. |
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He is dethroned by the spectre of an actor, and we shall never be able to keep the usurper out of our dreams. |
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Since a person sleeping is in this suggestible state, they become easily deceived by what appears in their dreams. |
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It is achingly sad to know those hopes and dreams can never happen as planned. |
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Various scientific study findings conducted within the last few decades say that pain in dreams can occur in contrast to Locke's claim. |
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I came to Hollywood with dreams in my heart,'' said Vilmos Zsigmond, who picked up the award for Best Cinematographer. |
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Ere we will eat our meal in fear, and sleep in the affliction of these terrible dreams that shake us nightly. |
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Such experiences were unlike dreams, or any of the miasmic apparitions that arise in the natural psyche, below the mind. |
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One component of Aristotle's theory of dreams introduces ideas that are contradictory to previously held beliefs. |
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Mr Weevil guarantees he will find the ladybeetles the house of their dreams and takes them on a viewing tour. |
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To keep their dreams alive, Chico and Rita travel to America in search of fame and fortune but Lady Luck can be a cruel mistress. |
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Tax cuts for the wealthy and the dismantling of the welfare state are Tory wet dreams. |
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It's hard casting the rod of memory back to teenage years without wincing at all the pimples, slow dances, and wet dreams involved. |
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For an alternative read with raw emotions and mental fluctuations, BoyFistGirlSuck will fuel you for hauntingly wet dreams. |
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Lloyd recorded Banks for inclusion in the play as a disembodied voice appearing as himself in one of the cast member's dreams. |
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He claimed that dreams are not foretelling and that they are not sent by a divine being. |
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Souza's project is related to xenoglossy, and Muniz's is related to lucid dreams involving shared contents. |
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