The former track is comprised almost entirely of bass-heavy drones and pulsating synth waves, slow echoes fading into the ether. |
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My bags of groceries rustle, and the sound echoes loudly in the large room. |
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Fires continue to belch smoke over the city and sporadic gunfire echoes through the flooded streets. |
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Nuuk is rich with undertones, tidal washes, deep swathes of velvet mezzotint, patient soundings, submarinal echoes. |
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In the thunder of the hunt today we hear echoes of the joust, the tourney and the cavalry charge. |
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The doors to Titan's office sprang open as the last echoes of a gunshot reverberated throughout the room. |
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Instead we get a series of very similar midtempo chuggers, songs leaking into each other and sounding like dim echoes of Interpol's past. |
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The system echoes a scheme due to be trialled in Leeds this autumn, which will see volunteers testing the equipment without being charged. |
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The car has a completely new dashboard and interior trim, with echoes of the TT sportster. |
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The glint on the wire frames of his spectacles echoes the glint on the birdcage wire. |
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I'm fascinated by the way that modern-day culture resonates with the whispers, sighs and echoes of ghosts. |
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We have also strange and artificial echoes and we have means to convey sounds in trunks and pipes in strange lines and distances. |
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Both directors' films are shot through with a mordant humour which echoes the essential Dublin. |
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Singing whales appear to slalom from one geographic feature to the next using the echoes of their intense, infrasonic voices to navigate. |
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For a while, the progression of their relationship echoes the discoveries they unearth about Ash and Christabel. |
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After years of keeping quiet it is time to find his voice, time to send out echoes into the uneasy silence. |
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A few mutters of agreements and echoes of his words followed the leader's voiced remark. |
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The wharves and warehouses on the Floss were busy again, with echoes of eager voices, with hopeful lading and unlading. |
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Their live vocals are combined with loops and echoes, which means the lack of a band or backing track goes completely unmissed. |
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The echoes of our footsteps bounce off the bare walls of the hollow structure. |
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We see echoes of this perspective in the writings of Noam Chomsky and Jerry Fodor, self-identified nativists. |
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In this environment, unsoftened by so much as a cushion or a curtain, his amplified rock soundtrack echoes and re-echoes. |
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Trimmed in pink ribbon, the sitting room's yellow sofa echoes the upholstery style of the bedroom's chaise longue. |
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Thus Dillard echoes Carlyle's sentiments that vaticination, or the act of prophesying, is a futile means of understanding the world. |
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Bright echoes, representing microbubbles can now be seen in the renal pelvis, indicating vesicoureteric reflux. |
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With that, he opened the door and walked away, but not before he slammed it hard, resounding echoes of the loud thud vibrating into the room. |
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With its burgundies and browns, the house interior echoes the rich emotions of the characters. |
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The choreography explores the concept of harmony and echoes the message of non-violence and peace. |
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In autumn the roar of the red deer stags that roam just north of the estate echoes around the castle. |
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A large hall was built in Rathbane, which now echoes to the clack of timber for indoor hurling. |
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The sharp crack of their rifles echoes through the humid Georgia night, evoking cries of alarm and warning from the encampment ahead. |
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The camera work echoes a spent, pared down existence in its washed out, Russian-made and processed film stock. |
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Window mullions were rebuilt, and birch plywood casework that handsomely echoes the 1950s was installed. |
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Alghero is a place for evening strolls atop battlements and along cobbled streets, and echoes everywhere with Catalan influences. |
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Away from the grand pedigree of the original building, the design of the hotel's new tower echoes the shapes and colours of the old one well. |
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The ornamental decoration of Spanish Hebrew Bibles is only one of the many echoes of this interaction. |
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The name of the organization created to further Basic, the Orthological Institute, echoes such terms as orthodoxy, orthography, and orthoepy. |
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The transducer detects echoes before being converted into electrical signals that are represented on an oscilloscopic display. |
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Its the expansion of the West German hostility to Ossies now finding echoes in complaints from London tradesmen about Polish plumbers. |
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There are Chekhovian echoes in its depiction of a way of life about to pass into oblivion. |
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But the work is more a summing-up of his conservative past and echoes of Lilburn's landscape writing are all too pervasive. |
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She remembered the dark, cold cavern and the hollow echoes of her footsteps as she walked into its darkness. |
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To avoid collisions while in flight, they emit high-frequency chirps and process the echoes that return from nearby objects. |
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The style, by intention, echoes that of the late, great choreographer Fosse. |
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A careful examination of the Deuteronomic history suggests that historical echoes parallel the textual. |
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A metachamber, not ringing with echoes at all, but with the grand hubbub that is the sounds of the little echo chambers singing into the void. |
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The overall impression of the early rooms is of a sybaritic indulgence which echoes the richness and confidence of Venetian Renaissance society. |
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Bat calls have to be incredibly loud so that the faint echoes can to be detected. |
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Her playful tone echoes these predecessors, but with a coyness that seems distinctly feminine. |
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The Melbourne Cricket Ground, a contemporary colosseum, growls and echoes eerily as Waugh makes the long walk to the crease. |
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Some of Fellini's situations seem impossibly grotesque, yet they have echoes in recent world events. |
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I pitied the hapless patient and commiserated with the unhappy house officer, unsettled by the echoes of my own mistakes. |
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A collective groan echoes off the cold cement floor, unforgiving to body parts not usually accustomed to communing with the urban landscape. |
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It emits pings and listens for echoes bouncing back from small particles in the water. |
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It was a long, empty morning in the silent office, filled only with the echoes of a taunting voice. |
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The top of the mirror repeats the angle of the ceiling, while the curve of the console table echoes the curve in the hearth. |
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Written in a sympathetic and irenic spirit, this book echoes a striking number of the same criticisms of the current Roman exercise of primacy. |
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She stepped onto its shiny, polished, wooden floor, and listened to the squeaking echoes of sneakers skidding across it. |
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I find his poety stark, cold and fairly confronting in it's simplicity and I think this echoes the suffering of the ordinary footslogger. |
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In doing so he echoes the humanist pragmatism of Florentine practical mathematics a century before. |
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Ireland has always had a tradition of superb tenors, and the golden voice of Tom Cregan echoes that tradition. |
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I would like to know what scientific writings about bow echoes and derechos have been published. |
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Blood and gore has lined every street, and in every corner the echoes of a million screams can be distinctly heard. |
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The chorus of gotchas and the echoes of laughter I hear this morning are making my head hurt. |
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Of course, echoes and repetitions do not necessarily imply non-differentiation of subjectivity. |
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The high-pitched echoes sounded louder than the actual shriek itself as they rebounded off the dirt walls. |
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We scream as we hit the water, the echoes flying back and forth in the circle of peaks. |
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The sewers reverberated with the muffled echoes of explosions and the sounds of war. |
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If a bat sends out two clicks and notices a difference between the echoes, it knows a tasty bug is moving nearby. |
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These sounds are received as echoes in the dolphin's jawbone and the signal is transmitted to its brain. |
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Carpets are needed throughout to dull the sound of footsteps and echoes in the corridors, which can distract and upset some children. |
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There was no screaming, no running footsteps, no echoes across the stony surfaces. |
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Lakes of methane could cover three-quarters of Saturn's moon Titan, according to radio echoes from this cloud-shrouded world. |
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He says the radar echoes indicate that impact craters filled with liquid hydrocarbons may cover as much as 75 percent of Titan's surface. |
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The echoes from the 32 beams are displayed on a high-resolution colour monitor. |
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But with transatlantic fiber-optic cables, you have a direct connection with no echoes. |
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Scientists will use intensity of the echoes to speculate about the nature of the surface. |
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For that reason, objects near the ground close to the radars often produce strong echoes even though they may not lie directly in the beam. |
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Analysis of the echoes produced will reveal much about the composition of the top five kilometres of the crust. |
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By sending out signals and retrieving the echoes, we can develop pictures of all the features on the ocean floor. |
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The news from Washington this past week had eerie echoes of the lead-up to the war in Iraq. |
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Moreover one frequently finds echoes of his ideas in the writing of many specialists. |
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However, for those seeking echoes of today's events, there are some hints there. |
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Its gameplay echoes the familiar Raiden series, but with much more variety than simply red and blue ships. |
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Cuba and her people have a vibrant and passionate past and one that echoes around the fading grandeur of her elegant architecture. |
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The echoes of the last gunshot had died long ago, replaced by an unnatural and eerie silence. |
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The historical setting never feels remote, as echoes of our days can be discerned between the lines. |
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Amid the crumbling plaster and tattered curtains, they spin out a private little reality that emptily echoes a life without meaning. |
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Dauphine echoes the initial warning of the second prologue in describing the ways in which the gulls are duped. |
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The disembodied voice echoes the knowledge he does have but has never really used. |
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The echoes that the harsh dissonance produced were cut short with the ongoing volume. |
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Only rarely today does one hear even distant echoes of that extreme position. |
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But an American official who has been privately doubtful of the Administration's commitment to the peace process now echoes this view. |
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The tone of children's stories merges with echoes of the Authorised Version. |
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In the hills and valleys the memory of the echoes of the old anthem abides. |
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But, in general, the wail of jazz trumpets and the melancholy echoes of domestic chaos remind you that Elysian Fields resounds with desperation. |
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One theory is that the sound of the quack tails away, which makes the echoes difficult to hear. |
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His absorption with the world of advertising and the intricacies associated with it find dominant echoes in his works. |
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Along the sandy trail echoes of Brits speaking Castilian Spanish and Spaniards speaking the Queen's English could be heard. |
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The origin of Fundi Mdawalo's craft echoes the better-known story of the origins of commercial woodcarving among the Kamba of Kenya. |
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At times there are echoes of the raw Gaelic keeners who sang the songs of the dispossessed. |
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This echoes the wave of such birth deformities following the US's use of the pesticide Agent Orange as a chemical weapon in the Vietnam War. |
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Poynton's arrant realism provides echoes of Lucian Freud, Stanley Spencer, Eric Fischl and Philip Pearlstein. |
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And as we leave, echoes of the roar of the king of beasts lingers in the still air over proud and deserted ruins of Hampi. |
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Over a wavery organ loop that gently builds then fades away amid a wash of echoes, a singer slowly groans out a wordless lament. |
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In doing so, he echoes the line of many a know-nothing conservative before him. |
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The issue has echoes of the Arab world's historical struggle to assert its own destiny. |
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Their dramatic alt-rock had more than a few echoes of The Bends and OK Computer. |
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The finance minister echoes this theme in more deliberate language in his speech to Northland business people. |
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Echoes of scripture, which abound in Map's text, provide examples of echoes at a considerable remove from the original. |
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The many echoes and repetitions throughout the performances carried the audience from one movement to another. |
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Poussin's view of the genre, as a representation modelled on true nature, echoes the meaning of the caprice in at least one form of literature. |
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Does it matter whether the place is a rundown tip as long as it echoes with love and laughter? |
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The patterns repeat themselves like family resemblances, the living seeing echoes of their own faces in old photographs. |
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Rowing through a bridge, every sound of the boat echoes, and shooting a bridge adds a burst of power through the boat. |
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Clearly, de Blainville's language echoes through this passage framing the scientists' concerns about human animality and sexuality. |
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I tried to imagine what the noise might have been, its echoes still reverberating down the corridors. |
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Buried under his covers he could only faintly hear the echoes of rings somewhere else. |
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A moment or two later there is a loud musical ring that echoes through the entire house. |
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The roar of the machines, the echoes within the massive structures, the subtly of whispered voices are all discovered anew here. |
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The style is very literary and carefully wrought, filled with archaisms and with echoes of Lamb's master Sterne. |
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Above ground, an amphitheater lined with seven double rows of cypress trees echoes the octagonal space below. |
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The gun itself barely moves, and the sharp sound of the report echoes through surrounding hills and dies away. |
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The globe echoes the shape made by the Queen's head with its surrounding ruff, like a planet in relation to the sun. |
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It is true that, in bad weather, radar beams can be reflected off waves, causing false echoes or making the screen unreadable. |
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Nadia flicked the small wind chimes she'd nailed to the edge of her desk, taking comfort is the light echoes. |
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But I will add that it often happens that after I publish a novel or story, some event in the news echoes it. |
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Referring to Figure 15-7 one sees how this eclipse echoes that of February 26, 1998, which was a saros earlier. |
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The recurrence of boils, pustules and other such ailments in the stories echoes Beckett's own frequent affliction with skin disorders. |
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With a few bits of cardboard, a light and a bit of plastic, Pratt's little model echoes both the reality and the dream. |
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They eschewed the old Tennysonian order and its sustained Edwardian echoes. |
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Delving into echoes of his personal history, Campbell resists this alienation and bares his soul to readers and to the land. |
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The depiction of her as temptress echoes the clerical trope of woman as Eve, the seducer of men. |
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What could be more appropriate for a fairy tale wedding hotel than the Chateau with its old-style architecture and echoes of mediaevalism. |
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As if no longer able to bear the echoes of horrors past, Kalin stopped his history lesson and looked at me for the first time in over an hour. |
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Usually early migrants, the first ouzel's song echoes round the hills and the first birds fall prey to merlins and peregrines. |
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The MU radar can measure the diffusion coefficients in the mesopause region by observing meteor echoes. |
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Then the couple decided to throw some curves at the problem, in the form of a serpentine front deck that echoes curves in the home's landscaping. |
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There are a lot of echoes, for instance, and these either stretch the small metallic sounds out into drones or create sharp, stuttering rhythms. |
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The staggering of the panels creates a step-like effect, which echoes the motion of the dog and emphasizes the painting's disharmonies of scale, color and reference. |
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Many odontocetes can navigate by echolocation, producing sound waves using a complex system of nasal sacs and passages, and using the echoes to navigate. |
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This vow echoes like an eerie refrain through a piece that examines the deepest intimacies of marriage while questioning the rules and expectations that govern it. |
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Never mind that they showed our chaps in the dungeons, there was a certain stylishness to them that caught the dying echoes of the last blast of stiff-upper-lipped officers. |
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Both works also display Jones's preoccupation with the manifold dimensions of language through their deliberate echoes of African American dialects and colloquialisms. |
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The ancient Advent collect still echoes deep within my soul. |
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Like all dolphins, these marine mammals gather information about their environment by emitting high-pitched sounds, or clicks, and analyzing the returning echoes. |
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Blair stood frozen like that, listening to the echoes of his footsteps and the hum of his car engine reverberating in her ears as they faded into the night. |
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His wife and business partner, Elizabeth, is also in black, a flowing dress that echoes her glossy black hair and highlights her porcelain-pale skin. |
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Lipsky's hand-painted edges and the sweet smell of oil paint that had subtly impregnated the gallery were the only echoes of Guston's painterliness. |
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This meant that fewer echoes or remnants of the market had survived. |
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The echoes were twisted and distorted in the enclosed tunnel. |
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The five-story addition echoes the existing cubic structure and is connected to it by a two-story link that will house several galleries and public spaces. |
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He restricts himself to poetic echoes that are manifestly conscious. |
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As Sclavis and Collignon explore the first of several ecstatic improvised conversations, whirling folk dances turn into warp-speed vocal scatting against electronic echoes. |
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Big smocks, lacy cardigans and wide trousers were the backbone of a collection that carried echoes of high-school uniforms and American small-town culture. |
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The ears of another kind of bat, the horseshoe bat, cannot hear sounds the same pitch as their own calls, but can hear the echoes because they are slightly lower in pitch. |
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While all the king's horses and all the king's men do build this grand and mighty structure, the sound of their hammers echoes limitlessly in the hollow within. |
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I can remember echoes of that Presbyterian morality in Scotland as late as the 1980's and think they probably exist still today in very diluted form. |
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There are echoes of hip-hop, reggae, socca, calypso and soul in garage. |
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Larva echoes this multiplicity of tongues, a babel of aliens. |
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This is now an unending conflict, with echoes of Vietnam, fought in the untracked wasteland of the southern mountains and around the Pakistan border. |
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We sang songs in rounds, back and forth with our own echoes. |
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No Hawaiian hulas or Tahitian chants here, though traditional cultural elements and echoes of local folk styles do inform these supremely mellow numbers. |
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Yesterday's attacks carried several eerie echoes of the July 7 bombings. |
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Coastal targets usually produced very distinctive echoes on the radar. |
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While these contemporary writers may not have read many of the authors in Harlem's Glory, many of their themes turn out to be echoes of this earlier writing. |
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Every peak and promontory shall catch up the symphonious echoes. |
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Definitely there's echoes of perhaps this idea of going out in a blaze of glory, or perhaps as a stark reminder to people of the reality of motor vehicle crashes. |
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But Jonson also echoes Horace's warning against imitating servilely. |
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In Spain and Greece early 2002 gave the lie to the persistent rumours that the movement could not survive the echoes of 11 September in the most dramatic way. |
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Yet their attitude to the poor, if condescending, was generous, and echoes of Young England survived as elements in Disraeli's later vision of Tory democracy. |
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The album differs from their earlier punchy efforts, concentrating on developing strong grooves laced in reverb and echoes at a leisurely-relaxed tempo. |
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One of the most famous of his teachings consists of two Torah quotations that were staples of Judaism and echoes the emphasis of the rabbinic teachings of his era. |
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Such a way of working echoes the theatre collectives of the 1970s, which tried to create an egalitarian alternative to the star-based power structures of mainstream theatre. |
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The entire place echoes constantly with the screams of prisoners. |
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This gilded silver casket was made in the form of a Gothic church that echoes the design of both the Ste-Chapelle and the baldachin that sheltered the grand chasse. |
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When Monica is re-born by a male scientist figure in this future society, an event that echoes the immaculate conception birth of David, she is the woman-as-mother. |
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A shattering tinkle echoes as the ice pieces cover the floor. |
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Those in the front heard her voice coming around the sides of the megaphone, those in the back heard the amplified version, and the clump in the middle heard echoes. |
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That phantom limb pain often echoes the injury that led to the amputation. |
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You can see echoes of Edinburgh step-gabling in the windows, hints of Scots baronial in the reception area and Celtic crosses carved into the ceiling. |
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Even more backward-looking are the works inspired by the styles of other artists, such as the watercolors he created in Venice, with their clear echoes of Turner. |
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Analysis of radar echoes showed birds crossed the Great Lakes in large numbers, although we also found evidence of birds avoiding lake crossing in some locations. |
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With echoes of Michael Mann's masterpiece Manhunter, the aptly named Sinister begins intriguingly. |
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The fretful tinkling of the convent bell evermore dinging among the mountain echoes. |
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This stir of change and these perpetual echoes of the moving footfall, haunt the land. Men move eternally, still chasing Fortune. |
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One can hear the echoes of King Lear as well as the completely different characters of Romeo and Juliet. |
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The story of Hamlet, as told from the viewpoint of two courtiers echoes Beckett in its double act repartee, existential themes and language play. |
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There are echoes of these darker experiences in Dahl's writings and his hatred of cruelty and corporal punishment. |
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Starkey has been praised for his playing style which echoes Moon's without being a copy. |
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When the clicking sounds hit an object in the water, like a fish or rock, they bounce off and come back to the dolphin as echoes. |
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Bat echolocation is a perceptual system where ultrasonic sounds are emitted specifically to produce echoes. |
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The delay of the returning echoes provides the bat with the ability to estimate the range to their prey. |
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They then receive echoes back at the finely tuned frequency range by taking advantage of the Doppler shift of their motion in flight. |
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The Doppler shift of the returning echoes yields information relating to the motion and location of the bat's prey. |
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They have adapted to change their pulse emission frequency in relation to their flight speed so echoes still return in the optimal hearing range. |
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The extent of Hemingway's influence is seen in the tributes and echoes of his fiction in popular culture. |
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His monologue stopped abruptly with a sharp noise like a thundercrack that rolled in dreary echoes round the dismal mere. |
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I could say as much of the tintinnabulatory echoes from some score of bells. |
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But let the judicial system be criticized, and up-handed horror echoes its protest in all directions. |
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Neither his fake narrative nor Eileen's perverse echoes of it are memories, stories, affording the reciprocity of an auratic relation. |
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The dining room echoes the timbers of the house and features traditional wattle and daub construction. |
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Attending to theological echoes finds support in Wesley's conjunctive theology and his study of affectional moral psychology. |
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Lost Canyons is a music CD resurrecting the haunting echoes of the Anasazi flute, an instrument lost to human ears for over a millennium. |
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Then, last Monday, he issued a television video which had clear echoes of the old IRA briefings in uniform and holding Armalites. |
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Superluminal light echoes were seen as light from the outburst propagated into the surrounding, pre-existing circumstellar dust. |
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One could hear the echoes of Robert Hass, but Roo seemed more numinous or metaphysical. |
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Forgive my sin of understanding one language through its unmeant echoes in another. |
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Bold echoes of Fellini's La Dolce Vita come to mind during the title sequence of Peter Lynch's debut feature documentary, Project Grizzly. |
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Just when the echoes of Tommy Docherty's 1985 flounderers were becoming ever louder. |
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To monitor their world, they send out beeps and listen for variations in the echoes. |
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After insulating the roof it was given a covering of Parana pine to improve the acoustics and reduce echoes. |
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The caringly sensuous and intimate caress of concentric circles echoes ancient practice of natural and dynamic expressions of humanness. |
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When the climbers hammer an ice ax the ice splits and cracks with a sound that echoes in the canyon. |
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The newly coined word clearly, and cleverly, echoes the familiar literary practice of explication while importantly encompassing much more. |
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Dating back to the 1880s, the coffee break emblemizes the iconic role of coffee in American culture and echoes the history of NCA's 100 years of industry service. |
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The Llangollen International Eisteddfod echoes the National Eisteddfod but provides an opportunity for the singers and musicians of the world to perform. |
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This echoes the growing interest in the afterlife in Maccabean times. |
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With echoes of Kenneth Waltz writing in a very different context, Drezner contends that bipolarity appears as the most stable form for a global regulatory regime. |
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The saddle roof echoes the insulated space within the chapel. |
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Tuffy can't help but bring echoes of rappers like Biggie Smalls to mind. |
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The irony of such Pyrrhonic echoes is that we can discern behind the modish posture the impossibility of Hamlet's ever really being able fully to adopt the skeptic's stance. |
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When the prowling aerialist senses the faint echoes bouncing off one of these prey, he turns toward the target, quickens his chirp rate, and homes in for the kill. |
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And if perchance some fleeting memories steal, Like far-off echoes to my dreaming ear, Away, ungrasped, the cheating visions wheel, As spectres start upon the wing of fear. |
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On the simplest level, this statement echoes existential philosophy in its eschewals of belief in ideology but not participation in ideologically-cemented communities. |
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Bats can estimate the elevation of their target using the interference patterns from the echoes reflecting from the tragus, a flap of skin in the external ear. |
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By comparing the outgoing pulse with the returning echoes, the brain and auditory nervous system can produce detailed images of the bat's surroundings. |
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They have to time their short calls to finish before echoes return. |
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In echoes of derby day 2013 when a Newcastle United fan punched a police horse in the face, Herby was struck and dragged to the ground, nearly smashing his head clean off. |
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There were echoes the Poll Tax riots which dogged the Thatcher years. |
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Ornamental grasses carry echoes of marram grasses, blowing in the dunes. |
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