Good though it was, it was eclipsed by the fantastic tapering baby carrots on which it sat. |
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He also observes that air power has completely eclipsed tanks' role as mobile artillery. |
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Despite the magnitude of these developments, they were overtaken and eventually eclipsed in the nineteenth century. |
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Unfortunately, much of her work has been ignored, partly because she was eclipsed, as a woman, by the male literati of the Harlem Renaissance. |
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As he matured artistically, the visual content of his murals eclipsed the politics. |
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The ska lads had emerged from Coventry the year before, rude boys all, and had yet to be eclipsed by their labelmates. |
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Its accomplishments so far eclipsed anything that had ever been done, Alexander and his Macedonians entered into legend. |
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Almost all our Spanish and Taino history is submerged beneath British and African origins and even the British influence is fast being eclipsed. |
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But they are totally eclipsed by the vivacity and originality of Vivaldi's three. |
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However well received the plays he had written since, none had eclipsed the haunting, poetic power of his first. |
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If anything has eclipsed his directing achievements in the past 20 years, it's his development work. |
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His drubbing by Chirac was soon eclipsed by even more extraordinary developments in the Netherlands. |
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Nevertheless, the taste for things English rivaled and soon eclipsed Dutch hegemony. |
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By the twentieth century, Pompeii's metaphorical significance had largely eclipsed its moral charge. |
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Much to his surprise, Sherry was leaning against the metal railings, gazing out at the giant red moon as it eclipsed a smaller blue moon. |
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The full moon on 16 May will be eclipsed as it passes through the Earth's shadow, but it won't be completely dark. |
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The Sun is partially eclipsed by the Moon late on the afternoon of the 13th. |
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In my estimation, Turner's psychohistorical reading has eclipsed the philosophical subtlety of Newman's project. |
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Having eclipsed the record of Anand to become the youngest grandmaster from the country, the chess prodigy is now gunning for greater glory. |
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Perhaps the two theories that have been most eclipsed by recent developments are Freudianism and behaviorism. |
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Total field goals made barely eclipsed total turnovers committed in the first half of this yawner. |
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In front of a capacity crowd of 8,000 at the Sheffield Arena, Lampkin eclipsed his rivals with a dominant display of inch-perfect riding. |
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Physical partition of land was eclipsed by the tide of emotional separation that soon became a gulf. |
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When an athlete breaks a world record, the previous record-holder's title is eclipsed. |
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Initially youths joined the separatist movement out of altruistic reasons to save their group identity from being eclipsed. |
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To some the signal importance of that event was eclipsed by another aspect of the morning's ceremonies. |
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The Popular Front period would fade into history, eclipsed by the war, the McCarthy period, the blacklist, the cold war. |
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It is impossible to overstate the momentousness of such events, and yet they have fallen into a shadowy disregard, eclipsed by recent history. |
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About a quarter of the lunar diameter was eclipsed, and re-emergence occurred about a quarter of an hour before sunrise. |
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The sun was suddenly eclipsed by a shadow as the other bird circled before diving. |
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In more than one instance their Eurocentric view eclipsed their respect, and they overlaid their names on ancient rock art and structures. |
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He spent enormous amounts of money buying influence, including giving public games as aedile that eclipsed anything that had gone before. |
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The Kantian concern with the beautiful was eclipsed by his notion of the sublime. |
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Once value consensus is eclipsed by dissensus, religion is a natural point of dissension around which political and cultural agendas cluster. |
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The Negotiator Class diplomatic cruiser eclipsed the light of a blue sun, highlighting battle worn scars along her hull like sunlight on a river. |
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Historical genre was gradually eclipsed by scenes from a semi-imaginary Orient, a reflection of the colonialism of the mid-century. |
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Furry bodies eclipsed the fans of light spilling through the shutters, turning the scene surreal. |
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She read aloud with a passion and urgency that eclipsed everything else around her. |
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But Greek monasticism was not eclipsed until the thirteenth century, when Latin culture finally prevailed in southern Italy. |
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The humanity of the characters is never totally eclipsed by their more malign traits. |
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If Bea's starter and main course were marginally better than mine, her tasty Drambuie-sodden trifle was comfortably eclipsed by my mouth-watering clootie dumpling and custard. |
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Indeed, when you read it, you comprehend how, almost inevitably, his oratorical gifts eclipsed his skill as a writer. |
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He actually made 191 runs, and in so doing eclipsed the record previously held by Sir Vivian Richards as the most prolific West Indian batsman ever! |
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As she galloped under the wire, the seven-year-old daughter of Desert King eclipsed the Australian earnings record held by three-time Horse of the Year Sunline. |
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They see him as having eclipsed Newt Gingrich, whose fortunes have sagged since his brief, shining moment in South Carolina. |
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The glamour of the seaside resort has long since been eclipsed by spectacular violence. |
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Some of the gloss was taken from the image of Great Britain when her colonies rebelled, and Anglomania was partially eclipsed by enthusiasm for all things American. |
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He is one of the most underrated rockers of the 20th century, an enormously talented musician whose misfortunes have completely eclipsed his importance in modern music. |
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Dr. Welner appears to be their star witness, although he might be eclipsed by the widow of Sgt. speer. |
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The moon will, at the full, be totally eclipsed, if its latitude is less than the difference between its own semidiameter, and that of the earth's shadow. |
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Data eclipsed God in 1973, and its continuing ascendance suggests a culture that treats it as a surrogate divinity. |
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The sandals nearly eclipsed Renee's tiny, delicate feet, and Suzie had spent a painstaking quarter of an hour painting her shell-like toenails a girlish shade of pink. |
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The inconstancy is caused by the fact that Algol is a binary system in which the brighter star is regularly eclipsed by its partner for a period of around 8 hours. |
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His favorite painters are the Tonalists, landscape painters whose work was once well known but is now eclipsed by the Hudson River painters, the Impressionists, and others. |
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In his latest book Smith argues that science, along with its attendant philosophies of naturalism and materialism, has systematically eclipsed this big picture. |
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But it is becoming apparent that these are all eclipsed by the English game's insistency on burying its head in the sand and claiming it's all okay, really. |
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It is when the Sun is totally eclipsed that the solar corona is visible. |
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Within a few years, he would be eclipsed by couturiers like Coco Chanel and Jean Patou, designers more willing to adapt to the needs of a new generation of American women. |
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And we will see the moon is being eclipsed at the same time. |
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The wonder of it all eclipsed the sadness I had felt earlier. |
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Washington State is eclipsed in consumers' eyes by its viniferous neighbors to the south, California and Oregon. |
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Fantom was first in North America with bagless technology, but finally was eclipsed by the market leaders. |
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This would remain the world record test match attendance until eclipsed by the 73,631 who attended the 1992 World Cup Final at Wembley Stadium. |
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That total may have been eclipsed by last year's bumper crop of forktails, though confirmation was not immediately available. |
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His 85 eclipsed the century he scored in India last winter with the Aussie attack the finest in the world even without leggie Shane Warne. |
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Although his fame has been long eclipsed by that of his contemporaries and friends William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge. |
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Richardson had gained a reputation for crashing aircraft, which Olivier rapidly eclipsed. |
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Silk, wool, fustian, and linen were being eclipsed by cotton, which was becoming the most important textile. |
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His painting continued to improve, so much so that he soon eclipsed the reputation of his father. |
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So, have pity on the mansplainer. His is the merely the voice of a patriarchal world eclipsed by a new one... wait, did that sound mansplainy? |
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When his patents expired in the 1790s there was a rush to install Watt engines, and Newcomen engines were eclipsed, even in collieries. |
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From about 1300 until 1600, Mapungubwe was eclipsed by the Kingdom of Zimbabwe. |
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About a thousand years ago, large chiefdoms emerged that were later eclipsed by the Great Zimbabwe empire, which spread into eastern Botswana. |
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Colchester was probably the earliest capital of Roman Britain, but it was soon eclipsed by London with its strong mercantile connections. |
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Their empire disintegrated into a rump over the course of the next century, when it was eclipsed by Pontus. |
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Even so, the monument appears to have eclipsed the site at Avebury in importance towards the end of this phase. |
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The ruined town was later eclipsed by nearby Murmansk, of which it is now commonly considered to be a satellite. |
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Statistically, the VOC eclipsed all of its rivals in international trade for almost 200 years of existence. |
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By 300 BCE, this culture was eclipsed by other emerging civilizations in Mesoamerica. |
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This new sensation eclipsed Lamb's Essays of Elia, which were then appearing in the same periodical. |
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In the second period, the island of Hormuz eclipsed the commercial power of the island of Kish. |
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By the middle of the sixteenth century, it was a small settlement long eclipsed by the more easily defended town of Newport. |
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This relative decline was, however, eclipsed by the dramatic collapse in Labour support at the 1983 General Election. |
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Hywel's wide domain, later known as Deheubarth, briefly eclipsed Gwynedd under his immediate heirs before fracturing. |
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In The Name of Love eclipsed only by the glitziness of their stage costumes. |
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The popular appellation eclipsed and eventually supplanted the official Portuguese name. |
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After the elder Paul was eclipsed by his son, Stinnett rebranded. |
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His flaws are eclipsed by the sizable shadow of his strengths. |
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So do the shadows of our own desires stand between us and our better angels, and thus their brightness is eclipsed. |
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I decided to watch for an uncommon eclipse phenomenon known as selenelion, seeing the Sun near the horizon and the eclipsed Moon near the opposite horizon at the same time. |
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It was later eclipsed by Francis Cabot Lowell's Waltham System. |
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In the early 13th century, a new wave of invaders, the Mongol Empire's armies, swept through the region but were eventually eclipsed by the Turks. |
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Northumbria held suzerainty amidst the Teutonic presence in the British Isles in the 7th century, but was eclipsed by the rise of Mercia in the 8th century. |
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Without a popular base, the issue of home rule did not feature as an issue in subsequent General Elections and was quickly eclipsed by the depression. |
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Unfortunately, this trendline hasn't eclipsed the 90 level yet. |
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It sold well in France, but was eventually eclipsed by the Renault 11 hatchback, as the hatchback bodystyle became more popular on this size of car. |
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There is every chance you would assume Paris was now hopelessly passe, having been eclipsed by second-generation reality succubi such as the Kardashians. |
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He laughs, so unresentfully that the gloom is completely eclipsed. |
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