Professional actors replaced the rude, extempore Fescennine verses with dancing and singing to the flute. |
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She was quite prepared to speak extempore for an hour, when well in her seventies. |
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This is followed by a one-minute extempore speech on a topic given by the company. |
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The Prime Minister seemed to be in a very enthusiastic and positive mood as he spoke extempore for about 20 minutes. |
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First up were the talents of the award-winning extempore duo and they dazzled the crowd with their improvisational skills and stinging repartee. |
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Was language invented extempore, or gradually developed from grunts and screeches? |
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Their extempore skills, general knowledge and other talents were brushed up to match the level of other participants. |
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Like politicians, almost everything they said was designed to enhance their public image while appearing extempore and sincere. |
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Throughout, John and his giant puppets kept the audience involved, giving the street play an extempore feel. |
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In any event, it was a bravura performance, a long extempore speech, apparently pulled out of thin air. |
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Some of them knew how to cast a spell on their audience by delivering a speech extempore. |
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Their worship is spontaneous, with emphasis on extempore prayer, believer's baptism, and the Lord's supper. |
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Every Thursday, the school organises competitions in areas such as recitation, extempore speech, quiz, map pointing, declamation and prepared talk. |
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The original kayak, though, was an amazing piece of extempore engineering. |
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The students were later given extempore topics for presentation. |
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Even a mature fruit falling extempore of the tree is still bitter and acrid. |
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Both have appeals that transcend party loyalty, and both are brilliant extempore speakers who, at their best, hardly sound like politicians at all. |
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Vithabai with her quick repartee and imaginative extempore dialogues and a vibrating singing voice brought about many changes in the Tamasha performance repertoire. |
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O villain, thou stolest a cup of sack eighteen years ago, and wert taken with the manner, and ever since thou hast blush'd extempore. |
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John Bright's first extempore speech was at a temperance meeting. |
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