Their faces registered curiosity and a tinge of alarm as guards leaped to bar the massive doors at the main entrance. |
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Through highs and lows, he faces the camera and explains what's going on and how he's feeling. |
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She could see them now, humans dressed in white with their faces covered by strange masks. |
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I wanted to watch their faces fall, watch their vacation end as abruptly as mine did. |
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Lots of people dancing raunchily until their sweat showed on their teeshirts, faces dripping. |
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Their faces would fall and I would feel terrible for them in their disappointment. |
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Only men can become Kathakali dancers and their make-up is striking with the use of bold colors to paint the faces and expressions. |
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They seemed to be no better off than their subjects, with hair and teeth falling out and sores like burns on bare faces and hands. |
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Hearing of that strange adventure the children's eager faces glowed with delight and excitement. |
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Their young faces glowed with anticipation, their eyes sparkled in the firelight. |
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Afterwards, a hearty lunch was devoured by the group of children, whose happy faces glowed with joy. |
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Many a low-lying island in the Pacific and Indian Oceans faces the very real threat of slipping beneath the sea. |
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A urine sample contained traces of the drug and Norton faces a six months ban at a disciplinary hearing. |
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The international movement against capitalist globalisation faces two important tests. |
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The news of widespread rain in the region may bring some cheer to the grim faces of farmers. |
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Now widowed in her early 50s, she faces the future with some anxiety, despite the growing success of her work. |
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Beneath the widow's peak of dyed blond hair, his face, as faces do, is beginning to pucker and billow. |
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Dozens of agonized male faces are packed together like grapes in a wine press, veins bulging from their temples. |
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Cunning eyes, wily grins, pesky faces had beamed tenacity and aptness and survival. |
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A gale howls over the hunchback of Cairngorm, stinging our faces with windblown sleet. |
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And makeup artists are already experimenting with airbrushes, misting their clients' faces with thin glazes that don't look too pancakey. |
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Ridgetop winds were blowing from the north scouring north faces or giving them a slight windslab. |
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The faces are made of silk or kid leather, molded and enhanced with embroidered or painted details. |
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Then later I was kidnapped by a gang of four blokes whose faces I can still distinctly remember. |
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For example, each barrier island has a shoreline that faces the sea and receives the full force of waves, tides, and currents. |
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And in some situations reclaimed land is already degraded and faces long-standing feral animal or weed infestation problems and future risks. |
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The sadness on the faces of those in the midst of the devastation told it's own tale. |
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The hair might be a bit thinner and greyer, but many of the faces in the historic village brass band are still recognisable. |
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The Albertan now faces the challenge of following up perhaps his best performance of the competition. |
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He faces a total of 66 counts on three indictments for genocide and war crimes in Bosnia, and crimes against humanity in Croatia and Kosovo. |
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One student has filed charges against Houston, who faces one count of terrorizing and a count of battery. |
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A teenager who cut a former friend's arm to the bone with an axe during a street fight was warned he faces being locked up. |
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A seasonal wistfulness follows as I remember the faces and places of the Christmases of the past. |
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Smiles can be seen on the weather-beaten faces of those who have been able to pocket this year's pay. |
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The French media kept the weathered faces of the disgruntled farmers in the press for months. |
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It faces imminent extinction resulting from disturbances to its sagebrush habitat, disease, predation, and loss of genetic diversity. |
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Both are black, a racial group that faces death sentences in disproportionate numbers, he says. |
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Many of these important historic racing cars are driven by famous faces from motor sport past and present. |
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One can disdain the cult of personality, but one cannot dismiss the look of radiant delight on her friends' faces as they cluster around her. |
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Besides, familiar faces from the silver screen and even the small screen, there will be a lot of glitterati at these burger joints. |
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There were many happy faces there from home, all delighted to welcome the touring party. |
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He now faces a new challenge of explaining his vision to the country and to the world in his second inaugural address. |
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Sharon always faces the latest crisis head on, picks herself up, dusts herself off, beams that adorable smile and goes on. |
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This was an opportunity to put names to the faces of those involved, American and Beninese. |
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At each vertex we consider the angles formed on the adjacent faces at that corner. |
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A shadow seemed to cross both of the brother's faces as Damien sat down next to Morgan. |
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Their faces were pale, but one did not know if they had eyes or ears, for they wore a hood that shadowed their faces. |
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Now he faces prison again after admitting fresh offences, including a bungled attempt to steal two laptops from the Great Western Hospital. |
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The kitchen faces part of the restaurant and I was encouraged to see that they had installed a wood-fired oven for baking pizzas. |
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Although it faces north, its length ensures it catches a good deal of the midday sun. |
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The individual faces are then ground and polished on a lap using diamond powder as an abrasive. |
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David Morse, as an American engineer, faces horrific conditions after being kidnapped by Colombian renegades. |
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There's a large outside balcony area which faces South over the city centre rooftops. |
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He faces massive revolts in his own party and in the nation at large over a whole range of issues. |
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This country has to stay young, and will draw its youth and vigour from the new faces that are bound to come to power. |
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Their faces are covered with feathered masks similar to North American Indian headdresses. |
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A maid and a butler hold umbrellas over a couple dancing on a windswept beach in their evening wear, their faces obscured. |
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No, don't worry, I'm not about to argue that it's those with looks of glee on their faces and amorous suitors latched onto each arm. |
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My friends' faces and arms tanned a beautiful bronze while my arms withered, blistered, burned and peeled. |
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Both of their faces had a soft sheen of sweat and Thom loosened his collar a little. |
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Rosanna's dyslexia means she faces daily problems with her schoolwork, most notably her reading. |
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So 700 curious faces stared me down from head to toe as I walked up to the podium. |
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Many people's faces in the audience were red and sweaty because of the heat. |
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This refurbishment includes replacement, pointing and refurbishment of stonework on the four faces and the north and south transepts. |
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As she wanders through the village, we see the incredibly evocative faces of her fellow Gypsy brethren. |
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It was difficult to make them out though as their faces seemed to shine so brightly. |
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We also see the joy, fascination and wonderment on the faces of children as they read, talk with or entertain one of the characters. |
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The mountains are massive red sandstone lumps, their vertical faces rising to table-tops or dropping sheer into canyons. |
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Most players are hitting long irons and fairway woods for the second shot to a green complex that faces north and has plenty of shade. |
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We need three, four or five new faces and I'm confident Harry will get those in during the transfer window. |
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Back out on the hill, they were ecstatic, their faces transfigured by huge, permanent smiles. |
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Young faces peer from behind field-hockey rackets, plastic bins, unusual fly swatters, car cup holders and tool caddies. |
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The faces probably represent the Yoruba god Eshu, who mediates the human and spirit worlds and plays a prominent role in the divination process. |
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Perhaps some of the faces will be familiar to our readers or maybe someone even knows the date or the year when the picture was taken. |
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He had tooled up for one level of demand and now faces an entirely different and, more importantly, elastic demand. |
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To be a man you have to be a businessman who faces the world by himself and who has to fight the whole world by himself. |
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You should have seen the lads' faces when I emerged waving the foil wrapper from a pork pie. |
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Ekeleke masqueraders dance gracefully on short stilts, wear George-cloth wrappers, and cover their faces with a piece of lace. |
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The tower will be scaffolded throughout and the clock faces will be removed for refurbishment, re-glazing and re-gilding at the end of August. |
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The sanctuary now faces the task of stabling and feeding all the ponies, horses and donkeys over the winter. |
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Shock and disbelief were writ large on the faces as irate depositors thronged the bank's Sector 8 branch to know the status of their deposits. |
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In this village, distress and despair are writ large on the faces of nearly 100 widows and their 350 orphan children. |
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A footballer faces jail after butting another player during a match, a court heard. |
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A huge media pack fired questions as the three, visibly upset, rushed past with their faces covered. |
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There were men, all with their faces covered, tidying the shards of glass from the hall. |
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In the audience it was both a mad mayhem of frenetic bouncing and a sea of staring faces intrigued and in awe. |
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Hours after the blaze was brought under control, dozens of bodies were laid out in a nearby parking lot, their faces covered by T-shirts. |
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What motivates him is the smile on the faces of patients and their relatives when blood is made available in time. |
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Today, albeit poor in reception quality, I got to catch familiar faces reading news. |
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Everyone respects a person who faces harsh realities and is prepared to make sacrifices. |
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I know that you've seen his plastic smile on a thousand eager faces before. |
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A law-abiding citizen who gets caught on a traffic camera faces a stiffer penalty! |
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Calvin Klein models' faces are redrawn as skulls with requisitely and impossibly high cheekbones. |
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Joyce moved her chair so that she could see the anchormen's familiar faces and hear their dispassionate voices. |
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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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The lines represent the free energy of the interfacial water between the faces of adjacent quarterspheres. |
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He will be sentenced this week and faces a maximum sentence of life imprisonment. |
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The answer to the question of whether or not miracles occur is bifold in nature, analogous to a coin with two faces on it. |
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He faces the significant challenge of having to battle for the puck along the boards against 220-pound defensemen. |
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Humanity faces a global crisis in the governance of knowledge, technology and culture. |
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They had dark scarves across their faces and wore dark sweatshirts with the hoods up. |
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Some of the protesters concealed their identity from security force cameras by covering their faces with scarves or hoods. |
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Many wore their faithful maroon scarves while some were draped in Jambo flags and others had their faces painted. |
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Their faces are hidden, they are wearing tall hats and are manacled and humiliated. |
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He faces down a bear with bow-and-arrow, scatters wolves with a slingshot, and shoots rabbits for dinner. |
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Either way, he faces months of rehabilitation, fittings for prosthetics and an uncertain future. |
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Of course the filmmaker, like the workers, has grown up under Stalinism and faces great ideological and intellectual obstacles. |
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One such indicator is the degree of deviation from bilateral symmetry of faces and bodies. |
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The look on their faces told its own story as they tried to take in the dreadful news of the tragedy that had befallen this community. |
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Red faces tonight for one Minister and her staff who sent some fanmail to the breakfast show shock jock, but sent it to the wrong radio station. |
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The mark of their Faith is on their faces from the traces of prostration during prayers. |
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The company still faces a dozen cases that could cost it billions more to resolve. |
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If the match is still level, a penalty shoot-out will decide who faces Sweden or Holland in the semi-final. |
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The way he evoked in stone such tenderness in the faces of Mary and Jesus is incredible. |
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A pre-school, which has been open for nearly 40 years, faces a desperate fight for survival after its building was badly damaged by flooding. |
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Their faces and garments are collaged from scraps scissored from magazines. |
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The disciples have gnarled hands, rough faces with the grime and sweat of an arduous day at their fishing nets. |
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Today the world faces the many-sided challenge that a rapidly aging population presents. |
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Their faces are completely scored by vertical eraser marks leaving only a bare trace of their features. |
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I had missed seeing the familiar faces and how everyone called each other neighbor. |
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Just months after its triumphal takeover of the Turkish parliament with an absolute majority the AKP faces crisis. |
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He faces a possible court martial and time in military prison for his action. |
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Today, every human being battles against the odds and faces the war of competition. |
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Fijian dancers wear skirts of shredded leaves and paint their faces for war dances. |
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I could see real terror on their faces and thought it might be a terrorist attack. |
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One goal should be to make a university, or indeed a tertiary education sector, one in which nobody faces any financial barriers to enrolment. |
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If convicted, he faces up to seven years in a military prison, demotion and a dishonourable discharge. |
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The faces in the end zone are a jumble as the noise envelops him with each jarring stride. |
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Their faces were smeared in grease paint and watch caps covered their hair. |
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All I can see when I walk about town is all the accusing faces and all the people who would like to see us dead. |
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We like to cuddle up in an accustomed environment, we tend to gravitate towards faces we can identify ourselves with. |
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She now faces the prospect of having to wean her young boy off a powerful drug, not knowing how he will react. |
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Others, weaponless, filed in through the open door, their faces masks of shock. |
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Children under 10 may be encouraged to paint faces rather than carving them, using poster paints or acrylic paints. |
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But since I was sitting right in front of it, with my back to it, I felt a mite self-conscious with all these faces turned in my direction. |
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His young administration faces fierce and conflicting political pressures on how he handles the stand-off. |
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Whereas the British want to see children's faces light up with joy, those foreign johnnies prefer to scare the living daylights out of them. |
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You would have to experience the joy on their faces when they see that we really care for them. |
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Everyone knew her time was come, but they tried to keep calm faces for her sake. |
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Yesterday he had seen, for the first time, the angry and distressed faces of the people he was meant to rule. |
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Their faces are scarred from infections caused by sandfly bites, and they are dressed in filthy rags. |
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A 17-year-old German joyrider faces a legal plucking after provoking the death of 300 chickens by crashing a van, Reuters reports. |
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Tired faces turned, waiting for the thread of babble and meaningless words they would only pretend to hear. |
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During his latest round of meaningless words their faces had drifted closer. |
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Backed up against the old stone wall, the building adjoins the main house and faces south across a newly planted garden. |
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I met them in front of the tennis courts by the jumble of parked bicycles as we had decided only to find them all wearing grim faces and frowns. |
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They immediately jumped to their feet, their faces flushed with guilt, just as Mr. Christensen walked in. |
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The game delivers an exhilarating thrill ride down huge wave faces and into barreling tubes, allowing gamers to pull off unbelievable moves. |
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The challenges he faces in writing a new-age bestseller are thought provoking. |
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To see the joy on so many young faces when presented with medals and awards was reward enough. |
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Pearce's view is aided by a hope fresh faces could soon be coming to Eastlands. |
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They faced each other, the flickering light casting eerie shadows and throwing their faces into sharp relief. |
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My eyes range over the familiar faces and I receive nods and smiles from every direction. |
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A fresh northerly breeze and a wheen of fresh faces took to the well-grassed sward of Old Anniesland. |
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The boys gathered around me, and the labourers removed their keffiyehs from their faces to talk. |
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Contrary to popular belief, the bird's nests are not found in the faces of cliffs but in caves. |
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The claim immediately thrust the spotlight on to Hoon, whose department faces fierce criticism over its treatment of Kelly. |
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The series shows a variety of female faces collaged together and is hallucinogenic in its visual allure. |
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The stranglehold that the airline enjoys on the Kangaroo route between Australia and London faces a new challenge tonight. |
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He frequently focuses on faces and uses the play of light and shadow to potent effect. |
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Germans don whiteface for Carnival, while urban African blacks paint their faces white in rites of passage. |
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Tomorrow's slightly shorter distance is her favour as she faces the starter with Jamie Spencer on board. |
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All I saw were more people, their faces filled with hate, their voices rising to a furious thunder. |
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On any Friday night you might well trip over any number of familiar faces on the razzle. |
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Barton faces a severe test, with the likes of Seebald and Fondmort among the opposition for an event which could well be the race of the meeting. |
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Virginia looked around at all of the faces staring back at her, some thunderstruck, others glowering. |
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The world yet again faces another mind-boggling issue which threatens the existence of human beings on planet earth. |
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Generally Brill focuses his rock-steady handheld camera on the faces of the doctors, nurses and Gillies himself. |
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You can always take a 'selfie' with the wall of famous faces who have stayed at the hotel. |
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Patients may quickly lose their ability to read or to see the faces of their grandchildren. |
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Robert faces a year in the can for drug money laundering despite claiming that he never realized his cousin was a drug-dealer. |
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His use of a wide-angle lens facilitated deep focus for faces and musculature, allowing him to render iconic, nearly sculptural images of beauty. |
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He'd make humorous, taunting faces or just out-do her hits with an unserious blow or a tickle. |
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What I know is that their heartbeats and breathing synchronized, their faces took on the exact same dazed and painful expression. |
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There were lots of appealing, smiling faces on view and the children's plain happiness was a delight. |
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They sat in the shade, their weather beaten faces screwed up against the harsh light. |
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That's a social get-together where bloggers and readers put faces to the names and pseudonyms they've been encountering online for months. |
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Today we had the conditions for which Manilla is known, with every pilot getting some airtime and plenty of happy faces tonight. |
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Nonetheless, curious reports of canals, faces and sculptures have helped to foster a belief in Martians for many years. |
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The learned professor is not the first to point out that modern masculinity faces challenging times. |
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Witnesses described seeing the prisoners handed to US agents whose faces were masked by hoods. |
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A few masked homogeneous faces around her made it clear that it was no dream. |
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Ignoring Sam's constant triumphant smirks, Nick searched our faces for an answer. |
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A team's No.1 pitcher is supposed to be its stopper, and its ace often faces the opponent's top pitcher. |
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Round faces would benefit from side slimming tendrils that hug the face. |
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Vases of every shape and design, minimalist masks that look like faces and vice-versa, and numerous experiments with geometry confront the visitor. |
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Edward DeHaan and his colleagues describe covert recognition in prosopagnosia, another category-specific agnosia in which faces cannot be visually recognized. |
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He was talking about places that give a neighborhood its stability and coherence, where we can see familiar faces and decompress. |
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But the handicapped person faces extra medical and transportation costs. |
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Last year, men on motorcycles used water pistols to squirt acid in the faces of girls going to school. |
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Others show a pair of young men, their faces weirdly painted, toying with liquid-filled beakers and sitting down to a repast of blue-painted goose. |
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Their faces were masked by the thick helmets that enveloped their heads. |
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The government also faces difficulty in financing the conservation of cultural sites and keeping their contents safe from theft and smuggling, he said. |
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Elsewhere, it's a case of familiar faces with the same blend of seasoned professionals and callow youths expected to form the backbone of the side. |
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Contestants, huddled on the couches of a communal room, clutched their faces in shock and some broke into sobs. |
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The faces of most cast figures are in repose, and when the artist attempts to animate them, they most often end up resembling masks or caricatures. |
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A shocked look spread out on the faces of the occupants of the table. |
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For example, they slash the faces of female bar owners who refuse to pay protection money. |
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The roof of the former four-storey spinning mill, which faces the railway line, is being stripped and re-covered in Welsh slate to stop it leaking in bad weather. |
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Products bearing his iconic image have graced the lips, hair, and faces of millions of men and women across the world. |
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The government is laying out the battle lines for additional austerity measures even as it faces pressure to reboot the country's faltering economy. |
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The figures of the guitarists are immobile, and so inscrutable are their veiled faces that almost the only stage movement is their hands flickering across the fretboards. |
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But in France silver statuettes are documented as having at least faces and hands painted, as distinct from being enamelled, from the early fourteenth century onwards. |
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The treatment of the face in this 1975 portfolio of ten screen-printed portraits of African Americans contrasts sharply with the celebrity faces discussed above. |
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Two big men with faces flushed from drink look over, miming cricketing actions that would not get them selected for a half-decent junior school team. |
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Tenants, trade unionists and MPs took part in a lobby of Tower Hamlets council, east London this week in support of a council press officer who faces the sack. |
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A Health board faces the threat of prosecution and a hefty fine following the discovery of several sackfuls of waste in a field near one of its clinics. |
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In the case of the CPA press conference you could see the disappointment on their faces and in their mien even if they asked a reasonable question. |
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The red faces say it all, they're exhausted but glad to have made it. |
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Fortunately for Jonny and myself the dark looks faded off Nicky and Val's faces and they allowed Josh to release them and move onto Jonny without making a scene. |
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Thankfully I saw a couple of familiar faces the moment I entered the function room, was welcomed into the fold and was given a rapid-fire overview of everyone present. |
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Specters sometimes drifted throughout the area, watching him with disconcertingly blank faces of incorporeal ectoplasm and dematerializing seconds later. |
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Coded onto female faces and bodies were the Frenchness of fashionability, the Englishness of hygiene, and the sensuousness of Orientals and Mediterraneans. |
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But he still faces a civil suit brought by Times Square Sofitel chambermaid Nafissatou Diallo in the Bronx. |
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As always the flow of patients was relentless, but as the day wore on I became familiar with some of the friendly faces of the patients on the unit. |
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When a nation faces deadly attacks on its citizens at home and abroad, it is only reasonable to expect that its leaders will take appropriate measures to increase security. |
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Its streamlined modernist line in sheer cliff faces and sleek curvilinear walls was celebrated by leading architects of the day and was a perfect ingredient in Art Deco style. |
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The guys were clearly loving playing in Wellington, their old stamping ground, and there were plenty of familiar faces from the scene a few years back. |
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The clean soldiers are too polite to tell you how you smell to them, but their faces reveal the immodesty of it. |
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A regular octahedron has faces that are all equilateral triangles. |
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The decision to send the jets, famous for their vertical take-offs and landings, comes as Afghanistan faces a tense period in the run-up to elections. |
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Rugby is cool, ditto the Eton wall game, because it's always fun to see some toffy nosed adolescents firmly press each others faces against a brick wall. |
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Although Kelly was unwilling to name players who might come into the reckoning, it seems certain that there will be new faces and some surprises when the invitations go out. |
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He is frequently represented in dual, bicephalous form, in constant activity in the four corners of the world, on the six faces of the cube of the universe. |
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It tries to produce stereotypes, to define faces and to arrange them hierarchically in space, based on the ontological and utilitarian criteria of representation. |
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The weight still shifts to the heel for increased power during the lunge so in the moment of the lunge, the rear foot faces straight across the strip. |
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He now faces returning to Greece in November for the appeal hearing and his haulage business is threatened with bankruptcy, with his lorry impounded by the Greek authorities. |
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Doctors are putting smiles back on the faces of seriously injured and deformed children with the help of a revolutionary new implant to help rebuild their looks. |
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Due to its close proximity to Thailand, some of these traditions are Thai in influence and origin, and faces of Kehah's people often bear signs of Thai or Achinese ancestry. |
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At the same time, it highlights the challenge he faces as a candidate trying to run on reasonableness in a party of zealots. |
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But Fellowes faces the challenge with the rigor and calm that would make a grantham proud. |
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He comes in and faces Stan, who has a sawed-off shot gun in his hand. |
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He faces a tough few months, with rebellions likely on the European constitution as well as the terror laws before the crunch local elections in May. |
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Without an advanced degree, he faces an uphill fight to get the job. |
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When I reached the desk, I got blank faces and flat refusals. |
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Can he follow through, not bow to pressure and continue chiding the people into conservation and taking necessary measures as the country faces it worst water shortage ever? |
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These men with weather beaten faces and broad shoulders went about their business quietly, their shirtsleeves rolled up over their muscular forearms. |
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But I could no longer read, drive, recognise faces or distinguish colours. |
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They speak slowly and soberly, the pain evident in their voices, their faces etched with despair. |
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Getting computers to recognise faces is notoriously difficult. |
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All one need do is hold a specimen of this material under a light to see countless reflections coming off of tiny crystal faces over the entire quartz surface. |
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Dried flowers wreathed around a small silver-hilted dagger carved into the shape of a dragon, and several tarot cards showed their faces next to it. |
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But he now also faces the task of rallying support from his own party, which is divided over the rescue and has long viewed him with a degree of wariness. |
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She faces a jury of famous villains and a judge from the Salem witch trials. |
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The director cuts from Bates to the faces of each of the interrogators. |
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Surprise and disbelief was writ on the faces of many of the members, as they could hardly believe that they had made so much money within a month. |
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After the public reading of expansive excerpts of her work the previous evening, one noticed that a huge discomfort was writ large on the faces of the accompanying family. |
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The pain and disappointment of the defeat was writ large across the faces of the Great Britain players as they trudged from the field, but coach Brian Noble remained stoical. |
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He rappels down near-vertical rock faces hundreds of feet above the Pacific, scales tall palms, and slogs through lush vegetation into deep valleys. |
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The party faces further losses at the polls tomorrow when the counts begin for the local government elections, which were held on the same day as the general election. |
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You can see this brush of the infinite on the faces of anyone's who's mourning, even on the face of one who considers himself an agnostic, or an atheist. |
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Nowadays the angle is taken as that between the normals to the faces and is measured roughly by a contact goniometer or more accurately by an optical goniometer. |
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But as Bill praised the service at a ceremony outside The Lowry centre, Katie, who was waiting for her turn to speak, pulled faces and smiled bashfully at the audience. |
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At the ceremony, a Russian member of the association presented him with a collection of traditional Russian dolls bearing the faces of previous ROC presidents and himself. |
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The week before, I'd fantasized about being this close to Hot Nerdy, our shoulders touching, our faces inches apart, his sweat dotting the collar of his button-down. |
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The weather-beaten faces staring out from old photographs are no longer around to tell of the hardships of life in a remote mining community 100 years ago. |
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Miri and the girls had to cover their faces to shelter from the heat. |
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I saw movies of the Great War in the air and was fascinated by those helmeted and goggled men, their faces stained with oil and burned gun powder. |
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Look a little closer at the well-groomed kids with innocent, idyllic faces in school blazers or the teens that look identical to their parents except for their age. |
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Some in the entourage had covered their faces with flags or hoods, some wore uniforms, and some had strapped webbed belts with green cartridge cases over their jeans. |
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Some of the deportees, including a girl aged about nine, hid their faces from the cameras as they climbed the stairs to board the BAe 146-200 jet. |
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For proof of that, check out the epic faces pulled by bassist and guitarist Este Haim on this brilliant Tumblr. |
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It also begets a plastic surgery chic, where people trade faces like they do cars. |
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After it was settled, the fighters at the shrine removed the bandanas that had masked their faces and slipped away into the city's maze of alleyways. |
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But Jean still faces an anxious wait until she can see her son again as Ashley has decided to continue his travels and visit Cambodia before returning home in February. |
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The disembodied faces which we see through the darkness are recognisably human, but also immobile, as if physically caught in a state of Beckettian stasis. |
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Blanc, though, faces a baptism of fire against Duncan Ferguson and Ferguson has warned the ex-French international what to expect from the towering Everton striker. |
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He beautifully captures the Lord of the Flies cruelty of insecure adolescents grasping for their place on the ladder, mashing the faces of those below them under heel. |
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If nominated, Curtis faces some major obstacles to being elected in the Republican-leaning state. |
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Humans find symmetrical faces more attractive than asymmetrical faces. |
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But there it was again in the faces of the cameleers and the spectators. |
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The faces below him were a mixture of men, elves, fair folk, and dwarves. |
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The audience was full of blocky types with the kind of faces we had feared in our counter-cultural youth. |
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Still, Horowitz faces stiff competition when it comes to becoming a man in the grandest fashion. |
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You could see the disappointment registering on the faces of the morbid crowd when they realised we had not grown horns on our foreheads or cloven feet. |
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Even with all her comforts and a constant, tugging ennui, Mei knows the risks that she faces as an ernai. |
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After the 1992 summer games in Barcelona, scientists at Cornell University studied the faces of Olympians who had just won medals. |
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The faces attached to this debate are Denver quarterback Peyton Manning and Seattle cornerback Richard Sherman. |
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Two years ago Facebook stopped limiting its emoticons to smiley faces and whatever those new blobs and cat memes are. |
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The Dumfriesshire hounds' kennelman, John Carruthers, said he now faces an uncertain future with his wife Isobel, 45, and their 10-year-old son Andrew. |
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Whether it was the forbidden joy of being allowed to paint on a wall, or the exhilaration of letting their inhibitions go, their faces glowed with excitement. |
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The astonished faces of the recipients soon turn to happy smiles. |
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Vendors with swollen pink faces were selling shawarma on every street. |
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Their faces were waxy, white and drawn, their eyes open and blank. |
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Survivors were rushed to the nearby hospital, while more than a dozen bodies were laid out in the hospital garden with their faces covered by cardboard. |
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They all share versatility, as the faces of high-fashion campaigns, magazine covers, and mass-market advertising campaigns. |
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The sun is now cresting to the east and alpenglow illuminates the faces of my fellow warriors. |
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The result is that dingle now faces a 23-count federal indictment. |
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The Non-Standard Aviation Division faces every demanding challenge head-on with courage of conviction and a high sense of professional pride. |
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But he had to stride ahead, turning faces with his red and white keffiyah, repeatedly comparing his watch and the clock on the wall. |
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In Arizona, pro-life Senator John McCain faces a likely challenge by pro-abortion Rep. |
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The bad news is that cotton still faces a serious threat from the western tarnished plant bug, Lygus hesperus. |
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The British number two now faces baseliner Andreas Seppi for a place in the last four today. |
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They had barely changed, but their eyes were open and unblinking, and their faces had the empty, reflexless look of psychic zero. |
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It was the first capital of Greece, before Athens, and faces the Argolic Gulf. |
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There were a few famous faces out to see the show's first night, including Alicia Keys and her husband Swizz Beats. |
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Not one exhibits plane faces or straight edges, being mostly distorted triakis-octahedra or tetrakis-hexahedra with finely striated curved faces. |
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Alejandro Avila, 27, faces charges of abducting, sexually assaulting and strangling Samantha Runnion in Orange County, California. |
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They were the faces of the same gentlemen who plied the corruptibles in Rumania with cash and impressed the impressionables with Germany's power. |
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He refused, given that he faces arrest on US soil for plotting to blow up a passenger jet with a shoe bomb in collusion with Reid. |
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