Both of the Evening Canticles are in his own idiomatic style, and hark back, in different ways, to ancient, time-hallowed chant. |
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Vespasian's images hark back to harsh styles of veristic portraiture of the late Republic. |
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These diasporic texts consistently hark back to colonialism and neocolonialism. |
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But, while it's fashionable to hark back to the past, Armfield believes that many aspects of the game are better than ever before. |
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In many ways it seems to hark back to a bygone age, with its wine, cigars and unashamed donnishness. |
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But nowadays, though the old men and women remember, the younger generations no longer hark back to that bitter past. |
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You can say that I hark back to the past and you would be right, because I am, but I do so for a reason. |
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His free-form fossil pieces hark back to pre-historic times, and only the odd Chinese character gives away their origin. |
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Peyroux's nomadic life and folksy, natural style of singing also hark back to a simpler era, when a teenager could run away from home and join a band of street musicians. |
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Her soft lustrous vocals hark back to days of the melancholic lounge singer, emoting to an absorbed audience through an opaque smoky veil. |
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Finally, I should like to hark back to three major points raised in your report, Mrs Sudre. |
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And yet there is no call to reinvent the wheel or hark back to outdated rural utopias. |
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These differences in opinion hark back to traditional debates over the causes of poverty, over individual responsibility and social injustice. |
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Barns from yesteryear, roadside crosses, chapels, and half-buried root cellars hark back to the area's farming past. |
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Suddenly it seemed that Naziism was alive and well and living in Vienna, not least because Haider's anti-immigration and anti-EU rhetoric seemed to hark back to a darker past. |
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Why do you think you decided to hark back to your high school days for this particular record? |
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I want to see horror hark back to the old days of video nasties. |
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Consequently, we regret that the new Structural Fund regulations fail to define clearly the principles of partnership, and once again hark back to national rules and practices. |
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The musicals of the season hark back to the classics. |
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The trial and executions hark back to Stalin. |
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Although he draws from the French chanson and sentimental ballad, elements that hark back to the 1930s recordings of La Bolduc and her folk contemporaries are still easily identifiable. |
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They hark back to the 'variable geometry' concept. |
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From a historical standpoint, they hark back to a tradition of the Outaouais, shared by the Objibway and the Potawatomi, whereby these three groups formed a single tribe at one point. |
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Jonson's aesthetics hark back to the Middle Ages and his characters embody the theory of humours, which was based on contemporary medical theory. |
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We think these products hark back to Sony's glory days. |
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Others say that in order to have a fishing industry at all we need to conserve, they hark back to the 1996 article in Nature warning of the collapse of cod stocks. |
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We therefore ask the Commissioner, whose initiatives we greatly appreciate, to insist that the special commissioners in Campania do not hark back to the past, but once and for all look to the future. |
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To conclude these few reflections, I must hark back to the world-wide solidarity for which UNESCO has been pleading and the universality it fosters. |
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Firstly, let me hark back to the wording of our question. |
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If you're looking for a new perspective on how people live, and long to hark back to your childhood days, then this fun and informative read is well worth branching out for. |
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Nacho-fueled Super Bowl bashes and multicourse wedding banquets may hark back to a time when preagricultural people devoured wild animal meat at their comrades' gravesides. |
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The names of Belgium and the Aquitaine hark back to Gallia Belgica and Gallia Aquitania, respectively, in turn named for the Belgae and the Aquitani. |
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