One fondly imagines that one reaches opinions by personal ratiocination, but of course many of them one inherits. |
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The patient begins to identify with the child being beaten, imagines enjoying such treatment, and develops a masochistic fantasy. |
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Who really imagines it's possible to tell from one frame whether or a tape is genuine? |
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After he finishes something he imagines particularly clever, he ends up looking smug and haughty. |
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Instead he imagines that the web was suspended close alongside a hanging glob of sap. |
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He imagines the past not as something temporally distant, to be recalled, but as something spatially proximate, to be touched. |
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He has a quavering, affected English accent, which the actor perhaps imagines to be that of a cheeky cockney. |
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The blush only doubled after his speech, imagines coming unbidden to her mind. |
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One imagines an arty, cultured childhood, with a genius typing away furiously at the top of the house. |
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Although he imagines that many of them must have similar problems and anxieties as others in the world. |
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Anyone who imagines a perfect bureaucracy really is living in a world of fantasy. |
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She imagines his brown hair spiky and lopsided, like the last time she saw him. |
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He imagines a cross-cultural dialogue between representatives of different traditions. |
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One imagines Dumas's young men about town affecting the same dandified, Anglophile pose. |
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One imagines that the earth-bound protagonists of later novels would simply not care enough to make the intergalactic journey. |
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This is a serious subject, because a car is much more than the means of conveyance and cargo handling that he imagines it to be. |
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Whatever the eventual afterworld destination of the people involved, one imagines that they are keenly alive to their own survival. |
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He imagines himself channelling vast cosmic forces through his droning feedback guitar. |
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Second, Zeno imagines that by writing his memoirs he has been detachedly analysing, and thereby curing, himself. |
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He seems both attracted and repulsed by the exoticized version of her that he imagines. |
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Upon hearing Kurtz's notes over the phone, one imagines the rewrite guy pshawing the angle. |
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She thinks they must be restaurant reviews and this buoys her spirits since she imagines it must mean the food is good. |
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He's horribly self-involved, yet he probably imagines that he's trying to save the world. |
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I spend my life as a lawyer in the dreamworld that imagines that principles guide judicial decisions. |
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No one, I believe, seriously imagines that the proposals in their present form are either wise or necessary. |
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He imagines face paint that would change colour to match your emotions, or skyscrapers that move up and down. |
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The Grey Fox imagines a mythic past for the Pacific Northwest and British Columbia out of a brief moment in actual history. |
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More than figures of speech, I think, his metaphors suggest that Hammersley imagines shapes and colors as characters enmeshed in graphic dramas. |
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But if he imagines that the country will be any the better for his cynical sops to the class-warrior wing of his party, he is mistaken. |
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He imagines the conversations and reactions he would get from the hot-tempered, proud people when they are told of his mission in their city. |
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One imagines Pete Wiggs and Bob Stanley lounging around hotel bars in tailored suits, discussing real estate and drum programming. |
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Though she is coarse and stupid, she imagines she is cut out for a job in the movies. |
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If one imagines a square with four quadrants, the top left-hand quadrant is the case where there is a simple breach of confidentiality. |
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In this project, she imagines, she will be quietly supported by her new acquaintances. |
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Her eyes light up as she imagines some of the fertile opportunities that still lie fallow. |
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Then he jumps to his feet and starts to sing it how he imagines it, clicking his fingers and jutting his chin out. |
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Some have been so bad that one imagines the umpires must have taken him to be left-handed. |
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Exercise does not loom large, although one imagines someone so much married went in for a few physical jerks. |
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As he engages with the merciless classmates who rag him and pick at him every day, he imagines himself in computer graphics in the armour of the warrior. |
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Second, he imagines that the putter shaft is a giant pencil. |
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Polidori is spotted on a balcony at Byron's London pad by a bookish damsel called Eliza, who imagines the handsome loser is the handsome lord. |
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He imagines a route full of delays and difficulties, and is apprehensive that we might feel reluctant to undertake it again to come fetch him. |
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To take action, however, it would have to cross an uncrossable line, no matter what or how many reforms it imagines and implements. |
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In the event of an extreme weather event of some sort, one imagines that these facilities would follow an established evacuation plan. |
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No one imagines that this can be anything but a long and incremental process. |
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As he slowly recovers, he imagines scenes from his first novel, The Singing Detective, with himself as the lead character, a gumshoe who croons on the side. |
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The slow movement has effortless grace, so gentle in its seduction and courtly in guise that one imagines two dancing figures lovingly expressing endearments. |
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It is the story of a child who imagines himself as an adult and of an adult who fantasizes about his childhood. |
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If anybody imagines that our drug policies are working, then they are living in cloud-cuckoo-land. |
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Glenn, one imagines, would get on well with Garry Cook, the former Manchester City chief executive. |
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One imagines that the latest pope, a Jesuit, is familiar with the centuries of calumny that have been heaped upon his forebears. |
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Gazing at mementos of Wagner in a display case, he imagines a young black artist who will one day mesmerize the world with comparable genius. |
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Lawrence Alma-Tadema imagines apple-flushed Victorian women soaking in a Roman plunge bath. |
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One imagines him spending the Trump years climbing up walls and foaming at the mouth. |
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Typically when one imagines a migrant worker, a public sector worker does not spring to mind. |
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Rose imagines that he is probably seated in a luncheonette in a subway arcade, sugaring his second cup of coffee. |
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One imagines exactly this consideration for the needs of another as grounding his transformation. |
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The designer, passionate about contemporary art, painting and travel, imagines easy-to-wear, original pieces for accessories and ready-to-wear. |
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The one that recalls and the one that imagines, to know how to stay alive in the midst of disaster. |
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Instead, he imagines it invisibly improving the efficiency and effectiveness of existing devices. |
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These widespread notions were undeniably important, but they harboured, one imagines, their share of contradictions and matters left unsaid. |
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If the pilgrim imagines that he is purified or sanctified because he has touched, or seen, holy things, the pilgrimage will have failed. |
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Though one imagines that successful players must be mean, damaged and mendacious, he turned out to be a thoroughly charming and friendly bear of a man. |
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Here is a leader who is at nostalgic ease as he imagines himself addressing every hearth in the country, through a plain-speaking fireside chat. |
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Douglas's film imagines Davis going further, and incorporating the genre of Afrobeat into his oeuvre. |
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For a unit taught by sci-fi funsters Smout Allen, Barbur imagines an artificial mountainscape as the setting for a new river festival in Chicago. |
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She imagines them laying the poster board on the floor, uncapping markers, drawing the letters, coloring them in. |
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Mr Turner imagines fine filaments of spider silk being used as sutures in ophthalmological, vascular or neurological surgeries. |
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One imagines, therefore, that a cosmopolitan Chinese duck might not know what it is called, just as a bummalo might wonder why it is called a duck at all. |
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Behind the CHSLD windowpanes, on which his gaze is fixed, he imagines the scene. |
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Sven is also in love with her, she imagines. In the reality even know her because Maike is sitting in a wheel chair. |
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She imagines sensual, urban, glam'rock jewelry directly inspired by her taste for travel, art and especially painting. |
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She imagines a dramatic dance between a princess and a cavalier, who look very much like Aunt Josephine and Edouard. |
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She told us that she is often inspired to write about women she imagines after reading a story or article in one of our bulletins. |
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What kind of cultural implications this has, what kind of society this imagines, is a question to be asked urgently. |
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Limagrain imagines and distributes seeds adapted to the climates and soils of each market. |
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He writes out five descriptions of a situation as he imagines five quite different people would see it. |
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None of these strangers imagines that each night I go home to a woman, that I march in gay pride parades, that I fight their assumptions on a daily basis. |
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Perhaps he imagines that the flax is first bundled and then beaten, though that would go against the flailing process which is normally done on a threshing floor. |
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What level does she calculate the immigrant population must exceed before the racist problem kicks in for her, a white woman among what she imagines to be fellow Anglo-Saxons? |
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The hybrid alliance is something of a Frankenstein monster where every arm imagines itself the brain. |
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Given the casting of Gish, however, one imagines that Charlotte will be sticking around for a while longer. |
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In the lyric that follows, the speaker imagines himself as a being contented to be a guest and a stranger, committed to coexistence with other guests and strangers. |
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Here he imagines a New Yorker sardonically addressing his weekend hostess. |
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A new book from Mallory Ortberg imagines what literary legends including King Lear and Jane Eyre would have texted. |
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For a moment, Tiffany imagines her two friends doing something slightly wicked, like joy-riding around Syracuse. |
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Acclaimed British painter Annie Kevans imagines the inner child of celebrities, dictators, and presidents. |
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The scalloped verandas and cupolas which create the effect of the kind of castle a child imagines, were the innovations of jai. |
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Discrimination of meaning comes when one imagines that words rise depending upon whatever subjects they express, and which subjects are regarded as self-existent. |
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From that limited contact he imagines the totality of their life together, every touch, glimpse, insecurity, and kindness. |
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The part of me that writes and imagines is always one step removed in every situation, constantly watching and noticing. |
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One imagines that, given the harshness of retribution and the softness of positivistic welfare, that the latter would lead to a more lenient penality. |
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Mr Collins admits he doesn't know what volume of claims to expect but imagines it will be upwards of one hundred and that the claims will be for large sums of money. |
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The creator of 'Mean Mad Men' Tumblr imagines Betty and Don Draper as the plastics. |
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Then he imagines moments in each of those three lives of the building, reenacting them on video with actors in costume. |
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In a room, browning at dusk, one imagines clearly and under the glaze of sadness envisions trailing arbutus and bloodroot. |
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Eliot's experiences as an air raid warden in the Blitz power the poem, and he imagines meeting Dante during the German bombing. |
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She suggests that both men and women should be treated as rational beings and imagines a social order founded on reason. |
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But it's on the minds of everyone who casts a glance forward, tries to put this year's problems in perspective and imagines management approaches that will drive farming a decade from now. |
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In a tailor's window, a dummy dressed in a black tuxedo imagines he can goes through the uncrossable to declare his love to the neighbor across the street, a beautiful bookseller. |
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Le Ballon is a touching, entertaining animated clip that illustrates the ideas that might flit across the mind of a child as she sees her balloon fly away and imagines the fantastic journey ahead of it. |
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The worst-case scenario, one imagines, is mononucleosis, so why worry about it? |
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But whoever imagines, upon this account, that masters rarely combine, is as ignorant of the world as of the subject. |
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Jo Baker's 2013 novel Longbourn imagines the lives of the servants of Pride and Prejudice. |
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She then photographs the wispy structures – some pinky violet, some yellowy white, depending, one imagines, on the day's load – and enlarges them into large-scale prints. |
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Not the picture one imagines of a black family in Mississippi shortly after World War I. Sunnyland's grandfather became a huge force in his life: he idolized him. |
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A brief list of initialisms appears at the end of the book, although one imagines that most specialized readers would not need it. |
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The law imagines gayness to be innate and obvious. |
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The Island imagines a not-too-distant future in which a huge corporation has developed very advanced cloning technology. |
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The superficial observer is amused, even delighted: he imagines he has come across a group of cruel practical jokers, cynical or subtle irony, collections of pungent curiosities, merciless exposures of pretence. |
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Mr. Klein's rump faction will get some committee chairs and, one imagines, a lode of lulus, Albany speak for the legislative bonuses and handsome office suites. |
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Physically and metaphysically unaccommodated, Brik even imagines the Biblical Lazarus as a kind of unaccommodated man — the emblem of all immigrants. |
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The sort of groveling one imagines taking place is repulsive to consider. |
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She has no idea where they will go when they reach the other shore, but she imagines that it will be someplace inland, among the hills, someplace like the Ettrick. |
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For every work that images and imagines community as inclusive, there is another that addresses the affect of outsiderness. |
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Mr Chairman, it is sad when a Member of the European Parliament imagines that in a democracy one can say anything without having verified whether it is correct. |
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To fight against infectious diseases and cancers, it imagines and develops new approaches in the fields of diagnostics, immunotherapy, food safety and nutrition. |
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One imagines immediately the loneliness that must have gnawed at these immigrants whose memory of their sunny, convivial island communities was their only refuge at such moments. |
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One easily imagines an African Tiresias and a Greek Taanda-N-leengi. |
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W hether it is through drawing, painting, writing, illustration, or sculpture, she interminably imagines and creates her own world from within, tinged with allegory, which she whole-heartedly shares with the multitude. |
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Like a young girl who knows everything about desire without ever having made love, she imagines her death as a play, creating an infinite range of possible scenarios. |
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And the sci-fi film Surrogates, out last month, imagines a future in which people prefer to stay at home and control avatars of themselves in the outside world. |
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In a trilogy of rather brilliant short films, WaterAid imagines how different society would be if it were men who lost the endometrium of their wombs every month. |
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In the last act, when Tristan falsely imagines Isolde coming to him, his delusion is expressed by the violins' effervescence and its baselessness by the inactivity of the double basses, declining to participate. |
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She imagines what her life might be like if she were Masai. |
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He also imagines her dancing a sexually aggressive spotlit dance. |
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Most bravely perhaps, Maka, 45, imagines some comedic moments. |
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One imagines their pie, as yet unserved: sausage and fresh garlic. |
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Although un-quantified here, a transformative scenario imagines development and implementation of breakthrough technologies that transform services and behaviours in a way that dramatically reduces GHG emissions. |
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Limagrain imagines and distributes seeds that meet the present and future needs of farmers, market gardeners, distributors, agri-food industrialists and consumers. |
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Is it too early to get an opinion or could I already ask the Council whether it imagines that foreign soldiers might be responsible for some border protection duties? |
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If she imagines Rachel finding out what she's just done with Kieran, after everything they talked about all afternoon, she feels a sickish kind of unease. |
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She often imagines her own adventures and becomes a hero in the novels, such as when she wins the war in Swallows and Amazons or finds an underground spring in Pigeon Post. |
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What is reiterated and haunts the narrative is that Nissim was dressed in a white djellabah and a cotton turban when the narrator imagines having seen him last. |
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If one imagines a radical axis stretching from Tehran through Israel's 'enemies', Sunni Syria could be seen as the odd-man-out amongst the Shia Muslims. |
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Chaucer imagines Custance's language as existing at a time before clerics were relied upon as the authoritative translators and glossers of Latin Scripture in England. |
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Rather than showing the dying woman as the aestheticised, objectified other, their writing imagines and approaches death from the position of the subject. |
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