When he looked up, he saw Kerna mocking him, imitating a woman drinking tea on the same log before the thicket. |
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She looked back at him, not able to resist imitating his expression mockingly. |
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We acknowledge the glamour and modernity of eating and drinking in American cities by slavishly imitating them in ours. |
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Several bluestones in the central oval were removed so that the remaining eleven formed a horseshoe imitating the trilithon setting. |
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Sophia stared down at the sketch pad, and made a mark with the charcoal stick on the paper, imitating the shadows beneath the tree. |
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Remember, there is no shame in imitating, provided you don't infringe patent laws. |
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Kurosawa plays the role of both Shingen and the body double, imitating himself in order to re-claim what he had lost. |
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I'm not bad at doing generic Scouse, Geordie, Brummie, Mummerset etcetera but not so good at imitating specific people's voices. |
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They are imitating the complex dance steps and hand jives that the group perform in their videos. |
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Despite this unconventional presentation, the opera, by intention, generally avoids imitating Fluxus-style happenings. |
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So I gave it a burl, and ever since I've not been able to watch an episode without imitating Moran's manic nature for the following two days. |
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Are the arts condemned, in short, whatever fertility one attributes to their techniques, to the eternal monotony of imitating the first models? |
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She said it, imitating a small crack in her voice, as she had heard Tyron's voice do all too often now. |
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This went as far as imitating every detail of wood, down to the joints and fastenings, in rock. |
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What a sight he made when he fashioned his coat-tails into a kind of pouch and hopped about the room imitating a kangaroo. |
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When Jen talks to the Mail Girl, she can't resist imitating her British accent. |
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Since her very early childhood, she has been addicted to elocution, imitating the voices and expressions of other people. |
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Timmy then promptly began imitating a blonde model, screaming and fluttering his eyelashes. |
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In other words, art is simply imitating life and by analyzing pop culture we get a bearing on society. |
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They are submerged in American culture, singing American pop songs and imitating cultural behaviors. |
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Through his popularity, an entire subculture has grown up imitating Al and even parodying him. |
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In a case of life imitating art, the couple attracted the attention of the real paparazzi, along with hordes of fans. |
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The guy was effectively putting his shirt on a horse, and it was the first and only time I have encountered life imitating a figure of speech. |
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The factory also made porcelain jugs imitating the Wedgwood jasperware, as did other factories in Staffordshire. |
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Almost as if imitating me, a large rumble of thunder echoed throughout the sky and large drops of rain began to fall, hard. |
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Oddly, there's a sense that some current contenders are simply slavishly imitating their post-punk forebears. |
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All those who used to make a living by imitating superstars have become film stars in their own right. |
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So a movie fictionalizing a school shooting committed by kids emulating a movie is art imitating life which imitated art. |
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We started imitating rather than innovating and wound up making faux American also-rans. |
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We developed a multilink bending mechanism imitating anguilliform propulsion of organisms in water. |
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Both Apache Crown Dancers and Navajo Yeibichei dancers wear masks and sing partially in falsetto or in voices imitating the supernaturals. |
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That is why Antipater, imitating the precedent, appointed his son Cassander chiliarch in spite of his youth. |
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As they walked and sang, they moved the paddles up and down imitating the movement of a racing canoe and giving a magnificent display of colour. |
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He, and some other classmates, were imitating the way our form teacher pouts. |
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As for contagious yawning, they think it has something to do with humans subconsciously imitating one other. |
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But his style was so marked that he had a legitimate fear of imitating himself and so struck out in other directions. |
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Discovered in Missouri, Shooby's musical style is imitating a trumpet in a bizarre improvised scat over a variety of music. |
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The first one suggests that the backward economies can make rapid progress by imitating the leaders. |
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From what I hear, the tenor of book publishing seems to be turning up, imitating the stock market. |
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Subconsciously imitating this legend, at the ripe age of forty, I have found myself a tutor as well. |
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Under the cream coloured jacket was a black shirt, with the top three buttons undone, imitating the model on the web page. |
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At one point, he lured a red fox close to his shutter by imitating the high-pitched squeal of a cottontail rabbit in distress. |
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The slats are spaced irregularly, imitating the look of an aging, weathered barn that has begun to lose some boards. |
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The one thing we are incapable of learning by imitating our friends and peers and playmates is the life trajectory that has been prepared for us. |
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The Oriental theme is continued in the strapwork with hatching, imitating the border on blue-and-white Chinese export porcelain. |
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Brown played the song at a brisk pace, imitating the piano blues so common in the jukes and barrelhouses of the South. |
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No doubt because bang is perceived to be onomatopoeically imitating the sound that it designates, the word also functions as an ideophone. |
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The bithorax phenocopies show a transformation of metathoracic to mesothoracic segments, imitating the Ultrabithorax mutant phenotype. |
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Bertolucci seamlessly intercuts footage from the original and, in doing so, achieves a beautiful synthesis of life imitating art. |
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All art is but facsimile of nature and the art of imitating someone or something classically in order to entertain is mimicry. |
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In less than two years she had won 84 cups in nightclub contests for dancing the Charleston, or by imitating Bee Jackson, the shimmy expert. |
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All this time I was slavishly imitating a TV character and she thought I was a fashion trendsetter. |
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Suddenly, the whole Net vanishes, except for a few pinpricks of light, far, far away, imitating the stars on a cloudless, impossibly dark night. |
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Small songbirds often mob them, and imitating the call of a Northern Pygmy-Owl will often bring songbirds close in for observation. |
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Equally adept at all subject matter, Lycett decorated vases and plaques with medallions imitating cameos, polychrome figures derived from Pompeian frescoes, and genre scenes. |
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In 1998, firestone moved to Las Vegas to begin his career imitating Michael Jackson. |
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It was once true that nearly every commercial pilot spoke in a drawl, imitating the West Virginian accent of the most glamorous airman of all time. |
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Later, he was taught to turn English verse into alcaics and sapphics in Horatian style, as well as imitating Virgil, Ovid and the Greek tragedians. |
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But the worshippers and admirers of these gods delight in imitating their scandalous iniquities, and are nowise concerned that the republic be less depraved and licentious. |
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He was imitating life and he had these tremendous insights over a huge range. |
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And Putin, to his great delight, got to revel in imitating a Cold War giant. |
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When you have one anxious child, the siblings are likely to act out in some way, either by imitating the anxiety or getting angry. |
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If Proust can change your life, then will imitating the queen make you happy? |
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In addition to helping us power our cars, imitating sharks could lead to swifter ships and more advanced underwater sensors. |
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But Jonson also echoes Horace's warning against imitating servilely. |
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The two were just playing, he said, and he was imitating television wrestlers who trounce their opponents. |
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It had fed bodgies and sailors and long-haired louts imitating The Beatles, as well as those kissing couples who had met at the Be-Bops dance on Saturday night. |
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The style of the choir, imitating the polygonal structure of the chevets of medieval churches, was most likely chosen to blend in with the dynamic composition of the nave. |
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He had grown fairly adept at imitating Jimjim's clipped speech. |
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He spoke slowly and clearly in his Elneside dialect, instead of imitating the speech of the easterners as he often did now in order to be easily understood. |
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There is nothing wrong in imitating mannerisms found in every human being. |
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In his defence, he claimed that he was merely imitating the film's hero. |
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He further enhances the image with color choices that reflect his artistic interests rather than simply imitating the natural coloration of zebras. |
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Instead of his head falling away and legs imitating those of a drunk, he was poised and resolute, pulverising anything that came within his shot-radar. |
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Amazingly no one was killed, and the parish priest then led the children and adults of the village in a kind of exorcism, imitating the noises of the helicopters. |
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So women are never angrie, but to the end a man should againe be angrie with them, therein imitating the lawes of Love. |
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The video shows two men in a luge, imitating a thrusting movement to propel the luge to move forward. |
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The cubs learn by following and imitating their mother's actions during the period they are with her. |
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Bellerophon attempts to become a mythic hero by perfectly imitating the actuarial program for mythic heroes. |
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It is alliterative, extending to almost 1,000 lines imitating the Old English Beowulf metre in Modern English. |
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Looking back, Bergman realized that ze'd been imitating hir father's style of prayer. |
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Now, in an uncanny case of life imitating art, actress Michelle Collins has fallen for a toyboy 22 years younger than herself. |
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It seems that Ronan's chiseller Jack was imitating his dad's singing techniques when a female passenger began to complain. |
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Soon after chopping down the cross, Shevchenko took pictures in front of it, imitating Jesus' pose on crucifixes. |
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In addition, lustreware was created there, a new type of ceramic finish imitating gold and silver. |
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Proof has sparked a major debate about trafficking lap dancers and prostitutes into Irelan, with experts claiming that art is imitating life. |
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An aedicule is a small building, as a shrine, imitating the form of the larger building. |
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What fun shone in his eyes as he recalled some of her fine speeches, and repeated them, imitating her voluble delivery! |
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I should not want to forget the gourd, for this seems to me the clown of vinedom, imitating as it does in grotesque manner other fruits. |
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This is less common, as it requires a great deal of technical effort, such as imitating the ink and paper. |
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The Lantern Lobby features flowing oak columns forming a vaulted ceiling, imitating an arum lily. |
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At first they lived by a cemetery, where the mother found her son imitating the paid mourners in funeral processions. |
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Similar societies, partially imitating Freemasonry, emerged in France, Germany, Sweden and Russia. |
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Pupils read and reread classic works and wrote essays imitating their style. |
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White entertainers like Eddie Cantor cashed in on the blackenization of White America by imitating Black minstrels in blackface. |
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Similarly, many species of birds and whales learn their songs by imitating other members of their species. |
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The wolf in this story is portrayed as a potential rapist, capable of imitating human speech. |
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Initially, around 1664, the Saint Cloud manufactory set about imitating porcelain of the kind imported into Europe from the East in vast quantities. |
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Continuing interest in the book has resulted in a number of dramatic adaptations and an abundance of novels and stories imitating Austen's memorable characters or themes. |
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The one way for us to become great, perhaps inimitable,' asserted pioneering Hellenist Johann Joachim Winckelmann in 1755, 'is by imitating the ancients. |
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In the wake of this decision by the king, thieves take to imitating the King's actions and murder the people from whom they steal to avoid detection. |
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Charles was heavily influenced by the works of Louis XIV of France, imitating French design at his palace at Winchester and the Royal Hospital at Chelsea. |
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Some hunters are able to lure wolves by imitating their calls. |
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One of the root concepts of Western cultural production, mimesis traces its origins back to the ancient Greek term for art's imitating the natural world. |
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While a bee will fashion a perfectly geometrical hive instinctually an architect will have more trouble in perfecting and imitating the bee's geometrical form. |
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