Worshipers are encouraged to be careful about diction, stay in tune, sing exact note values, and avoid forcing the sound. |
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It's too ridiculous that she didn't make it, spesh when the judges put through Jean who can't sing in tune! |
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Being in tune with nature is the easiest and only way of ensuring a life of contentment and happiness. |
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Though she loved the Divine Office and appreciated the Chant, she could not sing two notes in tune. |
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He sat the guitar in his lap and strummed softly, checking if it was still in tune. |
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We need a few theatre houses with a congenial atmosphere in tune with the local architecture of the land. |
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She's in tune with trends, but she's a confident individualist when it comes to style. |
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On the negative side, compound crossbows are more expensive, difficult to restring and keep in tune, physically heavier and noisier. |
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The ensign above him flapped restively in tune with the men under his inspection. |
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Arizona's other urban pillar, Tucson, seems more in tune with the desert, and uses local trees and plants to landscape gardens and parks. |
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He is more in tune with what the coaches want, and he's playing the ball much better. |
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Those in tune with local film gossip have been waiting for Hussain's vision to hit the big screen for a long time. |
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Maybe we were just a bunch of clueless tourists passing through and not at all in tune with the countries we went to. |
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I think this particular ecofeminist was saying that we should all be in tune with the sacred cycles of life. |
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I start eating my deep fried strips of beef in honey and chilly sauce in tune to elevator music. |
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The dignified movements of every limb of the actor are in tune with the tala. |
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Only bad guys need tools to manipulate our reality, because they are not in tune with the Tao. |
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When I was a young boy as a school musician, I learned that music was more than scales or keys or how to make sure I was always in tune. |
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Finally, when her instrument was in tune, she gave Darcy the signal, and he played the opening bars of the sonata. |
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That he can stay in tune and hit insinuating low notes isn't in doubt, but could he possibly sound any more detached? |
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In a society as dominated by consumerism as America, cash tills often ring in tune with the national mood. |
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One little girl reminded me that the guitar, too, is hard to use to really evil effect if it is at least in tune. |
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The grille design is certainly in tune with the aggressive trends of the moment, but not as in-your-face as some. |
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The best showrunners I know put out shows they'd like to watch and are in tune with the viewing audience. |
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Maybe a black and tan would have been more in tune with the holiday, but ah well. |
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To be fair, the irresponsibility of this government is perfectly in tune with the irresponsibility of governments everywhere. |
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Both groups sang very much in tune, but unlike, say, certain more modern groups, intonation never excited you by itself. |
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Each forthcoming note must be heard as a complete entity, in tune, with all musical parameters in place. |
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The alternate names chosen for the three characters are suggestive of the values depicted by the original roles in tune with Ramayana. |
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The downsides were a serious thirst for fuel when one put the foot down and the twin choke Dellorto carburettors being difficult to keep in tune. |
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Chris, however was so in tune with his bike I'm sure he could have ridden blindfold had I asked him to. |
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That also explains why he's gone to America, a much bigger media market and an area more closely in tune with his political beliefs. |
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The meanings of the hexagrams were divined many years ago by Chinese philosopher-priests in tune with the Tao. |
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I sang in tune but couldn't harmonize with the players, couldn't memorize the lyrics and I had no rhythm. |
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Their range and tessitura increases and, with training, children are singing well over an octave in tune and in time by the end of first grade. |
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Nevertheless, the crowd didn't seem to mind these trifles too much as they danced and sang in tune to the band's peppy, upbeat funk-rock. |
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A few can sing in tune before the age of two, while some studies suggest that children may able to respond to music even before they are born. |
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I shook my head in tune with the music, singing along with it at the top of my lungs. |
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Even the proceedings of the programme were different in tune with its central theme. |
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Too few people appreciate the genious of the Constitution and the gentleness of economies that are in tune with natural market laws. |
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We can no longer believe what our negative emotions are telling us, because prajna is bringing us in tune with deeper truths. |
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Most e-book borrowers are in tune with their libraries and call themselves heavy readers in all formats. |
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The wind occasionally blew cotton fluff into the set, which made you feel really in tune to the emotional side of the play. |
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From early morning, the general atmosphere was calm and relaxed, more in tune with a public festival than a mass protest. |
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I fortunately try to go skiing or snowboarding as much as I can, to keep my muscles in tune. |
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Births occur almost a month after incubation, in tune with the next lunar cycle. |
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Birds were singing, in tune to the slow movement of water over the pebbles. |
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The coverage was serious, it was sober, it was comprehensive, and the press really seemed in tune with the surge of patriotism in the country. |
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I am pleased to know that this report is well in tune with our own analysis of this subject. |
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Babies work in tune with our biological imperatives, lying there, helpless and demanding, screaming and spewing, while at the same time generating love. |
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He suggests that if all men learned music, it might be a means of keeping them in tune, and of bringing universal peace to the world. |
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If you can stay in tune with yourself, it's actually easier to connect up to the outside world. |
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Textbooks are updated every year, to ensure our educational program is in tune with the times. |
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Unfortunately, the ending comes far too abruptly and consequently feels kind of preachy and not at all in tune with the feeling of the rest of the play. |
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All were well spaced, in time with the music and in tune with each other. |
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Terry learned to eat in tune with his natural circadian rhythms. |
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I followed up on this question because it is in tune with the previous one. |
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Guitar overdubs compete to stay in time and in tune with each other. |
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One of the country's legendary tenor saxophone players, his name might not ring a bell for those who are not in tune with Jazz in India, but he deserves to be remembered. |
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When calibrated to be in tune with the planet's resonance, it created what is still the largest man-made electrical surge ever, an arc over 130 feet long. |
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Our ancestors had known that nature was not subduable and, therefore, had made it an obligation for man to surrender to nature and live in tune with it. |
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It is more in tune with today's markets and younger, more mobile demographic. |
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In order to retain its vigour modern football must move with the times, keep in tune with what current fans want and consider strategies that will attract new fans. |
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Petts Wood Methodist Men's Group is getting in tune for a sing song. |
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This time, Sid gladly replaced Rotten on vocals, singing every song word perfect and in tune. |
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This was possibly the band's first gig and I felt for them a bit coming on after that, especially as a limited soundcheck had left them not completely in tune with each other. |
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This option would be in tune with the EU's general policy interest in backing moves towards regional integration. |
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Mr. Gates's view certainly seems to be in tune with the electorate these days. |
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Indeed, one needs to be in tune with these issues, but there needs to be legislation that includes what we consider to be essential safeguards. |
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For Human Resources, we need to be in tune with demographics and impacts on employers' training needs. |
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In our example: « You appeared to be in tune with me when I exposed the way the estimates were built. |
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Such an approach would also be more in tune with the growing omnipresence of technology. |
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At the camp, Adrien meets Paul, who has a sixth sense and is very in tune with Adrien. |
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It is amazing just how much fuel can be wasted in heavy traffic when an engine is not in tune. |
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It's a subtle mix, as you have to find the right dose to keep up the pace and be in tune with your machine. |
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Many on the right are convinced they are more in tune with the public than Mr Cameron's cautious, languidly metropolitan inner circle. |
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The two other groups, who felt slighted in the Turkish era, now feel more in tune with the neighbouring states Serbia or Croatia. |
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It is also bad business, since the stations and the newspapers must be in tune with their markets. |
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Unlike most city workers with their regimented hours, lumberjacks toiled in tune with the changing seasons and available daylight. |
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And governments that were opposed to the war were buoyed and emboldened by being in tune with their electors. |
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The threesome trilled in tune, earned screams from the crowd with their gorgeous micro-miniskirts and added their own sweetness to the saucy lyrics. |
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Casting off the conventional boxy image of a utility, sporty and dynamic lines are in tune with the rest of Mazda's passenger vehicle lineup. |
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Members of the Royal Family wish any elements of protocol to be in tune with what is generally acceptable in Canadian society. |
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In addition, the centralised nature of the system is not in tune with the needs of high-quality research. |
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It brought me more in tune with the need to increase the supply of affordable, good quality housing in this province. |
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The barren trees were in tune with the sense of desolation all around. |
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But it will, hopefully, be more in tune with the great universal aspirations: more nature, more health, more attention paid to men and women. |
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The value of the projects and the support claim are in tune with the expected economic power of certain economic types. |
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Canada has always made an effort to harmonize and be in tune with American policies. |
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In the end, the Arab world must follow a model in tune with its own traditions and economic and political circumstances. |
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It also noted that the guiding principles were vast and not in tune with the limited amount of funds. |
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Simple and modern forms to effectively and directly convey the right message to customers who are in tune with trends and demand elegant design. |
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We select the designer whose approach is most in tune with the ethos of the brand and who best responds to the scenario set out by the Group. |
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In order to be in tune with its time, the case is shaped into curves and modernized. |
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String up with SP strings so you can stay in tune longer and play with confidence. |
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The Fair has also renewed its image with a new logo that is more flexible and in tune with the times, and better represents a sector characterised by dynamism and continual renewal. |
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By getting in tune with your inner rock star, of course! |
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But whereas the welfare state could not be easily adapted to fit with the way the world was going, Germany's foreign policy turned out to be far more in tune with the new challenges of an interdependent world. |
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As a result of all this the Department of Marine and Fisheries settled down to a comfortable jogtrot of precedence and custom which, if nowadays far short of acceptable standards, was then in tune with the facts of life. |
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Law and justice at times need to be in tune. |
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We should find in ourselves the true fundamental morals and be in tune with ourself, everyone has his own personnality and has got to accept himself and recognise himself the way he is without complacence nor shame. |
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Such an outcome should contribute to strengthening the stability and security of Kosovo and the region as a whole, and be in tune with the spirit and the trends of regional cooperation. |
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He is the great disturber and his ideas often unsettle us and yet, as we know, only those with imagination and a readiness to be disturbed will be in tune with the call of discipleship. |
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He put his slant on the session as usual, though this turned out not to be in tune with the opera singer who had envisaged a very conventional portrait. |
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If this experiment in coordinated global security and survival is to succeed, it must be in tune with the pulse of the international community in as many ways as possible. |
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It is essential that the tools that school boards develop be continually reviewed and be in tune with the development characteristics of children in a minority setting. |
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People want the benefit of the knowledge translation work, but the NCCMT does not appear to be in tune with the various public health people in the field as much as they need to be. |
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Pay special attention to the pitch of the note played: it must be in tune. |
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Evolis, the European leader in solutions for plastic card personalization, leverages innovation to always be in tune with market changes and offer the latest encoding technologies for plastic badges and cards. |
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Dreamily or jocosely harmonious in the late Renaissance and the Baroque Age, ancient sculpture had to be severe or melodramatic at the time of the Revolution and the Empire, in tune with the sound of incessant war. |
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Firstly, Herr Trittin, the Environment Minister, was not in tune with his colleagues in the Cabinet, then Chancellor Schröder blundered in like a bull in a china shop, having no expert knowledge of this process. |
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They closed their bases in Great Britain and Hungary to relocate all their operations to France, a country which they see as being in tune with the rally racing culture. |
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Ayurveda is a traditional Indian healing system and as a science of life and a means to good health it is becoming increasingly appealing to Westerners who are seeking a lifestyle more in tune with their essential nature. |
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They are often in tune with the most pressing needs and timely opportunities on the continent and they are willing to give generously of their time, energy, and money to make a difference. |
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There are numerous techniques and tools to better communicate! Yet they all seem to come up short when it comes to be quickly in tune with people of vastly different personalities. |
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Subjects of the restless Mercury, Geminians are nuts about fashion details, dress in tune with their mood and know how to mix all styles, models and materials together. |
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Nevertheless, collective exhibitions are now the swan song of a type of art in tune with a society marked by economic competition, the laws of market prices and rivalry. |
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And Zeuss had a creative vision one hundred percent in tune with the band's as the five of them set out to create what will undoubtedly go down as one of the heaviest records of 2005, if not ever. |
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Intensely dynamic, unwaveringly precise and absolutely resistant, the new DS Action is made for the exciting lifestyle of the true sportsman, in tune with extreme pleasure. |
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Bloomberg Radio has expressed a special interest in these short programmes, which are more in tune with an American mainstream audience that listens to music programmes intercut with short news segments. |
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I know the members from British Columbia are much more in tune with the softwood sellout than I am and I will leave that for them to discuss because it really pertains to them. |
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This approach makes the French characters equally relatable to their target audience, with their movements and expressions in tune with Quebec culture. |
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With his indubitable charm and his immense depth of feeling, the American actor is perfectly in tune with the philosophy and the products of this brand, which combines Italian style with Swiss know-how. |
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Is it as a moment of grace that obliges us to re-create our believing experience in tune with the challenges of an epoch in crisis or as a situation of death? |
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The quality materials used are also in tune with the uncompromising high-tech gadgetry of the building, including the latest in entertainment systems, complete furnishings and fitted kitchen. |
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Whether through cruises and its marina in the tourism sector or its various parks and bicycle paths, the port continues to beautify itself in tune with the city. |
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For Thomas, spearfishing is a way to get in tune with his heritage and nature, and his family eats everything he catches. |
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Tunafish made with Miracle Whip, lettuce, tomatoes, pickles healthy and low-fat to keep that torso in tune. |
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Francis of Assisi befriended and was in tune with nature not only for theological reasons, but also due to his natural inclination and his warm, instinctive friendliness. |
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Parliament and president are unusually in tune. |
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I think of myself as being in tune with those who are sensitive to the same issues as me, people who have the same concerns as I do but who don't necessarily know how to address them. |
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The City of Toronto contributed funds to ensure that ECE workers' salaries kept pace with inflation and that service levels were kept roughly in tune with demand. |
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Or, they may become articulated in the course of implementation, in which case the implementers need to be sufficiently flexible and in tune with the community so as to be able to adjust the programme to these new elements. |
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We become more in tune with the leading of our Thought Adjuster and more ready to become teachers, transforming awkward beginnings into conscious skill through practice. |
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When a sound wave hits a green anole lizard, for instance, the energy causes the lizard's chest wall to vibrate in tune with the wave. |
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Fran's scholarship exemplified imaginativeness and expansiveness that is so in tune with the nature of human experience and well-being. |
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The rural values of monasticism held little appeal to urban people who began to form sects more in tune with urban culture. |
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His Body of the Dead Christ in the Tomb of 1522 expresses a humanist view of Christ in tune with the reformist climate in Basel at the time. |
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Olivier had a great success in John Osborne's The Entertainer in 1957, but Gielgud was not in tune with the new wave of writers. |
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As each generation becomes more in tune with the Internet, their desire to retrieve information as quickly and easily as possible has increased. |
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They wanted to produce something which was more in tune with modern sports fans and had a bit of comedy linked to it. |
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When I look at what I call the gift of life, I feel a gratitude which is in tune with some religious ideas of God. |
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Artists who engaged with history and myth were not considered to be in tune with the times, either in poetry or art. |
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The idea was in tune with the times and had already been discussed after Balboa's discovery of the Pacific. |
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As we enter the Critical Days of Summer, we need to ensure all our personnel are in tune with Personal Risk Management and Wingmanship. |
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Banerjee's books have been a bestseller for the last 2 years in tune with her meteorical rise in politics. |
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This gives them the opportunity to stay in tune with their classrooms, and it's packable, transportable, and easier to transport than a laptop. |
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The easy thing about building for your domestic market is that you are in tune with your own hillbillies. |
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Its success is consistent with the view that writing is visible speech, which makes the method logical as well as in tune with empirical evidence. |
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The unisons in the menuetto were achingly in tune, showing that a unison can be just as devastating in its impact as harmony when played this well. |
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He wasn't the doughty pioneer in his rightful landscape, he wasn't the Indian brave at one with the forest, he wasn't the wise renunciant in tune with Nature. |
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A Scot called Macmillan, a man holding a master's square-rig ticket, gave me a portion of a shanty related in tune to the foregoing, and also to the British Rolling Home. |
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In 1889, Brazil became a republic, and it was agreed that a new state capital of Minas Gerais, in tune with a modern and prosperous Minas Gerais, had to be set. |
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Over a period of time, the style was modified in tune with their urban requirements, and civil engineering and building construction technology became developed and refined. |
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I need to fiddle with the strings on my violin. It doesn't sound in tune. |
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The maple neck and rosewood fretboard enable fast rhythm and lead playing, while the sealed tuner gears and adjustable bridge keep your guitar in tune longer. |
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