It can sound fantastical and wifty and achingly naïve, informed by the last inklings of childhood. |
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During his tenure at Oxford University, he belonged to a group called the inklings, which also included the author C.S. Lewis. |
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So we're getting these inklings of what it is, but we just can't know, and there isn't going to be any way to know this early. |
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This is a moment when an older fascination with looking collides with the initial inklings of self-awareness. |
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We may already be seeing the first inklings of renewed export opportunities. |
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In the meantime, maybe the SMFs will have formed the inklings of a first district in Western France. |
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These inklings are due to the many changes to your physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual bodies. |
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That was what our Father always did, especially from the time when our Lord began to manifest himself to his soul, with those inklings of love. |
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So, maybe there is something about inklings and destinies, but I suppose we'll never know! |
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Patricia, what were the first inklings you had about this story? |
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Suddenly, all those first inklings of vocation that stirred in childhood, the unshaped consciousness of call, the inner yearnings and searchings, are brought into sharp focus. |
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Things are going his way or, at any rate, there are enough inklings of change for him to pretend that they are. |
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It is only now that slow, gentle pressure from the top is producing inklings of change. In this section Is it really back on track? |
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Having an Airbus named after her and travelling first-class on the plane's maiden voyage, Alizée must surely have felt the first inklings of stardom. |
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We are getting the first inklings of the real Conservative agenda. |
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Under the light of my spirit, and oriented by Elijah those first children began to receive the inklings of a message which now, at its ending, you are receiving in fullness. |
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Syrian voters knew him only through his association with a half-hearted scheme for economic liberalisation, and a stronger anti-corruption drive. There have been one or two faint inklings of a political opening. |
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It was a peaceful and prosperous era, a time of expansion and optimism that corresponded to a worldwide economic upturn and predated inklings of war. |
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I had assumed the place would be overrun with Inklings fans and legions of folks trying to channel Frodo and Co. at the Prancing Pony. |
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They both served on the English faculty at Oxford University, and were active in the informal Oxford literary group known as the Inklings. |
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From the early 1930s to late 1940s, an informal literary discussion group associated with the English faculty at the University of Oxford were The Inklings. |
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Even within Tolkien's literary group, The Inklings, reviews were mixed. |
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