Pre-game festivities will include a special guest emcee doing player introductions. |
|
During the introductions I mentioned that information science is integral to each of the sciences represented and received loud acclamation. |
|
Imagine hearing the lines of the second quatrain as a series of introductions. |
|
While the introductions were being given, he windmilled his right arm, like David getting ready to smite Goliath with a sling. |
|
There it follows hard on the heels of introductions to the academic essay and the personal essay. |
|
The controversy over trout introductions has come to focus much of the current awareness on the impact of alien species both plant and animal. |
|
It is well known that the introductions of alien species have wreaked havoc on indigenous fauna and flora worldwide. |
|
The introductions continue and soon John has an audience fit for a King, filled with Dukes and Ladies, professors and clergymen. |
|
His witty introductions, funny stories and anecdotes kept the crowds smiling throughout. |
|
All of these editions feature introductions by prominent gay writers who reflect on the impact the books had on them. |
|
Her locutions seem to have neither introductions nor conclusions but begin from a place of inquiry and intimacy. |
|
The book does provide reasonable introductions to several casino games, such as roulette, craps, and baccarat. |
|
Everyone looked over, stared at Carmen, then proceeded to mumble their greetings and introductions as the lift ascended. |
|
More recent introductions include double figure bream, carp to 20 lb and many roach, rudd, skimmers, tench and crucians. |
|
I only came here so I could be mentioned in the same breath as him during the introductions. |
|
Another possible explanation is that multiple introductions of teasel have contributed to its distribution in North America. |
|
Included in the intermediate chapters are introductions to differentiable manifolds and Lie groups. |
|
That evening at the ball she watched the formal introductions patiently waiting so that she could go and greet Natalie. |
|
Brief introductions preface each text, which is printed in double columns on the page, and there is a full glossary at the end of the book. |
|
Marriages usually result from family introductions, if not outright matches. |
|
|
The rational approach you would think is to stop all further introductions of alien fish species like trout, bass etc into water environs. |
|
Formal introductions are rare, but professional titles are used to address respected persons. |
|
Her gut told her everything was wrong, even the kind introductions just a misleading start. |
|
I find it fairly easy to blog while writing film scripts, articles, introductions, blurbs and short stories. |
|
I'm horrendously unqualified for this sort of job, but I reckon it'd be a real laugh having a gay introductions agency. |
|
Chapter introductions contain inconsistent bits of information and are highly variable in their length and information content. |
|
Now that we got introductions out of the way, we will be on the road to splendidness together, I think. |
|
Recent introductions of foliage heucheras from Oregon nurseryman and plant breeder Dan Heims are making a big splash. |
|
Outside of formal introductions greetings are often vocal and are not accompanied by a handshake or kiss. |
|
Wishing to be sensitive to this complexity, I have not imposed uniform terms in my headnotes or introductions. |
|
In fact, headnotes, sidebars, and chapter introductions do a lot more to separate the good cookbooks from the bad than recipes. |
|
I'm already overcommitted with books I've agreed to read and blurb and introductions I've agreed to write going back some years. |
|
All have been carefully edited with helpful introductions, notes, reading lists and useful chronologies. |
|
Very few new product introductions result in company-wide, double-digit sales increases. |
|
After the introductions were done they exchanged pleasantries with Caitlyn who answered politely to all of them. |
|
Nupen scrupulously avoids any mention of the controversies in his newly filmed introductions, which he speaks simply and eloquently to camera. |
|
I've got one more stop to make, and then we can make formal introductions, okay? |
|
They can set up formal introductions, ensuring that members get the proper attention. |
|
Following the western cultural practice of ladies first, the entire session of formal introductions was completed in a blink of the eye. |
|
Don't feel embarrassed about forgetting someone's name while making introductions. |
|
|
He chuckled, turning her so her back faced his chest, and leaned on her shoulder, comforted by her presence without bothering with introductions. |
|
Jessica had been waiting in a corner while the dukes had gone through their formal introductions. |
|
Sometimes I have to check my underpants just to remember my name when introductions are beings made. |
|
And the copious notes and introductions you'll find prefacing the first volume make a strong case for it. |
|
Extended instrumental introductions and occasional solos for guitar, horn and trumpet add tasteful variety to the program. |
|
Some of the introductions to these arias are quite lengthy, which gives the players their own chance to shine. |
|
Unnecessary orchestral introductions taken from Richard Strauss and Rossini add little of value. |
|
Our introduction agency offers a dating solution by creating introductions based on Personalised Matchmaking through our Singles Network. |
|
The yogurt and flavored dairy beverage categories also have seen their share of low-carb and no-sugar-added product introductions. |
|
Being announced in pregame introductions with the first-team offense isn't necessarily reflected on the stats sheet. |
|
Currently, the best option for minimizing such introductions is deballasting and reballasting a ship in mid-ocean areas. |
|
His introductions and translations are scholarly, edifying, and link the mind with the heart. |
|
We never really made it to the last names part of the introductions. |
|
This is coupled with an absence of widely available introductions and open doors for those who are unfamiliar with contemporary or avant-garde poetry. |
|
After the round of introductions, it was time for some victuals. |
|
Yoli came in after a bit and took a chair and introductions were made. |
|
Featuring over 140 creative recipes and prefaced by witty introductions, the book offers an inspirational approach to cooking and eating seasonal food. |
|
After the formal introductions, Julie went on to talk about last year's projects for a long while, then we discussed ideas for this year for about half an hour. |
|
Lots and lots and lots of requests coming in for me to read and blurb people's books, or write introductions to things, to all of which at present the answer has to be no. |
|
She was drinking vodka shots and suddenly became absurdly interested in the three of us, begging introductions and giving each of us a good look-over. |
|
|
There were so many introductions, I barely got to the Dialogue Concerning the two Chief World Systems, so unbeloved of the Pope in Galileo's time. |
|
He got booed in pregame introductions, booed when his picture was put up on the video board, and booed again when came to bat in the first inning. |
|
There were three introductions before his speech, three questions from the audience after his speech, and the speech itself was tripartite to a fault. |
|
Elton focuses on changes in population and community dynamics that result from accidental and deliberate human introductions and subsequent attempts at biological control. |
|
She says that virtually all the identified unimproved plant introductions she encountered had characteristics that made them unattractive to American farmers. |
|
Outside of the well-deserved worship of vanilla ice cream, fudge, caramel and peanut butter were noteworthy as popular flavors in new product introductions in the past year. |
|
Academic writing generally makes use of such scholarly apparatus as introductions, provisos, disclaimers, acknowledgements, notes and references, bibliographies, and indexes. |
|
Met by ten burly men in military uniforms who gave rapid-fire introductions and led them down to the platform, they had little time to take anything in. |
|
You can get fun introductions to Japanese culture at two major festivals, with demonstrations of everything from classic dance to aikido martial arts. |
|
Not only are introductions in order, you should also give the fresh acquaintances a little traction to get their friendship rolling merrily along. |
|
Do you think that formal social introductions should be de rigueur? |
|
By and large, flavors continue to bring excitement to the dairy case as new product introductions exhibiting the latest flavor craze and consumer preference. |
|
Once we reached, we parked our cars beneath the trees and started trekking up the hill after a brief round of introductions. |
|
For plasma sets, clear-outs of older models as well as new-model introductions served to keep June prices in equilibrium. |
|
We met the new captain while we were taking enemy fire and were unable to observe the niceties of formal introductions. |
|
He would then add introductions, epilogues and music to link them together. |
|
Russell also wrote many pamphlets, introductions, articles, and letters to the editor. |
|
Editors customarily published fanciful, often nostalgic introductions to the material that included unsubstantiated statements. |
|
Alfred's own literary output was mainly of translations, though he wrote introductions and amended manuscripts as well. |
|
Viewers in Wales saw an original 'BBC Cymru Wales' mechanical globe with introductions provided by former BBC Wales announcers. |
|
|
Unintentional or accidental introductions are most often a byproduct of human movements, and are thus unbound to human motivations. |
|
The transport of ornamental plants for landscaping use has and continues to be a source of many introductions. |
|
Intentional introductions have also been undertaken with the aim of ameliorating environmental problems. |
|
Unintentional introductions occur when species are transported by human vectors. |
|
Another form of unintentional introductions is when an intentionally introduced plant carries a parasite or herbivore with it. |
|
It is likely then that Sardinian fox populations stem from repeated introductions of animals from different localities in the Mediterranean. |
|
Undocumented introductions probably occurred in some Mediterranean Islands. |
|
Further introductions were made in New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, and Western Australia. |
|
A few introductions have died out or been of limited success, such as those to Greenland and Cape Verde. |
|
The company has built curves of chrome and satin nickel steel into its gadget introductions here. |
|
These latest, record-breaking introductions are not only a testament to the strength of our exclusive, superclass of ageLoc products. |
|
Meanwhile, the concept of biophilia, or a human yearning to connect with the natural world, was evident in a few plant-oriented introductions. |
|
An influx of new product introductions fueled malternative growth, even as some were pulled or scaled back. |
|
In anticipation of spending slowdowns, many vendors delayed or accelerated product introductions to lessen the impact. |
|
The introductions are sometimes deficient as when Carey prints a martyrology prepared by Oengus the Culdee without relating the text to the Culdees' reforming program. |
|
The first of many successful introductions to North America occurred when birds from England were released in New York City, in 1852 to control the ravages of the linden moth. |
|
This hands-on guide also covers sequences and series, with introductions to multivariable calculus, differential equations, and numerical analysis. |
|
In the Norton edition, the addition of introductions and annotations to each play actually tends to reinstate the fixities that the edition ostensibly rejects. |
|
These four Japanese introductions probably were of the Japonica ecotype. |
|
Its intentional or accidental introductions to many regions, including parts of Australia, Africa, and the Americas, make it the most widely distributed wild bird. |
|
|
Spade will deepen her line with three formal dinnerware patterns, two new flatware patterns, two crystal stemware introductions, and metal and crystal giftware. |
|
As well as intentional introductions, the Pacific oyster has spread through accidental introductions either through larvae in ballast water or on the hulls of ships. |
|
Proposals for further such introductions remain controversial. |
|
These two tracts both present legal information about relatively new animal and technological introductions to Irish law from elsewhere in Europe, Bees and Watermills. |
|
Among Mohawk Home's introductions were its glow-in-the-dark mats, which use photoluminescent inks that allow the design to remain visible for hours. |
|
Two further introductions were made since the original stocking, with several escapes taking place due to breaches in the game preserve's fencing. |
|
In the 1980s, a new version of Alfred Hitchcock Presents was produced for television, making use of Hitchcock's original introductions in a colourised form. |
|
The First Years and Lamaze brands expand with consumer-centric introductions designed to address the specific needs of today's parents and their infants. |
|
Adoptive parents were matched with the children in January 2011 and introductions started in February, with a final move to the prospective adopters planned for 23 February. |
|
He has written introductions to most of the books published in the series, as well as for several of the books published in the British Library's Classic Thrillers series. |
|