That Frank Lloyd Wright building, its quaint oddness and dated vision of the future now strike me as the perfect temple for the spirit of Marin. |
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It will leave you celebrating our national character and glorying in the beauty and oddness of the human spirit. |
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Instead, the blandness of the Hollywood versions merely underlines the oddness, individuality and appeal of the originals. |
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The film's genuine oddness derives mostly from the presence and performance of Glover, eccentric actor extraordinaire. |
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The sheer oddness of the way the place functioned, the incongruity between functioning and pretension. |
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Somewhat sadly, he has worked himself into a niche for eccentric bad guys whose haphazard oddness makes them sinister. |
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There is something very odd about the way the revolution is figured, and the oddness goes beyond the closing scene. |
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Reactions varied from glassy-eyed indifference, people being a bit shaken by the oddness of it, and slowly smiling enthusiasm and amusement. |
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For without a contrast model the world has no way to know or feel the oddness of its dependence on power for survival. |
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Flashlights and torches provide just enough illumination to see the creatures in all their oddness. |
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He has aged remarkably well, his manic oddness muted by experience and dry wit. |
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The publication has only 163 pages, but it is full of the joy found in people when one sympathetically understands the oddness of age and mental infirmity. |
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A novel that highlights the oddness and distinct challenges that come along with being a modern, thinking person. |
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Each of these incidents incited the miffed woman to disseminate mild hearsay about my sexual orientation or general oddness. |
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There are included topics that have been singles and others that they have remained like faces B and oddness. |
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The T-assertions may look odd, but their oddness is only skin-deep. |
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You might think, as she sometimes did, that he was doing something odd in there, but who would have guessed the real oddness of it — that he could not see what he was doing at all. |
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While it initially sounds odd to say that a thing's operation is its end, the oddness disappears as soon as one realizes that all operations are ultimately reditive. |
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Fashion loves oddness, and it likes to shock. |
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However, those of you who loved the first book, those who felt in love with the graphical oddness of Robinson, should not worry, you will find here what you were coming for. |
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As most speakers are now bilingual, the language is spiked with puns on both English and Ojibwe, most playing on the oddness of gichi-mookomaan, that is, big knife or American, habits and behavior. |
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Jeebus, does Helen know this? Yes, she does. It's odd, this life of ours, and I'm terribly aware of my culpability in said oddness. |
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Her oddness might be an effort to make Sue seem more grounded. |
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A virtue is made out of a necessity, with the child feeling far more atop and master of his oddness, his behavior now deliberate or even clever. |
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And it also summed up the oddness of being a foreigner walking through the Occidentalizing landscapes of Japan. |
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It was the first oddness of the night and it was very good. |
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Once again, government was defeated by demonstrators and France keeps on displaying the oddness of its functioning method in comparison with other western democracies. |
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Her new book is a celebration of oddness and uniqueness in translations that come about as the result of some sort of slippage from the mimetic into the non-mimetic. |
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