One off-centre bay window extends upwards, bringing views of the sky in addition to the broad sweep of the hills. |
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With modern auto-focus cameras the most obvious focussing problem is where the subject is off-centre. |
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Rhodes has spoken of how her work has its parallels in her own history of being culturally off-centre. |
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Not just cute and beguiling, Pilkington's sculptures are slightly off-centre being both disarming and disconcerting. |
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From the off-centre title metaphor to the beautifully layered arrangement, this is no mere pastiche. |
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Its orientation, however, was curious, running diagonally across the ditch extension towards a position off-centre of the mound. |
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In the picture of a lustre bowl with green peas, the main items are off-centre, giving a diagonal thrust to the composition. |
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In the Skara Brae object, you can see how cunningly the top and base ridges are off-centre, allowing it initially to be held vertically. |
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There's a slightly off-centre 4in screen alongside a four-way navigation control with a separate button in the middle. |
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Mr. Butler liked everything quite off-centre and most ballet companies have to be on-centre for their particular kind of work. |
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For instance, the Earth is not exactly at the centre of the deferent, but is a little off-centre. |
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An extra arm placed off-centre wouldn't do, you see, but Medusa-style hair of snakes would be fine. |
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The composition of the figures is placed off-centre and the zigzagging lines of the cafe tables convey their situation in space. |
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In contrast to this, they attempt to supplement work on the central institutions of China by presenting an off-centre view. |
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Naturally, there is a fairly large screen, plus Canon's nine-point auto-focusing system, which rarely misses an off-centre subject. |
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Many had off-centre bores, which affected not only accuracy but also greatly weakened their breech ends, rendering them liable to burst. |
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Despite the fine leads, the TV series failed to match the off-centre appeal of the movie. |
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For me, already having an interest in the bizarre and anything off-centre, I liked Dada. |
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A larger semi-circular dial sits just off-centre and a further four sliding arcs sit on the far right of the front plate. |
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People opt for one fairly lush plant and place it off-centre on their mantel, rather than filling a whole shelf with plants. |
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Position the lancing device firmly and slightly off-centre on the fingerprint. |
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In addition, the reducers are arranged off-centre so that flow resistance is reduced at the bottom and turbulence is avoided. |
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The chronograph function is accompanied by a central second hand and three off-centre counters showing the hours, minutes and seconds. |
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The off-centre by-pass kit has a fixed setting that cannot be changed since it has no accessible adjustment. |
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Gold dial with off-centre circle of Roman numerals and small seconds dial at XII, Breguet blued steel hands, cylinder escapement. |
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This timepiece is instantly identifiable thanks to the off-centre hour, minute and seconds displays in a round segment at 10 o'clock. |
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The operation is based on an internal and external rotor that are displaced off-centre to each other. |
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Around the back, you'll find a deeper bumper with a chromed tailpipe poking through off-centre, a boot spoiler and some discreet badging. |
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The fold is off-centre giving it a scrappy, unfinished look at odds with the design's refinement. |
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Slightly off-centre, a constant whirlpool swirls and churns turbulently, sometimes spitting up a boiling fount. |
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This effect was also, as the experts agreed, exaggerated by the fact that the sensors of the Stal system were set off-centre in some of the holds. |
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In the second shot, Mthethwa moves his human subject off-centre. |
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A later invention, the unicycle with an off-centre hub, would bring people out into the corridors to watch him as he rode it, bobbing up and down like a duck. |
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In spite of all this, having the chance to watch a fine ensemble cast play such an array of off-centre characters is worth the price of admission alone. |
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The dials themselves were constantly redesigned, varying the off-centre or asymmetric layouts and functions, modifying the design of the numerals and hands. |
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When players talk about 'feel' in irons, they tend to be talking about knowing when a ball has been hit off-centre. |
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There is an off-centre reinforced concrete spine beam along the length of the building to support the precast concrete floors, and the columns are designed to co-ordinate with the different floor plans. |
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It is off-centre and off-round, and bears four concentric circles, one of which is stippled. |
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The points at which the axis of this off-centre dipole cuts the Earth's surface are called the Eccentric Poles, or sometimes the Eccentric Axis Dipole Poles. |
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The umbo of the oyster larvae moves off-centre during growth, whereas the umbo of the shipworm larva always remains centred. |
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The set is a 6.5 m x 6.5 m square placed 1 m from the front edge of the stage and 0.75 m off-centre towards stage left. |
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If the oleo strut had been off-centre once airborne, the system's logic would have prevented retraction of the landing gear. |
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The gateway is monumental, with smooth jambs, a caliphal horseshoe arch with carefully cut voussoirs converging at the line of the imposts, an off-centre extrados and double-framed alfiz panel. |
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His schtick – skewed angles, endless close-ups, off-centre framing – has already tripped into the realm of self-parody, but here it helps to offset what could have otherwise become a stuffy Sunday-evening television film. |
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He has that slightly off-centre rakishness perfect for our Leo. |
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The Scot spent most of his career using cavity-back Callaway irons which have a much larger sweet spot than most and can be reasonably forgiving to off-centre strikes. |
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Find a centre or off-centre point using the squares provided. |
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A round, greenish token with one face stamped with cursive characters expressing the omnipotence of God and an off-centre seal with granulations on its left edge. |
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An internal gear pump is shown in Figure 2. The driven gear is a rotor with internally cut teeth, which mesh with the teeth of an externally cut idler gear, set off-centre from the rotor. |
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This period saw the sales of ultra-flat watches, timepieces with complex functions, off-centre dials, and the invention of keyless winding systems. |
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