Presumably, a few acid attacks are sequel to frustration at rejection of sexual overtures. |
|
Largely unnoted amid the sound and fury are several peace overtures in the White Paper. |
|
Diplomatic overtures are also being made to France, Canada and Japan as well as to ASEAN countries. |
|
Her young daughter is soon making overtures to the man, who wants to rob the women blind. |
|
They are regularly approached by potential suitors but have resisted overtures so far. |
|
Those complex overtures done with, I followed up all gung-ho with an enquiry as to when the piece was required. |
|
The opening sinfonia for strings and trombones is remarkably like several opera overtures of the time, with square rhythms. |
|
The local tributary rulers were deposed because they refused to pay their dues, and the ruler of Gilan was making overtures to the Ottomans. |
|
At the end of the table a greybeard makes heavy overtures, mirthfully spied upon from a window above, to a half-protesting matron. |
|
The overtures did not divert tens of thousands from marching against the government. |
|
Suddenly amazed at their own good fortune, the Cardinals made overtures to retain Keane, but he put them off until after the World Series. |
|
These include a lickety-split Don Giovanni, a disc of Beethoven overtures, and Brahms's Third and Fourth Symphonies. |
|
Similarly, the overtures go well, yet the conductor misses something of the earthy humor of the Academic Festival. |
|
Organ fugues, orchestral overtures and jazz favourites are united with pop hits, movie themes and folk tunes. |
|
You aren't worth it, and the friendly overtures of others come as a justified reproach. |
|
He is confident that rival operators will listen to his overtures and work with him to establish a hub in Scotland. |
|
You can express your feelings, disclose plans, make overtures or offer opportunities. |
|
Recent overtures by extremist groups to renounce violence and discuss issues provides a window of opportunity to redress old wrongs. |
|
Instead it gets bogged down in motions and amendments, addendums and deliverances, overtures and the like. |
|
The sensitive Druid launched deep into thought, shrewdly observing the the hazel-eyed man making overtures to the daughter of Cobham. |
|
|
The president is making overtures to Mexican immigrants and planning a manned mission to Mars. |
|
Yet, we do hear of British aristocrats making overtures to Rome, and even dedicating offerings on the Capitol of the world's pre-eminent city. |
|
Yeltsin had made repeated overtures to the Chechens to preserve Russia's territorial integrity. |
|
These include lieder, thirty string quartets and six symphonies, plus numerous overtures and choral works. |
|
Yet Havana's overtures for friendlier relations have been repeatedly rebuffed by successive administrations in Washington. |
|
So long has he is steeped in his loneliness, he's immune to friendly overtures. |
|
Though Ernst says he repeatedly offered to correct the text free of charge, his overtures were rejected. |
|
My initiatives and overtures over the years to engage the Chinese leadership in a dialogue remain unreciprocated. |
|
Hollywood began to make overtures to Silicon Valley, which produced some collaborative ventures inevitably tagged Siliwood. |
|
Tells why China may have been willing to make overtures to the U. S. at this time. |
|
Admittedly Cameron had no choice but to make overtures because of the indecisive result. |
|
It does have to make overtures to foreign investors and it cannot take them for granted. |
|
He seems very comfortable with a very narrow base and doesn't even make overtures to win over more moderate voters. |
|
I appeal one more time for the Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development to pick up the phone and make overtures. |
|
Those overtures to consumers will put a crimp in the company's profit margins. |
|
Competing bands played overtures of Italian operas, marches, and light music. |
|
The author valuably describes how propagandists depict diplomatic overtures by South Korea and America as quaking capitulations. |
|
A sincere openness is required and so far, the maduro government has ignored the few overtures the opposition has made. |
|
With the preliminary rounds and overtures done and dusted, 2005 CONCACAF Champions Cup action is set to get underway. |
|
And so it is my hope that the overtures we have made to you do not fall on deaf ears. |
|
|
So far, there has been no sign of the hoped-for overtures towards the political parties. |
|
Britain has made similar overtures, as did the Euro-Zone in its recent discussions. |
|
Several firms made overtures to acquire Media Metrix, but it was comScore that eventually prevailed. |
|
In an attempt to find a negotiated solution, CAR authorities initiated overtures visà -vis the armed groups. |
|
The President has made significant overtures to address some of these concerns with a view to promoting political reconciliation. |
|
Typical Broadway overtures come in the form of ovations, but at this week's reception the empty steam trays said it all. |
|
Symbolic overtures are important, but we also need to see more results on the ground. |
|
And are Iranian overtures to France, especially to French business, anodyne or a way to undermine Western resolve? |
|
From this he generates canons, overtures, duets, fugues, 3-part sinfonias, and even the famous quodlibet, in which several tunes sound simultaneously. |
|
But I live in a country ridden with religious overtures in every facet of life, of silly, stupid superstitions, traditions and beliefs that are senseless and illogical. |
|
Despite the enthusiastic overtures which the dawn of a new season brings, Clark admits he will quickly lose his appetite if matches descend into torpidity. |
|
Anthems written for the Chapel Royal at this time make much use of jaunty dotted rhythms in triple time, with accompaniments, ritornellos, and overtures for violins. |
|
Fuller was making overtures about hiring min to take over Star, and Wenner was desperate not to lose min as well. |
|
While Washington so far had been unreceptive to his overtures, he was aware that a prompt commitment of Australian forces would improve the chances of such a pact. |
|
Telekom had frozen his wages since the ban but were making overtures to him about renewing his contract when the current one finished at the end of this year. |
|
Sturgeon's overtures are designed to cement the SNP's 17-point lead in Scottish opinion polls, particularly among ex-Labour voters, but also to make it far harder for Miliband to reject SNP support in the Commons. |
|
We have made overtures and we continue to make them. |
|
Recent PRC overtures to Taiwan on the issue of reunification appear to support the contention that China will have to accept further political reform in order to woo Taiwan back into the fold. |
|
Irrespective of such differences between political parties and continuing tensions among the political elite, positive overtures to engage in political dialogue emerged during the reporting period. |
|
Be that as it may, these overtures stand against a dismal backdrop for peace defined by crisis after crisis in which the implications of nuclearization of the region were never lost. |
|
|
In the 1960s, the Methodist Church made ecumenical overtures to the Church of England, aimed at church unity. |
|
Naturally, the situation in Belarus still remains serious, but we need to recognise that one way of coaxing Belarus towards the European Union is to recognise and respond to Mr Lukashenko's overtures. |
|
They responded to the Spanish overtures and returned to Nootka. |
|
Neill's move indicates A-League clubs have rejected overtures to sign the Socceroos stalwart for the rest of the season. |
|
They arose not from short-term electoral strategies, let alone from friendly overtures to media barons and banks, but from citizens' movements that began, in some cases, 50 years ago. |
|
Richard made overtures to Landais, offering military support for Landais's weak regime under Duke Francis II of Brittany in exchange for Henry. |
|
In the 1960s the Methodist Church of Great Britain made ecumenical overtures to the Church of England, aimed at church unity. |
|
The overtures from the Gilbert and Sullivan operas remain popular, and there are many recordings of them. |
|
In 2005, the government, led by central bank governor Gideon Gono, started making overtures that white farmers could come back. |
|
In the bottom of the curtain was located a big jardiniere with exotic plants, lighted with green spotlights and just before features and during 70mm roadshows musical overtures fountains were in action. |
|
What is more, there is also a profound contradiction: on the one hand we are closing our borders, while on the other we are starting to make overtures to the top-level workers that these countries have. |
|
But their comments were only the most blatant overtures among a series of thinly-veiled pitches for the party's nomination to take on a Democrat for the job of commander-in-chief in November. |
|
The following year he was in heady if duller company in Stanley Kubrick's Spartacus, playing Antoninus, the handsome slave who flees from the overtures of his master, Laurence Olivier. |
|
It tries to make overtures toward stabilisation by way of sustained promotion of democracy, human rights and the rule of law throughout the neighbourhood. |
|
We believe it is still too early to make overtures to these two countries. |
|
He renounced the overtures made to him to follow a political career in Normandy and enrolled in the School of Political Science in Paris, where he marvelled at and sympathised with great spirit he encountered. |
|
In the mid-19th century the Tibetans repeatedly rebuffed overtures from the British, who saw Tibet at first as a trade route to China and later as countenancing Russian advances that might endanger India. |
|
Sir Walter had sought the acquaintance, and though his overtures had not been met with any warmth, he had persevered in seeking it. |
|
Caesar was already in Crassus' political debt, but he also made overtures to Pompey. |
|
Orchestras also perform overtures, a term originally applied to the instrumental introduction to an opera. |
|
|
The UAE, along with other Gulf states, have been being making friendly overtures to Iran following the election of that country's new president and the prospect of a deal on its nuclear programme. |
|
In the bill, some overtures have been made about the objectives. |
|
His repertoire mainly included waltz overtures, popular tunes and medleys. |
|
Provinces have continued to be reluctant or unable to make any unilateral policy commitments on greenhouse gas reduction, even after federal government concessions or overtures. |
|
Despite a wave of international protests, Chinese policy in Tibet no longer knew overtures after this period, orienting itself towards extravagant demonisation of the Dalai Lama. |
|
While Goring cultivates that romance and dodges the overtures of the lovely Mabel and the proddings of his proper father, we meet the film's title character, Sir Robert. |
|
Henry's rising prominence made him a great threat to Richard, and the Yorkist king made several overtures to the Duke of Brittany to surrender the young Lancastrian. |
|
They steadfastly ignored the cutie-pie overtures of the pop image makers. |
|
Indian administrations, both Congress and BJP have remained cold to these overtures and have instead chosen to maintain India's commitment to nonalignment. |
|
Leading church figures, including John Overall, Dean of St Paul's, were tasked with winning Jonson back to orthodoxy, but these overtures were resisted. |
|
He left the overtures until last and often delegated their composition, based on his outlines, to his assistants, often adding his suggestions or corrections. |
|
The individual pieces comprise overtures, airs, minuets, gigues, gavottes, and the like, and they represent a fair sampling of Rameau's many varied moods and styles. |
|
Cabral presents a letter from King Manuel I proposing a treaty, but Emir Ibrahim is suspicious and, for all the formal pleasantries, resistant to the overtures. |
|
One must note that Handel always used common time rather than the correct alla breve for his overtures, although the beat is nonetheless the half note. |
|