Adaptation, a concept of increasing interest to cultural geographers, plays an important role in shaping patterns of cultural diffusion. |
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In the movie, he plays a demented man trying to survive on the streets of Los Angeles. |
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He plays the role of a meek husband who has been emasculated by his domineering wife. |
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Ibsen wrote plays such as Hedda Gabler, Peer Gynt, A Doll's House and The Lady from the Sea. |
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In this game, each player rolls the dice to see who plays first. |
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The theater company will be putting on plays by Shakespeare this season. |
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In a direct democracy the public plays an active role in shaping and deciding policy. |
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With the Age of Enlightenment came Ludvig Holberg whose comedy plays are still being performed. |
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The public sector, including publicly owned enterprises and the municipalities, plays a dominant role in Greenland's economy. |
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The Republic of Ireland national football team plays at international level and is administered by the Football Association of Ireland. |
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Huntingdonshire County Cricket Club has a chequered history and now plays informal matches only. |
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As the centre of Scotland's government and legal system, the public sector plays a central role in Edinburgh's economy. |
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The Northern Ireland national football team, ranked 43rd in October 2014 in the FIFA World Rankings, plays its home matches at Windsor Park. |
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Jersey national football team plays in the annual Muratti competition among others. |
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By contrast, religion plays the least important role in New England and in the Western United States. |
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The American Dream, or the perception that Americans enjoy high social mobility, plays a key role in attracting immigrants. |
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This in turn inspired a wide range of feature films, books, magazines, works of art, poetry, radio plays and MOI short films. |
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Production of serious plays was restricted to the patent theatres, and new plays were subject to censorship by the Lord Chamberlain's Office. |
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Thatcher has been depicted in many television programmes, documentaries, films and plays. |
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Stonehaven's long established pipe band plays at events throughout the year, including the folks festival and fireball ceremony. |
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Independent filmmakers Undercurrents and Studio8 are based in Swansea, and the city plays host to the BeyondTV Film Festival. |
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The Provost plays an important role in William Shakespeare's Measure for Measure. |
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The Guernsey cricket team plays in the World Cricket League and European Cricket Championship as well as the Sussex Cricket League. |
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However, it is solely in the United Kingdom that the Queen actually plays a role in organised religion. |
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In addition, the sector plays a crucial role in fostering innovation, in particular for devices and networks. |
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Creativity plays an important role in human resource management as artists and creative professionals can think laterally. |
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Suspension plays a huge part in giving the racecar the ability to be driven optimally. |
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Leicestershire County Cricket Club plays in the second tier of the county championship. |
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Gaelic music is popular in the islands and the Lewis and Harris Traditional Music Society plays an active role in promoting the genre. |
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Secularism is most often associated with the Age of Enlightenment in Europe and it plays a major role in Western society. |
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His plays have won numerous awards, including seven London Evening Standard Awards. |
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Ten of his plays have been staged on Broadway, attracting two Tony nominations, and one Tony award. |
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Literacy plays an important role in the development of language in these immigrant children. |
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Outside school, he and other neighbourhood children performed plays, usually written by Waugh. |
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In the following year, Ayckbourn appeared in six other plays at the Connaught Theatre, Worthing, and the Thorndyke theatre, Leatherhead. |
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His final appearance in one of his own plays was as the Crimson Gollywog in the disastrous children's play Christmas v Mastermind. |
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He was a sprinter and a keen cricket player, acting in school plays and writing poetry. |
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Pinter composed 27 screenplays and film scripts for cinema and television, many of which were filmed, or adapted as stage plays. |
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I have always tried to interpret his plays with as much humor and humanity as possible. |
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Stoppard's plays have been sometimes dismissed as pieces of clever showmanship, lacking in substance, social commitment, or emotional weight. |
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Initially, Edgar's career as a journalist developed alongside his attempts to write plays. |
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One series in Glasgow was scheduled for a dozen plays but proved so popular they eventually had over a hundred. |
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By 1914, Maugham was famous, with 10 plays produced and 10 novels published. |
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He continued to be highly productive, writing plays, short stories, novels, essays and travel books. |
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Greene also wrote short stories and plays, which were well received, although he was always first and foremost a novelist. |
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In addition to his own poetry, Hughes wrote a number of translations of European plays, mainly classical ones. |
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He was born and educated in Scotland but moved to London, where he wrote a number of successful novels and plays. |
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Frohman was responsible for producing the debut of Peter Pan in both England and the US, as well as other productions of Barrie's plays. |
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This Toronto group plays multitextured instrumentals that veer from clangy turbulence to pastoral, acoustic daydreams. |
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Hence arose an urgent demand on the part of the managers of Vienna and Berlin that I should have my plays performed by them first. |
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After their first runs none of the three plays were seen again in the West End during Shaw's lifetime. |
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Shaw's major plays of the first decade of the twentieth century address individual social, political or ethical issues. |
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In Shaw's view, the London theatres of the 1890s presented too many revivals of old plays and not enough new work. |
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After the turn of the twentieth century, Shaw increasingly propagated his ideas through the medium of his plays. |
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It produces plays by or written during the lifetime of Shaw as well as some contemporary works. |
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Although often encountered, it plays a fringe role in Irish Traditional dance music. |
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Gilbert's creative output included over 75 plays and libretti, and numerous short stories, poems and lyrics, both comic and serious. |
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In later years, Gilbert wrote several plays, and a few operas with other collaborators. |
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He would later return to many of these as source material for his plays and comic operas. |
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In 1871, with Pygmalion and Galatea, one of seven plays that he produced that year, Gilbert scored his greatest hit to date. |
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Once he became established, Gilbert was the stage director for his plays and operas and had strong opinions on how they should best be performed. |
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However, he no longer needed to turn out multiple plays each year, as he had done before. |
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Similarly, Gilbert had written several plays at the behest of comic actor Ned Sothern. |
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While Jonny Greenwood plays most lead guitar parts, O'Brien makes use of effects units to create ambient effects. |
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Like Morris, the Set were fans of the poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson, and would meet together to recite the plays of William Shakespeare. |
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Ireland also plays Intercontinental Cup matches at the Woodvale Road ground. |
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It plays a prominent role in the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, and in 2005 joined the World Trade Organization. |
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Urban radio generally only plays English music, though there also exist a number of vernacular radio stations. |
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Kenya is represented by Lucas Onyango as a professional rugby league player who plays with Oldham Roughyeds. |
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Nijmegen or just NEC, short for Nijmegen Eendracht Combinatie, which plays at the 12,500 seat Stadion de Goffert. |
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The team is composed mostly of players from Mexico and plays from February to July in the Municipal Auditorium. |
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Brazil's national development bank plays an important role for the country's economic growth. |
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Published editions of medieval poetry by John Barbour and Robert Henryson and the plays of David Lyndsay all gained a new audience. |
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The town's second football club, Clachnacuddin, plays in the Highland League. |
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However, attempts to ban folk plays were more leniently applied and less successful that once assumed. |
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Voltaire wrote between fifty and sixty plays, including a few unfinished ones. |
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Despite being located in England, the club plays in the Scottish football league system. |
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Arthur's Seat plays a prominent role in Scottish writer James Hogg's 1824 novel The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner. |
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The club plays in the East of Scotland Cricket Association and is based in Murieston. |
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Aleksander Fredro, whose fables, prose, and especially plays belong to the canon of Polish literature. |
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The Great Highland Bagpipe plays a role as both a solo and ensemble instrument. |
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He has also written plays and screenplays, and directed several short films. |
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Duffy is also a playwright, and has had plays performed at the Liverpool Playhouse and the Almeida Theatre in London. |
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Professional footballers coming from the region also form the Brittany national football team which sometimes plays with national teams. |
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The United States plays Europe in the Ryder Cup and an International Team representing the Rest of the World in the Presidents Cup. |
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Agriculture remains important to the area, but tourism plays an increasing role in the local economy. |
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The fungus also plays a role in the solubilization of heavy metal sulfides. |
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Silver plays a certain role in mythology and has found various usage as a metaphor and in folklore. |
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Edward's relationship with Gaveston inspired Christopher Marlowe's 1592 play Edward II, along with other plays, films, novels and media. |
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An important aspect in the statement of the rules is the distinction between reviewable and nonreviewable plays. |
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He serves as the primary channel of communication between the two nations, and plays an important role in treaty negotiations. |
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The threat of major earthquakes plays a large role in the city's infrastructure development. |
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Geology, a major academic discipline, also plays a role in geotechnical engineering. |
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In Irish mythology, a creature called the Salmon of Knowledge plays key role in the tale The Boyhood Deeds of Fionn. |
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A series of festivals is organised in the city, including mystery plays, a summer music festival and a literature festival. |
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Munster Rugby plays half of its home matches in the Pro14 at Musgrave Park in Ballyphehane. |
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Although located within the Munster jurisdiction, the club plays in the Leinster Senior League. |
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The actor Kunal Nayyar plays the character of Raj Koothrappali in the popular US sitcom, The Big Bang Theory. |
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The flag of Saint David often plays a central role in the celebrations and can be seen flying throughout Wales. |
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There is little industry other than farming, so tourism plays an important part in the county's economy. |
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Medieval romance in particular plays with this process of turning myth into literature. |
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The Dublin GAA team plays most of their home league hurling games at Parnell Park. |
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In addition, each team plays two further derby fixtures against teams from the same nation, but in the opposite conference. |
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However, the club currently plays in England in the Southern Football League Premier Division. |
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His grandson, Jake Charles, currently plays for Stalybridge Celtic, and has represented Wales at youth level. |
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The club is based in Cardiff and plays most of its home games at Sophia Gardens, which is located on the bank of the River Taff. |
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The show's theme tune plays over this monologue and the additional intertitle. |
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In May 2011, the BBC Radio Drama newsletter announced that a further three Torchwood radio plays had entered production. |
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Seafood plays a major role in the cuisine of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. |
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Avial is a widely eaten vegetarian dish in the state and plays a major role in sadya. |
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Imperial, royal and noble preference also plays a role in the change of Chinese cuisines. |
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The plays originated as simple tropes, verbal embellishments of liturgical texts, and slowly became more elaborate. |
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By the end of the 15th century, the practice of acting these plays in cycles on festival days was established in several parts of Europe. |
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In given cycles, the plays came to be sponsored by the newly emerging Medieval craft guilds. |
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Perhaps the most famous of the mystery plays, at least to modern readers and audiences, are those of Wakefield. |
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The dramas of the Elizabethan and Jacobean periods were developed out of mystery plays. |
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There are rare dramatists, notably George Bernard Shaw, who have had little preference as to whether their plays were performed or read. |
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Satire plays are generally one of the most popular forms of comedy, and often considered to be their own genre entirely. |
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Examples of historical plays include Friedrich Schiller's Demetrius and William Shakespeare's King John. |
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Comedians can be dated back to 425 BC, when Aristophanes, a comic author and playwright, wrote ancient comedic plays. |
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The cricket club plays its home games at its Treleet ground on Upper Lamphey Road, opposite the rugby club. |
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But Pope Brock plays him in such a one-note key of gulping and spitting and snickering cynicism that the spectacle becomes numbing. |
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Technetium plays no natural biological role and is not normally found in the human body. |
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In the 18th century, playwright Carlo Goldoni created full written plays, many portraying the middle class of his day. |
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The related matter of the length and strength of the four seasons plays a role in which plants that naturally can grow at various places. |
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It plays an important role in supplying heat to the polar regions, and thus in sea ice regulation. |
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The convection between the relatively warm water and cold air in the winter plays an important role in the Arctic climate. |
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All together, we can conclude that osmobalancing plays a crucial role in caspofungin adaptation. |
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Generally, topography plays a big part in how fast runoff will reach a river. |
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The variety of theatrical and poetic styles, even in a single cycle of plays, could be remarkable. |
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Izzy lays down some big chords while Slash plays the song's banjo breakdown of a theme. |
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In addition to burlesque plays, operas and burlettas, the Italians invented two other species. of drama, pastoral and rustic plays. |
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Am I as a child perhaps, chasing a flown cageling, who among the branches free plays and peeps at the offered cage? |
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The oxidant also plays a crucial role for the selective Pd-catalyzed carbocyclizations. |
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Paul tries to lead us out of the catastrophization of childhood but too often plays right into it. |
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Chamber plays became popular in the early 20th century, with leading exponents being Max Reinhardt and August Strindberg. |
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The digital channelizer, which is used to split the received signal into a number of sub-channels, plays an important role in SDR systems. |
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At the conclusion of this part, Eric, who plays Jesus and is now a soldier, captures Violet in the forest, fating her to a concentration camp. |
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The readiness of the child to be sacrificed at his parent's command plays a great role in the development of filioparental relationships. |
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Then he walks out and plays a fifteen-minute encore doing nothing but bumps and grinds and humps and tongue flickings. |
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There at the fording in the little boat the unknown man plays upon his lute. |
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This is especially true of the Galoshins plays where his fixation on numbers and line lengths led him to mistake the nature of the play. |
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Gene Kelly plays D'Artagnan as an irrepressible, tongue-in-cheek Gascon who is knee-deep in gory swordplay. |
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James is such a grognard, he only plays the original edition of Dungeons and Dragons. |
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Georgie Fame plays all types of keyboards including electric piano, organ, and Hammond organ. |
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Only two exploration wells have been drilled so far, and there remain numerous undrilled targets in tilted fault block plays. |
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North of the North Atlantic Gyre, the cyclonic North Atlantic Subpolar Gyre plays a key role in climate variability. |
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The island has produced some notable cricketers, such as Danny Briggs, who plays county cricket for Hampshire. |
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Dowling says that most performances of Chekhov plays have been filtered through translations into a British highborn sensibility. |
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Setup plays can also be made when you do not have the needed letter but believe your opponent doesn't know the hook owing to its obscurity. |
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Shakespeare's plays contain several tales relating to these legendary kings, such as King Lear and Cymbeline. |
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According to the historian Norman Davies, the plays were constrained by the political and religious requirements of Tudor England. |
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The era is most famous for theatre, as William Shakespeare and many others composed plays that broke free of England's past style of theatre. |
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His plays have been translated into every major living language and are performed more often than those of any other playwright. |
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His early plays were primarily comedies and histories, which are regarded as some of the best work ever produced in these genres. |
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Many of his plays were published in editions of varying quality and accuracy during his lifetime. |
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Shakespeare continued to act in his own and other plays after his success as a playwright. |
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His last three plays were collaborations, probably with John Fletcher, who succeeded him as the house playwright of the King's Men. |
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Textual evidence also supports the view that several of the plays were revised by other writers after their original composition. |
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Shakespeare collaborated on two further surviving plays, Henry VIII and The Two Noble Kinsmen, probably with John Fletcher. |
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The Globe opened in autumn 1599, with Julius Caesar one of the first plays staged. |
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Burbage played the leading role in the first performances of many of Shakespeare's plays, including Richard III, Hamlet, Othello, and King Lear. |
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Shakespeare's first plays were written in the conventional style of the day. |
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The blank verse of his early plays is quite different from that of his later ones. |
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This technique releases the new power and flexibility of the poetry in plays such as Julius Caesar and Hamlet. |
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These include two operas by Giuseppe Verdi, Otello and Falstaff, whose critical standing compares with that of the source plays. |
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The authors of the Parnassus plays at St John's College, Cambridge numbered him with Chaucer, Gower, and Spenser. |
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The Expressionists in Germany and the Futurists in Moscow mounted productions of his plays. |
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Entertainment included concerts, films, plays and books from local libraries. |
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Each year New Orleans plays host to the Sugar Bowl and the New Orleans Bowl college football games, and Shreveport hosts the Independence Bowl. |
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In Sweden, for instance, case law arguably plays a more important role than in some of the continental civil law systems. |
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The Sovereign plays no formal role in the disestablished Church in Wales or Church of Ireland. |
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Rather than the large house, though, Belle Isle plays host to a folly which is used by the Water Witches in the area. |
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George Bancroft stars as ruthless stock manipulator Jim Bradford, who plays his customers for suckers and laughs all the way to the bank. |
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Founded in 1881, the Chichester Symphony Orchestra plays an important part in maintaining the classical music tradition of the area. |
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The club has men's and ladies' sections and plays a mixture of competitive and friendly matches. |
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Loan activity by banks plays a fundamental role in determining the money supply. |
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The burning of fossil fuels plays the major role in the current episode of global warming. |
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She plays on the Ladies European Tour, and was a member of the victorious European Team in the 2011 Solheim Cup. |
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Most important is the Ordinalia, a cycle of three mystery plays, Origo Mundi, Passio Christi and Resurrexio Domini. |
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Cornwall produced a substantial number of passion plays such as the Ordinalia during the Middle Ages. |
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Puppetry and shadow plays were also a favoured form of entertainment in past centuries, a famous one being Wayang from Indonesia. |
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The school has numerous sports facilities, and sport plays a major part in the everyday lives of the boys. |
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Robin Hood is known to have appeared in a number of other lost and extant Elizabethan plays. |
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The backdrop of Saint Mary's Abbey at York plays a central role in the Gest as the poor knight who Robin aids owes money to the abbot. |
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Trade guilds began to perform plays, usually religiously based, and often dealing with a biblical story that referenced their profession. |
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In the British Isles, plays were produced in some 127 different towns during the Middle Ages. |
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Mummers plays are often performed in the streets near Christmas to celebrate the New Year and the coming springtime. |
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The earliest evidence of mummers' plays as they are known today is from the mid to late 18th century. |
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In some parts of Britain and Ireland the plays are traditionally performed on or near Plough Monday. |
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Mummers plays were performed in Philadelphia in the 18th century as part of a wide variety of working class street celebrations around Christmas. |
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As she sits and plays with Damien, she feels her legs start to tremble from the effort. Her knees seem to disappear. |
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There are two known instances where saint's lives were adapted into vernacular plays in Britain. |
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Latin literature includes the essays, histories, poems, plays, and other writings written in the Latin language. |
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Plautus scattered songs through his plays and increased the humor with puns and wisecracks, plus comic actions by the actors. |
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Terence's plays were more polite in tone, dealing with domestic situations. |
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Traditionally, editors of Shakespeare's plays have divided them into five acts. |
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It was among Shakespeare's most popular plays during his lifetime and along with Hamlet, is one of his most frequently performed plays. |
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In Shakespeare's day, plays were most often performed at noon or in the afternoon in broad daylight. |
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This forced the playwright to use words to create the illusion of day and night in his plays. |
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Romeo and Juliet ranks with Hamlet as one of Shakespeare's most performed plays. |
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Macbeth has been adapted into plays dealing with the political and cultural concerns of many nations. |
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He was preoccupied with the question of whether fairies should be depicted in theatrical plays, since they did not exist. |
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They are, in his view, ignorant men who compose and act in plays merely for financial reward. |
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Marlowe's plays are known for the use of blank verse and their overreaching protagonists. |
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Marlowe's plays were enormously successful, thanks in part, no doubt, to the imposing stage presence of Edward Alleyn. |
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The influence of these plays on European drama was largely the reason for the interest in Kyd among German scholars in the nineteenth century. |
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Perhaps partly as a result of this new career, Jonson gave up writing plays for the public theatres for a decade. |
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He later told Drummond that he had made less than two hundred pounds on all his plays together. |
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He resumed writing regular plays in the 1620s, but these are not considered among his best. |
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Lyly must also be considered and remembered as a primary influence on the plays of William Shakespeare, and in particular the romantic comedies. |
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Lyly's play Love's Metamorphosis is a large influence on Love's Labour's Lost, and Gallathea is a possible source for other plays. |
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Shakespeare wrote plays in a variety of genres, including histories, tragedies, comedies and the late romances, or tragicomedies. |
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Charles spent his time attending plays in France, and he developed a taste for Spanish plays. |
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The plays were, however, tragic in the strictest definition, even though they were not necessarily sad. |
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The plays themselves were in a version that Johnson felt was closest to the original, based on his analysis of the manuscript editions. |
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Shakespeare's plays, in particular, had multiple editions, each of which contained errors caused by the printing process. |
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Chesterton wrote around 80 books, several hundred poems, some 200 short stories, 4000 essays, and several plays. |
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Most of the plays were comedies, which suggests how Austen's satirical gifts were cultivated. |
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For the next year he was occupied writing reviews for plays, films and books for The Listener, Time and Tide and New Adelphi. |
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Meanwhile, he was still writing reviews of books and plays and at this time met the novelist Anthony Powell. |
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He writes plays and poems of rare spirit and beauty about our old Irish mythology. |
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Several books of plays appeared in 1927, including A Book of Little Plays and The Play's the Thing with the illustrator Alfred Bestall. |
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Their extensive travelling had a strong influence on her writing, as some type of transportation often plays a part in her murderer's schemes. |
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Twenty one of Pratchett's novels have been adapted as plays by Stephen Briggs and published in book form. |
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Elgar's life and music have inspired works of literature including the novel Gerontius and several plays. |
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Baines, whose wife is far away in England living a separate life, is taken by the transformation in Ada when she plays her piano. |
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It becomes clear that he procured the piano not for his own interest in music, but because he likes who Ada becomes when she plays. |
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Despite Ada having her piano back, she ultimately finds herself missing Baines watching her as she plays. |
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During the 1950s and 1960s, many plays were produced in theatre clubs, to evade the censorship then exercised by the Lord Chamberlain's Office. |
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The works staged are predominantly musicals, classic and modern straight plays, and comedy performances. |
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These theatres stage a high proportion of straight drama, Shakespeare, other classic plays and premieres of new plays by leading playwrights. |
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Middleton and Manuel note that this definition has problems because multiple listens or plays of the same song or piece are not counted. |
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For many artists and bands, visual imagery plays a large role in heavy metal. |
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The leader of the first violin section, commonly called the concertmaster, also plays an important role in leading the musicians. |
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Where a solo part is called for in a string section, the section leader invariably plays that part. |
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He plays retired thief John Robie, who becomes the prime suspect for a spate of robberies in the Riviera. |
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Over the next four years Olivier spent much of his time working as a producer, presenting plays rather than directing or acting in them. |
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In 1955 Olivier and Leigh were invited to play leading roles in three plays at the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, Stratford. |
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In his decade in charge of the National, Olivier acted in thirteen plays and directed eight. |
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From the late 1960s he found new plays that suited him, by authors including Alan Bennett, David Storey and Harold Pinter. |
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He played a wide range of parts in classics and modern plays, greatly increasing his technical abilities in the process. |
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He decided that he must form his own company to play Shakespeare and other classic plays in the West End. |
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In the second half of the 1950s Gielgud's career was in the doldrums as far as new plays were concerned. |
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He remained in demand as a Shakespearean, but there were few new plays suitable for him. |
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He made many other recordings, both before and after this, including ten Shakespeare plays. |
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He appeared in more than fifty more plays on television over the next four decades. |
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Sellers portrayed Sir Guy Grand, an eccentric billionaire who plays elaborate practical jokes on people. |
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Spike Milligan plays a prophet, ignored because his acolytes are chasing after Brian. |
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Cumberbatch featured in Michael Dobbs' play, The Turning Point, which aired as one of a series of TV plays broadcast live on Sky Arts. |
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He joined the Nuffield Studio, getting involved in designing and producing plays. |
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Mystery plays were presented on the porch of the cathedrals or by strolling players on feast days. |
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Mystery plays and miracle plays are among the earliest formally developed plays in medieval Europe. |
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There are four complete or nearly complete extant English biblical collections of plays from the late medieval period. |
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Besides the Middle English drama, there are three surviving plays in Cornish known as the Ordinalia. |
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In his final period, Shakespeare turned to romance or tragicomedy and completed four major plays, including The Tempest. |
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He went on to become the most significant London playwright of the late 18th century with plays like The School for Scandal and The Critic. |
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The tale plays with logic, giving the story lasting popularity with adults as well as with children. |
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In World Cup years, an abbreviated tournament is held in which each team plays the others only once. |
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As such, each player plays doubles and singles over the course of a match, with the singles player always serving. |
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One Northern Irish club, Derry City, plays its football outside of the United Kingdom in the Republic of Ireland football league system. |
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The PGA European Tour is headquartered in England, and the main European Tour plays more events in the United Kingdom than in any other country. |
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Germany plays its home matches among various stadiums, in rotation, around the country. |
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The points totals are reset to 0 and each team plays 7 games each, playing every other team once. |
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Davis himself now plays upon this image and says it helped him gain acceptance from the public. |
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Henry II appears as a character in several modern plays and films. |
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In this period plays were almost the only popular show in Wallonia. |
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Winona Ryder plays a female auton. The character Distephano names her as an auton, loosely defining the term as being designed by androids. Machines manufactured by machines. |
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Kings are stock characters in plays as well as slaves and braggadocii. |
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It wasformed in 1947 and it plays in the Welsh Rugby Union leagues. |
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There is a widespread belief that Brenda plays no part in politics. This is not entirely true. For instance, she has very strong feelings on Rhodesia. |
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He is best remembered for his epigrams and plays, his novel The Picture of Dorian Gray, as well as the circumstances of his imprisonment and early death. |
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In Seneca's plays such scenes were only acted by the characters. |
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Now he told me that when the coach had diagrammed plays, he would move to the back of the huddle, in the hope that the coach wouldn't call his number. |
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The campus plays host to frequent fashion and art exhibitions. |
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Over the next five years they staged fourteen of Shaw's plays. |
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It was followed by one of Shaw's most successful plays, Pygmalion, written in 1912 and staged in Vienna the following year, and in Berlin shortly afterwards. |
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The home stadium of Berwick Rangers is Shielfield Park and the club currently plays in Scottish League Two, the fourth tier of the Scottish football league system. |
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Perhaps more than any other figure in the Oedipus Trilogy, Creon, Oedipus' brother-in-law, seems to be a very different character in each of the plays. |
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The disease... plays havoc with mood, personality, perception and thought, and can require constant adjustments by friends and relatives just to keep life on an even keel. |
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Critics found the five plays strikingly uneven in quality and invention. |
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Sometimes feederism is practiced within relationships and sometimes it is practiced alone. Respondents emphasize the importance that fantasy plays within feederism. |
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While there, he cultivated friendships with Elizabeth Pigot and her brother, John, with whom he staged two plays for the entertainment of the community. |
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While Percy composed a series of major poems, Mary wrote the autobiographical novel Matilda, the historical novel Valperga, and the plays Proserpine and Midas. |
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She was nominated for the 1974 Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play for the plays, Chemin de Fer and The Visit, and won a Drama Desk Award in 1976 for Habeas Corpus. |
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Mr. Pinchot, wearing a long-haired fright wig, plays a guileless nut named Bobby McGee who has been struck by lightning and turned into a psychic. |
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In 1944 nine Shaw plays were staged in London, including Arms and the Man with Ralph Richardson, Laurence Olivier, Sybil Thorndike and Margaret Leighton in the leading roles. |
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The most famous plays of the Towneley collection are attributed to the Wakefield Master, an anonymous playwright who wrote in the fifteenth century. |
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Yet the implications of implicitly genderizing ethical positions in these particular plays may be even more far reaching than it appears on the surface. |
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As in earlier decades, the shorter plays were generally comedies, some historical and others addressing various political and social preoccupations of the author. |
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Nevertheless, the question of who plays the key role is disputed as there are different theories on European Integration focusing on different actors and agency. |
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Weather plays an important role in the occurrence of rare birds. |
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He championed Ibsen's plays when many theatregoers regarded them as outrageous, and his 1891 book Quintessence of Ibsenism remained a classic throughout the twentieth century. |
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She plays the piano, as was revealed in a Channel 4 News interview with Jon Snow, on 18 September 2015, during which she played theme music from the film Titanic. |
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From the 14th century they were used as processional songs, particularly at Advent, Easter and Christmas, and to accompany religious mystery plays. |
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Purcell also composed for five other plays within the same year. |
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In modern times, the scope of philosophy has become limited to more generic or abstract inquiries, such as ethics and metaphysics, in which logic plays a major role. |
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Today, agriculture still plays a part in the economic life of Stirling, given its focus at the heart of a large rural area, but to a much lesser extent than previously. |
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Chesney Hughes, is a West Indian cricketer who plays for Derbyshire. |
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Two other plays of the Elizabethan era predated Shakespeare's work. |
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