The melody is tender but not unduly saccharine and is played here with more concern for easeful relaxation than poignancy. |
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Mine was a Bearded Silver Muskelunge of surpassing beauty and poignancy with mica-chip eyes and a hint of rakish scintillant teeth. |
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There seemed a particular poignancy in the lives of boys and young men being crushed out at a moment of supreme joy. |
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This year the lament and longing for the South, now standing so battered by Hurricane Katrina, strikes me with unusual poignancy. |
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This has far more beauty and poetry and poignancy and soul than we were expecting from the property. |
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The album isn't bad because it isn't distressing or painful, which one would expect from poignancy. |
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What gives this wretched episode extra poignancy is the fact that the bandit commander's life had been saved by the Red Cross a year earlier. |
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She delivered the long despairing monologue that closes the work with great poignancy. |
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His public funeral and the later memorial evening of performances by the company are described with heartbreaking poignancy. |
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There's a sense of poignancy to her performance, but the vocal flatness eventually becomes problematic. |
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Such images resonate with some poignancy, with the personal situation of many commentators. |
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The writing is her usual blend of charming whimsy, heartbreaking poignancy and sometimes impenetrable surrealism. |
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The world's very vividness and poignancy results from the momentariness of our experience. |
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The film veers in its perfectly-plotted course from absolute hilarity to extreme poignancy. |
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They have a perfect blend of humour, poignancy, pathos and a social message. |
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He thus makes something that might otherwise be a forgettable eyesore a fantasyland of beautiful poignancy. |
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Her subjects may revolve around love, loss, and guilt but poignancy rarely tips over into plangency. |
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This figure's weak chin, hunched shoulders and humble demeanor contribute to the poignancy and humanity of the busts. |
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The raunchiness of the former stands in marked contrast to the poignancy of the latter. |
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If anything the sheer poignancy and compelling simplicity of this vision of our existence deepens with age. |
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That poignancy cannot be recaptured now, and the choreography's mass yearnings and grievings feel uncomfortably religiose. |
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Though despair at his material sometimes makes him bellow, he gives a bravura performance that transmutes pointlessness into poignancy. |
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Owen also provides plenty of poignancy, and does so with admirable unobtrusiveness. |
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Eddie's failings are lent an almost intolerable poignancy by his former chauvinistic notions of patriotism. |
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I use harmonics for effect, colour and poignancy as well as their ethereal tone texture. |
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Featuring solo parts for horn, piccolo, and clarinet, this is the one movement in the work that thrives on poignancy and understatement. |
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As a family physician I have always been impressed by the poignancy of the plight of the infertile couple. |
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It added a certain poignancy to the notes and to the conversations that I had with colleagues in Great Britain. |
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But what makes her special is the way she can shift so smoothly to gut-wrenching poignancy. |
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Either way, part of the tragedy and poignancy of polio is its preferential spread to babies and toddlers. |
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The drive to find the cause and cure of autism rivals the urgency and poignancy to find the cause and cure of cancer. |
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It may be a history lesson but it is sure to portray with poignancy the humour, hurt, heartbreak and pain that they didn't teach us in the classroom. |
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At 78, Schmidt is looking for redemption and cleansing, and, like DiMaggio, comedy and poignancy achieve a perfect balance. |
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His sensuous music is so full of charm and nostalgic poignancy that I feel it deserves to be heard by a wider musical community than just by flautists. |
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Descriptive words that convey Gabi's confusion, hurt and disbelief create the poignancy of this tale. |
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The former Poland winger was dazzled by the poignancy of the emblem for the tournament which the neighbouring nations will co-host. |
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Flower Portraits: The Life Cycle of Beauty is a rumination on the poignancy, mystery and beauty of life itself. |
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This issue takes on particular poignancy when discussing the Justice system. |
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This does not reduce the greatness of his last works, in fact it adds poignancy to their touching, introspective intimacy. |
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But the third movement is a wondrously plaintive Adagio in G minor, which gives the whole work an unexpected poignancy and importance. |
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That question arose with particular poignancy in the course of the Homolka-Bernardo trials. |
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In this situation competing for the production capacities of Omsktransmash loses poignancy somewhat. |
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These images lose none of their poignancy or power in this familiarity. |
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His is an incomplete ethical analysis, because it simply isn't true that the existence and poignancy of demand for a practice can, in and of itself, justify the legitimacy of the practice. |
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The programme aims to present milestones from the history of cinema and art, whose artistic poignancy remains unaffected by time for the pleasure of contemporary audiences. |
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This is what explains the poignancy of Longfellow's epic poem about the tragic destiny of Évangéline, who was separated from the man she loved at the time of deportation and spent her life trying to find him. |
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Learning about the importance of these two influential people may give a poignancy to your trip. It's also a great way to feel connected to this beautiful place. |
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Although the mood of the women's hospital tends to be happy, with 8000 deliveries annually, the presence of some very ill children gives poignancy to the mood of the children's hospital. |
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Once edgily shocking, the show now feels rich with pathos and poignancy. |
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And the last moments of this finely-shaped evening caught the poignancy of his rough burial on the island of Skyros. |
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The events and meetings, organized in collaboration with partners, were characterized by poignancy, stimulating exchange, networking and, above all, a spirit of solidarity-all testifying to the importance of the Award. |
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But he's still managed to cram in all the laughs, poignancy and downright freakiness that we've come to expect from his projects. |
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But with Rocky pushing 60, feeling unloved and just aching for an ear to listen to his palooka wisdom, the poignancy factor is hard to resist. |
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Such contemporaneousness contributes to the poignancy of the production, which is directed by Joe Grifasi with schoolboy relish and designed by Cyrus E. Newitt with the makeshift ingenuity of a dinner made of leftovers. |
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There is poignancy, too, when Lambert sings Who Wants to Live Forever under lighting that makes him look like a ghost and in the touchingly warm reception given to May's achingly sincere Love of My Life, for Mercury. |
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In this entrancing bittersweet mix of comedy and poignancy, Axel shifts from past to present and between voiceover narrative and dialogue with considerable skill. |
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This story takes on even greater poignancy when one learns in the afterword that Pitt Polder is a real place, and that the greater sandhill crane population there currently numbers between 13 and 19 birds only. |
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Where the larger images remind of us of the bleakness and poignancy of the soldier's experience, the smaller one emphasizes the importance of involving today's youth in remembrance. |
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However, this year the holiday weekend has a special poignancy, because the number of people who can remember what happened 70 years ago is shrinking fast. |
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Time has not eradicated the poignancy and quotability of these words. |
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It is not altogether uncommon to hear a reader whose heart has been desolated by the poignancy of a narrative complain that the writer is unemotional. |
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In the darker sound, it sinks in silence, and in the middle section it splendidly accelerates, so as to chime with the poignancy of the Baroquely wistful piety. |
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