It is another of those tiny groups of dots that punctuate the vast expanse of the Pacific Ocean. |
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He tends to favor cut-up dirty 70s funk guitar samples that he uses mostly to punctuate his chunky beats. |
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At Nili's bedside, she reads her latest novel, extracts of which punctuate the text. |
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Detail shots featuring blow-ups of these reflections punctuate the transcript like posters in a man-hunt for the missing photographer. |
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The thing that distinguishes this new play is the twist ending, which does punctuate the show with a note of originality. |
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The trick in overcoming this is to punctuate the display with patches of darker, richer colour such as dark pink, magenta or deep red. |
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I punctuate each word with slaps of my left palm against the chockstone, as tears well in my eyes. |
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Vary your tone of voice to punctuate important points, and keep it moving to capture interest. |
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We're the people who catch errors, clean up copy, answer questions, massage egos, and punctuate sentences. |
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An average director would have to punctuate this scene with music or a cutaway or anything to distract us from the stark image. |
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With her legs curled under her on a sofa, she is relaxed enough to punctuate the conversation with sudden gusts of wild laughter. |
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Rebellions and armed unrest did not so much punctuate as define the history of colonial British America. |
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Small box balls punctuate the beds, interplanted with old-fashioned rugosa roses, irises and silver-leaved pinks. |
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Intermittently enjoyable segments punctuate the generally underwhelming monotony of this scatological would-be musical. |
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But those watchful, pale-blue eyes and the tufty chevrons that punctuate their brows are easier to spot. |
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More rolling piano and offbeat horns punctuate an almost New Orleans feel in the chorus. |
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Untreated cells displayed bright perinuclear and punctuate fluorescence, an indication of the accumulation of the dye in the mitochondria. |
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To punctuate that thought, she let rip with a six-round burst, the rounds impacting the windshield. |
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These people seem to travel constantly, fetching up at the key events that punctuate the shifting circuit. |
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Commands and injunctions, as I suggested, punctuate the text from the outset. |
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I have to pick through and revise the text, space it, and punctuate it, to make it readable and suitable for use. |
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Rustic humors punctuate and leaven the boxlike patterns of the plot, which gathers itself before each action as if for an aria. |
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The bleak landscape is shaped by a series of cliffs, terraces and expanses of limestone pavement, with little else to punctuate the view. |
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Her hips punctuate the bass tala, her hands move like the suvit's serpentine melody, the rest of her dances with the flute and govind. |
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The gentle splashings of two huge terrapins punctuate the tides of sound coming out of the stereo's speakers. |
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To punctuate his statement, he yanked the last offending hair out and set the tweezers down on his dresser. |
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Previous issues have included quotes from the visiting critics, sometimes simply to punctuate the layout typographically. |
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The soundtrack is dominated by the rich buzz of blowflies, the same winged buzz that punctuate later scenes set at the garbage dump. |
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Camberley is another one of those familiar dormitory towns that punctuate the south-east of England. |
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The pint-size vesper sparrows darting in front of the truck seem to punctuate his point. |
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Bastian puts a contemporary spin on classic soul with beat and horn stabs that punctuate her retro vocal. |
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Seven engaged columns, each painted totem-fashion with two gargantuan faces, punctuate the hallucinogenic scene. |
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The seven daily offices punctuate a way of life regulated by prayer, while the passing of the seasons marks time. |
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The room grew silent and the howl of the midnight wind was the only sound to punctuate the tableau. |
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Small plants at left, clods of earth at center, and arcs of grass at right punctuate the narrow ground. |
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Attempts at singing punctuate the record, and though Mos Def's technique is unconventional and amateurish, his efforts still manage to remain somewhat charming. |
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Sunken courtyards, which will be colonised, punctuate the building and create pleasantly lit corridors, giving natural light to most practice and teaching rooms. |
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The acreage is not exactly sylvan: a few mango trees punctuate a landscape of rock and dust. |
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Rice-Oxley will not only be an authorial presence on stage though, as the accompanying music is a recording of her singing Latin phrases to punctuate the English text. |
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If you habitually speak at the same rate, you need a variety of ways to punctuate your speech. |
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Productions of a few artists and craftspeople punctuate the presentation and enrich the discourse through unique and sensitive approaches. |
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Finally and above all, the meetings, which punctuate the Meeting process, provide an opportunity for dialogue in three different dimensions. |
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Statistics from the U.S. Census Report and quirky audience participation sections punctuate sociological debates, scuffles and tormented soliloquies by the characters. |
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As the pipe is pushed along the floor the objects turn over and move together and apart, while the metal bar and aluminum objects punctuate the movement with a rich sound. |
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Sober commemorative events, including one on the battlefield of the Marne, will punctuate the year. |
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It was an almost schizophrenic existence, and a few bizarre remnants of this doublethink still punctuate my life here. |
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Brilliant pink and blue splotches of paint punctuate the surface. |
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In sustaining rhythmic tension without compromise or wayward rubatos, Mr Rose takes advantage of those larger intervals to effectively punctuate the music's rhythmic profile. |
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By arriving at the Throat, they discover fourteen oratorical babies which punctuate the way driving to the church. |
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Everything happens as if the traditional evenings that punctuate the cultural life of the villages were passing before one on the small screen. |
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As students, they are grim-faced and punctuate their training with odd, guttural sounds, and as instructors they tend to be intensely rank-conscious and overbearing. |
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These manic episodes, however, only punctuate a life that is most fundamentally pathetic. |
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Crises and turning points punctuate the life story of any person. |
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Oil rigs and gas flares punctuate the horizon: his oil, 3.2 billion barrels in proven reserves. |
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Some 30 company-wide agreements punctuate the life of the group and in 2007, preliminary work began on a new retirement plan. |
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The inflammatory vocabulary that used to punctuate asylum debates was gone. |
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At each point, the audience was eager to punctuate his rhetoric with cheers and applause. |
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Several checkpoints may punctuate a journey between cities that would otherwise be less than an hour's drive apart. |
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Here the composer presents himself in an unbridled fury, the coruscating arpeggios that punctuate the melodic phrases suggesting fist-shaking. |
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This is, after all, a film which takes the business of war and genocide as its central themes, but which manages to punctuate events with some much-needed light relief. |
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In any case, it always pays to punctuate the dialogue with carefully-worded summaries. |
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Laid out around the three transit wells that punctuate Les Quatre Temps shopping centre, this bestiary offers the passer-by a digression into a world of marvel. |
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However these iconographic landmarks dissolve into a mass of coloured splashes and black lines that punctuate the image rather than describing any forms. |
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Kun Qu songs are accompanied by a bamboo flute, a small drum, wooden clappers, gongs and cymbals, all used to punctuate actions and emotions on stage. |
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The glamorous names that punctuate the history of summitry Versailles, Yalta, Potsdam, Rome, Nice betray the weaknesses of summiteers for sun, sea, sand and palaces. |
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The influence of his Brazilian experience can be heard in the rumba rhythms that punctuate most tracks, some of which are sung in Portuguese and French. |
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Those remarks punctuate the utter disdain of our arrogant counterparts across the way for our serving members of the armed forces and our veterans. |
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They must not be confused with nightmares, which are a normal phenomenon that punctuate the child's psychological development and the difficulties that they meet. |
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Unfortunately, the major financial scandals which continue to punctuate relations between Russia and international finance, and a number of projects involving the international community, clearly illustrate as much. |
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Marx believed that increasingly severe crises would punctuate this cycle of growth, collapse and more growth. |
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The Wall Street Crash of 1929 served to punctuate the end of the previous era, as The Great Depression set in. |
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Gargoyle-like snake heads of Quetzalcoatl, the plumed serpent deity of the Aztec, encircle and punctuate the second basin. |
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The gray autumn clouds masking the light separated for a moment, and a ray of sun appeared, as if to punctuate the hope reflected in their conversation. |
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Just as Kandinsky's Compositions punctuate the successive phases of his career as a painter, except that the Babel paintings are themselves part of a more or less extensive series of works in their own right. |
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This instruction outlines the contents of the opinions and decisions that punctuate the progress of the studies, and clarifies the roles of the many people involved. |
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Silk touches the lives of rural Chinese in more material ways, too, in the form of the silk clothes, quilts, umbrellas, fans and flowers that punctuate everyday life. |
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Her interventions will punctuate the conversation that follows. |
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Perhaps it was because he could punctuate any story you told with a great punch line or an even greater laugh at your punch line. |
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Metasternum between middle coxae finely, shallowly punctuate near coxal margins. |
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One such portrait, which hints at the surrealism that would punctuate his later films, features a ballerina called Frances Pidgeon, wearing a hip bath. |
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Abstention from alcohol will most frequently abolish the attacks of painful acute pancreatitis which punctuate the progress of chronic alcoholic pancreatitis. |
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Never far from his computer and the grib files which punctuate his day, the skipper of Groupama 3 is keen to get down to business and return to the salty taste of the sea spray. |
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He even went so far as to punctuate the scoop with an exclamation point! |
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The red specks that punctuate this rhythmical bird ballet, and the round eyes that seem to glare at you with strange insistency, convey a weird sense of unspoken threat. |
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By a roll of the dice, certain real-life events will punctuate the progress of the students and will have an effect on the economic development and occupation of the territory. |
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Patches of scrubland occupying close to 7 ha punctuate its 14 kilometres. |
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Wearing come-hither names like Provencal Vert, these lighter shades of green offered buyers a grace note of summer color to punctuate assortments. |
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British style now prefers to punctuate according to the sense, in which punctuation marks only appear inside quotation marks if they were there in the original. |
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