I checked every computation, retraced every step, and reinvented every wheel. |
|
Following the collapse of white fish stocks like cod and haddock, the town has reinvented itself as the country's largest shellfish port. |
|
He also determinedly reinvented the notion of the auteur by fusing it with public relations and advertising. |
|
He reinvented a technique for the animation of live actors that had been used in the early days of French cinema for trick effects. |
|
Alan Ayckbourn, author of some 60 mostly memorable plays, has also reinvented space and time, geometry and chronometry. |
|
The unco guid, who held Scotland in thrall to the ducking-stool in times past, have reinvented themselves. |
|
Born in a railway boxcar in Illmo, MO, Jackson reinvented himself many times. |
|
Holmes and Watson have become cardboard variations on a theme, rather than reinvented characters. |
|
Sam Walton reinvented logistics, turning a five-and-dime into Wal-Mart Stores Inc, which draws almost 140 million shoppers a week. |
|
Imagine the network effects that will occur when your industry gets networked and rebuilt and reinvented. |
|
All manufacturing tools and processes must constantly be improved and reinvented to address shrinking dimensions and tighter tolerances. |
|
In short, they've reinvented their companies through a series of innovative maneuvers. |
|
By 2000, Pringle had reinvented the twinset again as a sleek, modern garment, a symbol of comfort and luxury. |
|
The building has been reinvented as a 22-screen cinema, one that will also include shops and restos. |
|
It's during that period of discovery, when cultural identities are being reinvented and reshuffled, that things look more ambiguous. |
|
They and their patrons reinvented the art of promotion and hype in part by attacking good taste and the stuffy elitism of the art world. |
|
Can it even be reinvented in the aftermath of the departure of two of the anchormen and the inevitable retirement of Peter? |
|
Masters of the prevailing zeitgeist, U2 have reinvented themselves more times than Bowie and Madonna put together. |
|
Then we reinvented them and called them city technology colleges then relabelled the bottle and called them city academies. |
|
Lindell was a pitcher turned outfielder turned knuckleballer who continually reinvented himself. |
|
|
Vintage bowling bags have been reinvented as women's accessories, from compacts to purses. |
|
But many of the reinvented firms have failed just as badly as many of the dot.coms. |
|
With his inventive sense of flattened, decorative form and composition, he has truly reinvented the still life, but he is also a master of whimsical erotica. |
|
As the decades passed, a clamorous tropical settlement reinvented itself as a spic-and-span outpost of the developed world. |
|
In 1994, Nagra reinvented the recorder by replacing the magnetic tape by a memory card. |
|
The short film presents how inhabitants of Hong Kong appropriate the city and notably the many alleyway which separate towers: reinvented spaces. |
|
It was reinterpreted by putting more emphasis on martyrdom and reinvented in modernist terms to challenge the Shah. |
|
Vegetal sky, multiplicities of use, and reinvented pleasures of city allow automobile territory to be re-conquered by the pedestrian. |
|
An urological surgeon from Lviv, in western Ukraine, he reinvented Svoboda as a broad protest vote. |
|
Like previous FLEXY winner Madonna, this now 41-year-old mother of three reinvented herself as a hardbody in the '90s, and she shows no signs of going soft. |
|
They link smaller government with reinvented civil services. |
|
Two palettes for a sixties look: the smoky eye is reinvented in shaded tones of green and of copper. |
|
But singles holidays are being reinvented for a sophisticated market, offering more thrills and glamour than ever before. |
|
Much of that reinvented product will be doing the kinds of things that you were talking about, provided the market supports it. |
|
This contract is constantly being renewed in theatrical street performances, where the terms of the encounter are repeatedly reinvented. |
|
Like them, throughout history people have invented and reinvented their social environment, their cultural milieu, their futures. |
|
Humankind's response will need to be constantly reinvented in ways that will no doubt require Governments to intensify their cooperation. |
|
They have been reinvented to be deeper, more striking even while they retain a touch of the traditional. |
|
Many scholars, philosophers and writers have reinvented and reformulated it in many different ways. |
|
This leads to certain products being reinvented and new tools being developed. |
|
|
Educated opinion in both countries was affected by a new demonological theory which reinvented the witch as a member of a conspiracy against Christendom. |
|
Lewis is retired, and Thain has reinvented himself as CEO of the reinvented lender cit Group. |
|
He has now reinvented himself as a radical stand-up with just enough charm and stagecraft to get away with an amazingly low ratio of jokes to running time. |
|
In the U.K.'s smash hit Downton Abbey, coming to PBS Sunday, the period drama is reinvented for a new generation. |
|
Over the past 200 years, Malthusianism has continually reinvented itself. |
|
In recent years, away from the screen, hurley has reinvented herself as a yummy mummy. |
|
Across the Atlantic, Danielle Anne researched and then reinvented recipes to suit modern ideas of health and sustainability. |
|
He reckons the gaming industry is being reinvented by social networking. |
|
During the last century, Finland has reinvented itself as a highly sophisticated, socially urbane culture with the highest aspirations for design and for architecture. |
|
From a rugby league point of view, if you talk mentors the biggest impact on me was Ricky Stuart, he was awesome and reinvented the way a halfback plays rugby league. |
|
Apple alum Tony Fadell reinvented the boring market for home thermostats with his sleek and eco-savvy digital Nest. |
|
She reinvented herself from cute girl-next-door to sultry diva. |
|
Consequently, advertising has to be reinvented so that profits can still be made, for example through product placement, split screen, promotions, virtual advertising and interactive advertising. |
|
Alex Hope, the former Wembley stadium catering manager who reinvented himself as a day-trading currency markets expert, has been found guilty of defrauding investors out of £5m to help fund a lavish lifestyle. |
|
And like the Canadian Club, we have reinvented ourselves over the years-in your case, to meet the changing needs and tastes of your members, and in our case, to respond to the evolving needs and requirements of Parliament. |
|
It was amusing to see Berlin street food reinvented and elevated. |
|
How can a channel brand be reinvented to appeal to a new target group? |
|
I must be on the wrong path because simplicity has been around for so long that it can't be reinvented, not to mention that whatever is good about the idea is already being used. |
|
Starting from the fact that the concept of art itself is often redefined, artist Andrew King suggested that the artist's work could also be reinvented. |
|
As it did with its services for residents, the city of Montréal has reinvented its business services to ensure that it can meet business needs quickly and efficiently. |
|
|
Théo's father, a former mechanic who reinvented himself as a farmer, insisted that all thirteen of his children should remain at school as long as possible and get a decent education. |
|
All four members of the group fought in the war against Mali in 1990, but reinvented themselves as musicians after a peace deal was signed three years later. |
|
However, even that one is not deserving of patent protection because during the 20 years in which a patent is valid, even the MP3 format would in all likelihood be, or have been, reinvented by someone else. |
|
The former child star, who reinvented herself as a pop act, is to be a stand-in for the station's Dermot O'Leary. |
|
She reinvented herself as a working-class hero, Rocky in a pantsuit. |
|
However, while Sheffield's heavy industry has declined, the region has reinvented itself as a centre for specialist engineering. |
|
Gray had reinvented the variable resistance telephone, but Bell was the first to write down the idea and the first to test it in a telephone. |
|
Although merchant halls were known in antiquity, they fell into disuse and were not reinvented until Europe's Medieval period. |
|
A Christmas carol revived and reinvented it around the gift of giving. |
|
The RIM Blackberry, originally a business product, has been reinvented for consumer markets, and some of the new features will boomerang as business applications. |
|
So John went home and reinvented a nineteenth-century instrument called the Wheatstone pseudoscope. |
|
Backed by nearly 50,000 employees and drawing from a 76-year legacy of engineered innovation, the reinvented HP Inc. |
|
Some kinds of wheels have to be reinvented many times before you get them right. |
|
The firm explored the ways in which the New York Times tower has reinvented the office building as a workplace. |
|
In doing so, he has reinvented the traditional Japanese house, with its post and beam structure and infill of translucent shoji screens. |
|
For a reinvented Seattle Dog, try toast, The Laughing Cow Creamy Original Swiss cheese, mortadella and sauerkraut. |
|
It's a reminder that while the draconian policing of the Beckett estate too often leads to the petrification of the stage works, the pieces never intended for performance can be reimagined and reinvented in compelling ways. |
|
By a skewed logic more perverse than anything Isabella could dream up, a sane woman was now reinvented as an erotomaniac driven mad by a conveniently identified uterine disease. |
|
Twin trapeze artists Nichole and Danielle Bird intriguingly reinvented Tweedledum and Tweedledee overhead, and the Mock Turtle's song about Wonderland was composed and performed by Alexander Wolfe with striking melancholy. |
|
Now Amanda Freitag, formerly of Tribeca's coziest restaurant, the Harrison, has reinvented the icon, but unlike the last time around, there's not a hint of New Coke about it. |
|
|
By pairing trendier pieces with reinvented classics, JACOB enables the professional woman to put together a wardrobe tailored to her multi-faceted lifestyle. |
|
Yannick Noah, the flamboyant tennis star famous for his flying dreadlocks and his deadly forehand, is the only French sportsman to have successfully reinvented himself as a pop star. |
|
The days of supporting roles, however, are over, and he's reinvented himself as the leader of Joe Lean and the Jing Jang Jong, the band whose supremely silly name causes a not-unwelcome Dolly Parton earworm. |
|
In a number of ways, popular music depends on innumerable varieties of small-scale inter-personal collaboration, in which the nature of work and the fixity of roles are perpetually reinvented. |
|
This marks the first time Ive has personally struck out against alleged copiers of his work, which has seen Apple reinvented first with the original iMac and then with the iPhone and iPad line as a design-focused company. |
|
The TEMAVITM is the tongue and groove reinvented. |
|
By pairing its reinvented classics with ultra-trendy pieces, JACOB hopes to surprise and delight the fashionistas among its clientele, while satisfying those who prefer classic styles. |
|
The legendary pack has been reinvented and reborn through the imagination of Ora Ïto. This is the enfant terrible designer's second creation for Guerlain after the Idylle fragrance. |
|
A reinvented medieval recipe where game meat and citrus are associated to develop multiple tasty emotions, discreetly completed by some Davidson plum. |
|
He found a kindred spirit in Florence Nightingale Graham, a former nursing student and makeup salesgirl from a small town in Ontario who had reinvented herself as Elizabeth Arden. |
|
In recent years, Latvia has reinvented itself as a financial services hub, facilitating capital flight from Russia and other former Soviet republics. |
|
A struggling city, decimated by the decline of its manufacturing base, had seemingly reinvented itself by – of all things – betting big on culture. |
|
These have become the city's social hubs, where dilapidated buildings have been reinvented into quirky watering holes where furniture picked off the street is mixed up with modern pieces from local artists. |
|
Leitmotif of the exhibition is the rediscovery of the products of the Turin Hill and the culinary traditions of the territory, reinvented and updated with contemporary style and creativity. |
|
The old syndicalist and co-operative traditions cannot be reinvented overnight and, in some areas, they have to be invented for the first time. This is not a declaration of war on the government. |
|
It is in essence a Georgian and Victorian design based on a medieval structure, with Gothic features reinvented in a modern style. |
|
In the everydayness of their use, gestures are reconstructed, usages adapted, reinvented and appropriated by sensibilities refined in repeated acts of known activities. |
|
Grammar schools were reinvented as academically oriented secondary schools following literary or scientific curricula, while often retaining classical subjects. |
|
The big delays in manufacturing and transporting toys makes it crucial to stock up on possible sell-out items like the reinvented Furby or the Steam Along Thomas Train Set. |
|
Mass merchants, specialty chains, big boxes and online shopping have reinvented retailing, leaving department stores in need of a little reinvention of their own. |
|