I think one of the readers of this website had recommended this book to me a long while back, and I'm giving it a reread. |
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Some are good, some are bad, and some fall somewhere between, but all are a good reread. |
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He reread, as he read, with obsessed intentness, filling flyleaves with pencilled codes that helped him retrieve any beauty, any bathos. |
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Sometimes even the best writers commit to paper intimate thoughts that are cringeworthy when reread. |
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This is a long book which is most profitably read and reread in its chapter-sized chunks. |
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The researcher read and reread the verbatim transcripts to identify and extract significant statements. |
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I've read and reread her letters to me, and she seems to think that I'm perfect. |
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On retreat prior to our moving, I read and reread the story of the annunciation. |
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With little more than a hello, I began to reread the letter that was in my hand. |
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But as any who read or reread those essays will know, a huge depth of learning, often from the archives, underpinned the edifice of argument. |
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Despite the fact that I edited this book, and was intimately involved with the material, I gave it a reread and I have to say, it rocks. |
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However, despite the extended whinge about paying good cash for a reread, this is one book which I would love to find in my Christmas stocking. |
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Be sure to mark confusing parts of the piece you are reading, or sections that warrant a reread. |
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They got so excited by the story that the moment Max ended his adventure there was a request for a reread on the spot. |
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We show that, under reasonable assumptions, significant enhancements are achieved by a reread. |
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They've had the rereads, and they can't just have two or three sentences when they want a reread. |
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In my mind, the whole point of a reread is to do a close analysis of the text in light of all the information that we've got so far. |
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As I leaned forward to reread the brass nameplate, the man with the crutch introduced himself. |
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Why, to nerve herself for an adulterous affair, does she reread The Red and the Black in English? |
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We thought of that comment during Holy Week this year when we reread two passages in the Gospel of John. |
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If an agent fills out the application for you, reread the form for accuracy and completeness. |
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The Jean Coutu Group suggests to the User to reread the Conditions of Use from time to time in the event that these have been modified. |
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I invite the government to reread what I just said about measures to help the next generation of farmers. |
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The purpose of allowing a witness to reread his or her statements is to help to «refresh» potentially fallible memories. |
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I couldn't stand the shame when I reread it a couple days back. |
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I reread the above two paragraphs and I see that I sound a bit like a textbook, and a quaint one at that, one printed long ago. |
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For his admirers there cannot be too many Prousts available in English or French: it is always necessary to read and reread. |
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Be sure to reread this document once in a while because Microsoft will update it periodically. |
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The reason I'm stating this is that in the question you posted not only did I neglect to even reread it for typos but I didn't even sign the letter. |
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Alice in Wonderland is a book that remains as enchanting as ever, no matter how many times we reread it. |
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Breathlessly, I told him that I had reread his Foundation books several times. |
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The teacher will have to write down what is said in order to reread it during the pooling of results. |
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She read and reread the letters and cried until she fell asleep. |
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So when we reread the text we do so knowing that neither the characters' points of view nor the narrator's point of view is completely accurate, or all-encompassing. |
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Kratouna reread it aloud, as if to convince himself of the message received on his computer. |
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I shall also reread the Rules of Procedure, but I cannot tell you right now if you will be able to ask this question orally next time. |
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I also reread writers I admire, and try to glean a phrase or thought that will get me going. |
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I think I may have start from the beginning and do a reread. |
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De la Mare's The Three Royal Monkeys entranced me then, and still had some of its magic when I recently reread it. |
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I have read, reread, reflected on and prayed his books which really strike home with me. |
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And for personal research I reread his speeches during the 1960's, when he founded the Fifth Republic in France. |
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I must be a tiger for punishment, because I reread her speech. |
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It has to be reread, for this book explains everything, including the Kingdom. |
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I have reread it at irregular intervals, always with pleasure and renewed astonishment. |
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I read his book some time ago, but I suspect it might be worth a reread. |
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When I reread the Presidency Conclusions, these seven lines of text read worse now than they did almost a year ago. |
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You should note that those recruited may be called on to revise, reread, and if necessary translate into their main language texts of various kinds relating to the activities of the institution. |
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In our grief and in our remembrance, we must quote him, read and reread him, speak about his ideas, build on them, embrace them as our shared task. |
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That way, it is easier to get lost in personal thoughts, to stumble upon a serendipitous idea, or to reread a previous passage to challenge an assertion or confirm an opinion. |
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Mr. Speaker, I would like to reread the motion we are debating here today. |
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Rather there was supervision of the tone, of the editorial content and supervision by the people who take care of Francis and by Francis himself who reread all of the texts put on the site. |
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Dramé pointed out that Mali has a process underway to take into account progress in international law in order to reread laws concerning families, and women's and children's rights. |
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I couldn't find any internal average, to reread the entry. |
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The following guidelines constitute the woof so to speak on which we weave our sharing. Until you have interiorised them, it is suggested that you reread them before each circle meeting. |
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Put yourself in your reader's shoes as you reread your message. |
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It was subsequently reread and interpreted many times. |
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To see whether a warranty applies in your case, reread the contract or contact the consumer affairs office in the province or territory where the contract was made. |
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Make sure that they have reread their statements before testifying. |
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Could it help me to reread my situation, our situation at the convent? |
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In fact, they are very close. During a recent trip to Athens, I had a chance to reread a speech made by the Director of the French Institute of Salonica during a visit by General Charles de Gaulle. |
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From Rabelais to Montesquieu: Gentlemen, reread your classics! |
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To read one of one's own texts in another language is always an interesting event, to reread it in the language of his adolescence represents a particular experience: it is like returning to one's own roots. |
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The uproar over Ferguson's off-the-cuff quip sent me back to reread it. |
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I love nothing more than to reread what I wrote the night before. |
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He amassed the largest collection in Britain of Scott manuscripts and early editions, and constantly reread the novels. |
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Pupils read and reread classic works and wrote essays imitating their style. |
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No sustained analysis exists in which the history of poetry and poetics is reread in the light of the history of globalization. |
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He read and reread The Arabian Nights and the Collected Farces of Elizabeth Inchbald. |
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Using the passage of time as a soft pedal, she gentles the impact of a devastating affair, creating the record of a passion more safely reread than relived. |
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They can read and reread between the lines, lose themselves between legends and anecdotes, find themselves in a peal of laughter or a heart-wrenching revelation. |
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I read and reread one of those self-hypnosis books. |
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It's a heartbreaker, as I was reminded just now when I went to get the chapter reference, reread it, and started bawling. |
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I reread the names of those who eventually conquered Everest 60 years ago and left their signatures on the ceiling, including the summiteers Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing. |
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I read, reread, copy out and recopy out, more than I actually write. |
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