There are certain superficial resemblances, say, to the nineties films such as American Beauty, or the recent Ghost World. |
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If analogous resemblances can be traced between hyetal and auroral curves, they will be interesting and suggestive. |
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There are a few resemblances, but one cannot make a full parallel between the two. |
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Molecular data enable workers to determine relationships with greater certainty than using physical resemblances alone. |
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The patterns repeat themselves like family resemblances, the living seeing echoes of their own faces in old photographs. |
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All the more striking, then, are the resemblances between their early experiences, in many respects uncannily close. |
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The soundtracks extend the analogy by their resemblances to early sound recordings. |
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One searches the family portraits for resemblances and finds hardly a trace. |
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Family resemblances can be studied at length between reunions, and stories heard and reheard. |
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Those physical resemblances, and many other attributes, would surely be traceable to the genes within each species. |
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And if physical resemblances were undeniable, that made it more important to defend the less tangible ground of mentation or behavior. |
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Despite superficial resemblances to their medieval predecessors, these Lutheran altarpieces share a number of striking new features. |
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The viewer can fall in love with resemblances, or can play detective, looking at signs as an index of a process. |
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But although the surface similarities are remarkable, the deeper resemblances seem to flow from the primal nature of boxing. |
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It has lately been the fashion to focus the mind entirely on these mild and subordinate resemblances and to forget the main fact altogether. |
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Some Late Precambrian Ediacaran fossils bear strong resemblances to colonial coelenterates called pennatulids, or sea pens. |
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We have a lot of expressions to acknowledge the resemblances present within families. |
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Sensibly, I think, he acknowledges that comics and movies are two wildly different media, despite superficial resemblances. |
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Are there any resemblances in live stock breeding and farming practices applied in present Bulgaria's agriculture and the EU member states? |
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Any and all resemblances to other stories are purely coincidental. |
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But this regress presupposes that resemblances are entities that can resemble one another. |
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Others have similar looking active sites, but are different everywhere else. Vertex's software digs out and exploits these family resemblances. |
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The world is criss-crossed with resemblances that shine forth here and there. |
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The vehicle looks quite unique, although I have to say that I found slight resemblances to other vehicles here and there. |
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And the resemblances are not ideological points of views on the situations and the events. |
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Saint Etienne's Cathedral is one of the places from which those resemblances shine out. |
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Historians continue to debate the issue, scrutinizing photos of Emilie's son, Armand, for resemblances to the prime minister. |
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So conceiving the legend resides largely in deciding how general resemblances and particular distinctions are to be conveyed. |
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One remarkable feature of the indigenous culture is that there are striking and inexplicable resemblances between the language and that of the Basques in Europe. |
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There are notable resemblances between the two figures in their comportment and demeanor and, even more so, in their generalized, even-featured beauty. |
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The resemblances, after all, were vivid, and far from accidental. |
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No two situations will be exactly alike, but there will be resemblances. |
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In similar fashion he attributed other thematic resemblances between New Comedy and Sanskrit plays to the presence of universal themes and motifs. |
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He did not make the mistake of judging Catalans not only by their difference from other Spaniards but by superficial resemblances to French ways and style. |
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To outsiders, the accent has resemblances to the accents of South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand. |
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The structure of the Faroese educational system bears resemblances with its Danish counterpart. |
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Therefore, one can speak about a genetic relationship only if one finds a converging set of resemblances, even partial, instead of a striking but isolated resemblance. |
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There are striking resemblances to Seuls, the one-man show in which Wajdi Mouawad splattered himself with paint as he cast off his chains in a long, intensely physical scene. |
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The groups then looked at the resemblances and the differences between them in terms of legislation, and picked out what they considered to be the most urgent problems. |
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When genes are good, the resemblances stand out. |
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English avifauna bears resemblances to that of continental Europe, consisting largely of Palaearctic species. |
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Although there are many differences between the individual Celtic languages, they do show many family resemblances. |
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The offence of selling or offering for sale foods which are spoiled or are otherwise unfit for human consumption bears many resemblances to the offence previously described. |
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These waters are clearly different from waters of the same water type encountered in the Crystalline and the Buntsandstein, but show striking resemblances to some waters of present salt lakes. |
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As a historian, he feels the EU has many resemblances with the old Holy Roman Empire, a patchwork state with such divided authority that it was very poor at responding to internal or external threats. |
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The real affinities of all organic beings, in contradistinction to their adaptive resemblances, are due to inheritance or community of descent. |
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With regard to resemblance Languages of Art echoes the claim in Fact, Fiction, and Forecast with regard to regularities: resemblances can be found anywhere, for anything resembles anything else in some respect or other. |
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This species is large compared with known Eocene alligatorids, although its character states present a mosaic of resemblances to earlier and later alligatorids. |
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Scientists have preferred something along the lines of ball lightning or earthlights, but all their scientific explanations have tripped over the resemblances to line dancing. |
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Unwelcome sisters-in-law and soldiers who have stayed as necessary guests too long bear uncomfortable resemblances, politically, if not consanguineously, speaking. |
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