Inside the hotel ballroom, he was at a rostrum giving a rousing speech to a packed house. |
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The lowered position of these surfaces require downward flexion of the rostrum in order to maintain occlusion of upper and lower incisors. |
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Hours later, he repeated the remark even more confidently on the victory rostrum. |
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The relatively obtuse rostrum terminates almost directly in front of the anteriormost tooth socket. |
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After the Tribune, he moved to the other side of the speaker's rostrum, becoming the public affairs manager of the Transit Authority. |
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If you cannot fit a second mic on the rostrum or the speaker will be using a lavalier, a shotgun mic can serve as a backup. |
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Copson was a good teacher, whether behind the rostrum with his general class or in tutorials or seminars with his honours or research students. |
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The fact he has reached the Olympics is like a gold medal for me but it would be great to see him on the rostrum on Sunday. |
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When needed to enhance visual communication, two 20 by 30-foot video screens drop down on either side of the rostrum. |
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On the rostrum, it became clear just how much winning meant to him after an 11-month drought. |
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But at least a large proportion of the crowd booed as he smarmed his way onto the rostrum, as was also the case at the Rugby League grand final. |
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All I had to do was get up from my chair and step forward to the rostrum to speak. |
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The opening of the infraorbital canal is sunk into a vacuity that penetrates the rostrum. |
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At its peak, St. David's were regulars on the winners rostrum in the county leagues championships. |
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There is a long, serrated rostrum and the abdomen bears pointed terminations on the pleura. |
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Species identification was based on the morphologies of the rostrum and the 5th pleura. |
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The zoaea larva can be recognized by the flattened blade at the end of the telson, the smooth rostrum and the sessile eyes. |
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Sometimes, as the pianist said, the conductor would leave the rostrum and lock himself in his dressing room. |
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A powerfully built man, slightly hunched round shoulder level, he strides purposely onto the rostrum. |
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You should've seen the look on Tony's face, standing on the rostrum waiting for the receiving officer. |
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The artist who carved this elegant example exaggerated the length of the fish's toothed rostrum and streamlined its body. |
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He yanked his robe up to his waist and raced on naked bandy legs to the stone rostrum at the east of the forum. |
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At the very far end of the rostrum one could just discern a tribunal of sapient figures seated around a table. |
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Offspring from each female were measured from the rostrum to the end of the last large coxa. |
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A proper rostrum is a very involved affair with the camera vertically above a flat surface so that you can zoom in, pan, and so on. |
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This trilogy is interesting technically, as it shows a virtuosity of rostrum technique, combined with stylised and painstaking animation drawing. |
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Other delphinids possess a melon, but their rostrum is short and the bulging forehead merely gives the head a squared-off appearance. |
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He earned his living as a trainee architect and a rostrum cameraman, a photocopier salesman and later as a debt collector. |
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There were drinks and chatting and the two Ambassadors mounted a rostrum to give their speeches. |
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It is suggested that these may have acted as hydrofoils, and along with the rostrum and downturned tail, elevated the front of the body during swimming. |
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Putting his characters on the rostrum he sends up everything from the contextual pieties of the new historicists to the gender fixations of the post-feminists. |
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The rostrum in homolids is usually bifid, while that of P. gorrelli is characterized by two lateral rostral spines and a downturned, central rostral spine. |
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The cingulate sulcus begins below the rostrum of the corpus callosum and arches in front of the genu of the corpus callosum, about a finger's breadth distant from it. |
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Nelson Mandela spoke from this rostrum after his release to thank the United Nations for this great achievement. |
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While sound is amplified throughout the auditorium, certain parts of the audible spectrum are delayed in the seating areas farthest from the rostrum. |
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In its traditional bricks-and-mortar configuration, Sotheby's was limited to the lots it could evaluate, catalog, store and sell from the rostrum each year. |
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Later, the magistrate asked the presspersons, who were standing near the rostrum, to go further behind where it was overcrowded and also where only one door was kept open. |
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When August comes around and Bovell more than likely mounts the medal rostrum in Athens, he will find himself under a kind of scrutiny he's never experienced. |
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In Berlioz, he planted the two harps in front of the orchestra, on either side of his rostrum, and banished bells and drums to the unseen backstage. |
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Once a suitable location is found, the crawler fixes itself to the host by deeply implanting its rostrum. |
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Yesterday, the President of Iran stood at this very rostrum spewing his latest anti-Semitic rants. |
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Crouched under a rostrum in 1933, he watched brownshirts and blackshirts at a rally. |
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I therefore wish, on this rostrum, to pay to you the heartfelt tribute that you deserve. |
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Mr. K mounts the rostrum at the United Nations to begin a speech against war. |
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Most sessions of the Symposium took the form of presentations from the rostrum, each followed by a brief question-session. |
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The public is waiting impatiently, the manufacturers present them proudly and the Show offers them an ideal rostrum. |
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Comrade Sullivan proved from the rostrum of the Communist International that unity is impossible. |
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Mr President, ladies and gentlemen, perhaps I may begin by saying how gratified I am to return to this rostrum. |
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The skull of the fennec fox is relatively short, broad over the braincase and tapers sharply toward the rostrum, forming a slender and narrow muzzle. |
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The film proceeds through numbered graphite sketches, the rostrum camera deliberately positioned to capture both the mechanics and the magic of the animation process. |
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There is evidence of this destruction throughout the town, though it can only be accessed through rostrum pictures from the archaeological excavations. |
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Roasted, pulverised and dissolved in wine, the lobster's rostrum is served as a medicine for a variety of urinary diseases, as well as for removal of kidney stones. |
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It made much of the long-distance triumphs of the Finns, but I was struck by image after image of black athletes taking their places on the winners' rostrum. |
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The rostrum is relatively short and blunt, with rounded lateral edges. |
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When he stepped down from the rostrum at the end of his speech, he sat next to the deputy leader of the party, his most slavishly subservient follower. |
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The Kaba Media door provides the shop manager with an attractive advertising rostrum that he can individually design and use as he deems appropriate. |
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The Assembly was continuously represented on the Presidential rostrum. |
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Both of these have slender bodies and broad heads, dark on top and lighter beneath, with lateral ridges on the rostrum, two blowholes and three parallel ridges running from the blowholes to the snout. |
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Indeed, from 1948 to 1994, countless speeches were delivered from this rostrum and countless resolutions were passed denouncing apartheid and seeking to rally international action against apartheid until it was dismantled. |
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The small hairs on the rostrum of the boto are believed to function as a tactile sense, possibly to compensate for the boto's poor eyesight. |
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The rostrum is well developed and is spinose, at least on the dorsal surface. |
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The size of a crawfish shall be measured as shown in Figure 7 as the length of the carapace from the tip of the rostrum to the midpoint of the distal edge of the carapace. |
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This græco-roman bireme is fitted with its characteristic ram: a rostrum. |
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So without further ado, I hand the rostrum over to the dinosaur we all know as Doc. |
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It was hard not to get mixed messages from the rostrum, too. |
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If you are speaking from the rostrum or a lectern and want to reply to questions from the floor, please make sure you have a receiver set with you to follow the questions as they are interpreted. |
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The rostrum is wide, flat, subspatulate, almost as long as the thorax, scale covered and carinate on the basal third. |
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It was here that the whole world saw them shake hands for the first time on an international rostrum before they received the Nobel Peace Prize a few months later. |
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Just a few hours to the end of the Summit and heads of state are taking the rostrum to repeat one after another, with a few exceptions, the same banalities heard too many times already. |
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That nominee had three challenges as he took the rostrum in Tampa. |
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Members of Rajidae are distinguished by their stiff snout and a rostrum that is not reduced. |
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He saw a crowd listening to a man who was talking from the rostrum of a kitchen-chair. |
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It has a single ridge extending from the tip of the rostrum to the paired blowholes that are a distinctive characteristic of baleen whales. |
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In Shark Bay, dolphins place a marine sponge on their rostrum, presumably to protect it when searching for food on the sandy sea bottom. |
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Their elongated upper and lower jaws form what is called a rostrum, or snout, which gives the animal its common name. |
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The rostrum is concave dorsally, terminating in an upturned acumen, median carina strong. |
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