It hardly takes a brilliant operatic dramaturge to see through this brainless travesty, loaded with irrelevant inventions and non sequiturs. |
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I have a large cardboard box the size of a tea chest with an aperture in front which people can see through. |
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Savvy laypeople will see through these broad brush strokes, thus undermining the credibility of the experimental method. |
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Although the others see through him, and his lies, Kirk persists in keeping the pretence going. |
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It's perfectly safe to have freedom of speech in Oxford, because we're smart enough to see through them. |
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Only by knowing his true nature was it possible to see through his gentlemanly veil. |
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It amazes me how they can obfuscate or even lie and believe people won't see through them. |
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If you're not comfortable doing something, people can always see through it. |
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Despite all my better feelings and all the desire to see through this particular hype, I couldn't help myself. |
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Kwenn clung on even tighter, but could barely see through the thick smoke belching from the ship. |
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Pure populism it was, and I thought Australians would see through it big time, which they have. |
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The mountainside was blanketed in trees and shrubs, making it impossible to see through the thick vegetation. |
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The mirror looks exactly like a two-way mirror looks, that weird dark thing you can kind of see through. |
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Her eyes strained to see through the darkness, but she could only make out shadowy, undefined figures. |
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She couldn't see through them, because they had been boarded up on one side with a massive slab of mahogany. |
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Popping up into the air, he can see through the water sluicing off his mask that Simon is yelling, but he can't hear what. |
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As you have always known, Canadians are sophisticated enough politically to see through the sour grapes of criticism. |
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The students were allowed to see through the camera viewfinder and one girl wanted to know how 3D films were made. |
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There is one project in the can that Anderson is determined to see through. |
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We can see through the rear of the Wal-Mart, all the way to the oceanfront, to the water. |
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It is hard going but it is something I will see through, even if it takes the rest of my life. |
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She tried her best to avert her eyes from the chest that she could plainly see through the open shirt. |
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Politicians here should learn the lesson that people can see through such opportunistic politiking. |
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Ideally, the fabric would stretch out enough for you to see through without cutting any holes. |
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Some of this was predicted, but you could never see through the haze, it was all surmise. |
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In fact, an English audience is in a much better position to see through publicity hype and cant. |
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Those etymologists who can see through the mirrors of conspiracy and who are not in the pay of multinational interests will be aware of this. |
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They were an icy blue, a blue so cold and intense that Erin was certain that he could see through her. |
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She should have been able to see through this outrageous imposture, but she needed this man to be her long-lost son. |
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I pulled out a black long dress, black fishnet stockings, and see through undershirt. |
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At last, a woman of taste and discernment who can see through the shallow suavity of a lounge-lizard and poodlefaker! |
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Crouching, he could see through the window to the farm fields behind the cottage. |
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To those who have an education grounded in critical thinking and science we can see through it very clearly. |
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But the fact he also had real human frailties made him a greater man than was realised by those who could not see through the fog of adulation. |
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He glares at the small window nearby, unable to see through its frosted glass pane. |
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Her whole body has a ghostly appearance, although there's nothing to see through it. |
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Though people claim they can see through it all, they are still attracted by the glam quotient. |
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Since you'll be deluged with advice like that this week, learn to see through the motivations behind it. |
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Mr Porter added that it was possible to see through the wall in places because so much stonework had eroded away. |
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We've laughed at a bloke riding past on a bike and almost falling off as he tried to see through our window. |
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He used his mental quickness as a weapon to see through the faulty logic of the people who reported to him. |
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The rain was pounding down so hard that it was hard to see through the windshield, even when the wipers were going full speed. |
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She stopped in her tracks and rose onto her toes, trying to see through the people, cursing her lapse of concentration. |
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The clothes are the first commercially available to know the difference between right and wrong, and to see through their moral duty and obligation. |
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The dust-choked blackdamp scrapes at my throat and stings my eyes so that even if there were light I probably couldn't see through the veil of tears. |
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Set against an Indian red field, they are painted the colour of a cloudy sky, dappled grey and white, so that we see them and see through them at the same time. |
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His name was Alexander, and he had a rifle in his hands, but the eyes you could see through the slit in the mask looked friendly. |
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There are some journalists and war reporters who, despite years of experience, are very opinionated and whose masquerade of objectivity is easy to see through. |
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His skin was so pale Sara fancied she could see through it, and his single normal eye had become stained as dark as the obsidian one which sat in his other eye socket. |
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It allows us to see through the false expressions of regret, the hand wringing and the crocodile tears, to understand how they really view the world. |
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The white Roman columns that supported the faded stucco were covered with cracks and lesions, and the windows were either boarded up or too grimed over to see through. |
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I watched for nights as they came with rockets flashing red through the sky and again on impact so they could see through the never-ending dust storm. |
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The disembodied faces which we see through the darkness are recognisably human, but also immobile, as if physically caught in a state of Beckettian stasis. |
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The girl wore a see through black basque and back combed bleached hair. |
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We can see through the pseudo-humility, cod philosophy and self-serving attempts to gain a reputation as a staunch supporter of charitable causes. |
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And if you wear bifocals or trifocals, keep in mind that you may have a tendency to tilt your head backwards so that you can see through the lower portion of your glasses. |
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Not that there's much to see through the steaming sheet of water dancing around me, running in freezing rivulets down my back and filling up my shoes. |
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Don't be fooled, she will hope that you will see through her bluff and love her enough to make some sort of effort to celebrate. |
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Notice the color of the sky that you see through the compass windows. |
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It is possible to see through the sunstrike and keep your bearings. |
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You can get very daring with the see through body stocking done in see through lace in black or red when you want to buy plus size women's sexy lingerie. |
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By the time the Moon opposes Neptune in Pisces, midweek, you already see through mercenaries masquerading as paragons of virtue. |
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So if an insignificant sideliner from Africa can see through the fog, then I am sure all of them must realise the same thing. |
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We must also keep in mind that Gandhi did not live long enough to see through the fruitification of his vision. |
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When he hit the Jersey wall separating the north and southbound traffic, he sent up a huge cloud of dust that I couldn't see through. |
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The upper and lower eyelids are joined, with only a pinhole large enough for the pupil to see through. |
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In strictest forms, the face as well must be covered leaving just a mesh to see through. |
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Central to the story was Steve Eisman, an eccentric and rebarbative hedge-funder who was one of the earliest to see through the subprime lies. |
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The fog was right hard to see through so I was on Tom Pritchard before I saw him. |
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The church had taught her to see through the eyes of others. |
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The ghosting effect lets you see through the window to reveal the other windows beneath it, allowing you to move and resize windows more easily. |
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The goal of my book is to empower people to see through this scheming. |
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She has privileged the wrong kind of sight, a vision that fails to see into blackness and thus fails to see through language. |
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You can talk all you want about customer satisfaction, but consumers are quick to see through a smokescreen. |
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However, in many situations it would be incredible advantageous to actually see through a cataractous eye. |
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But that's not true charisma, and the fact that you see through it is proof. |
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Selena Gomez's wax statue in Berlin is seen wearing a see through white shirt and black leather shorts and a small black tube top under the shirt. |
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I could see through the open doorway some fishermen in guernseys sitting on the grass listening, and a boat was drawn up on the shingle and others moored to the cauchie. |
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These skills allow us to enter the darkest fears human experience offers and to see through the illusions that bind our hearts in mental unwellness, confusion, and depression. |
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Seismic wave studies thus gave the geophysicists a way to see through solid rock to the subterranean streams in the mantle underlying South America. |
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Their fabric is so thin that I can see through these curtains. |
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