The Semitic mind speaks in terms of beings, beings that embody good and evil. |
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The libation is poured into the soil before her father's tomb as she speaks. |
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There are vast schemes, abandoned because of some caprice. There are secrets which everybody knows and no-one speaks of. |
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I have an ABC friend who speaks much worse Chinese than me, but nobody pushes her to switch to English when they talk with her. |
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The same author speaks of the nails frequently showing evidences of abnormity in connection with either absence or superabundance of hair. |
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If no-one speaks up then she just walks all over guys, which at least means that she treats them equally. |
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The lopsided vote for Libya, including all those cowardly European abstentions, speaks volumes about the UN's character. |
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This speaks volumes about the perceived quality of the product compared to competing offerings at the moment. |
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The Miami woman said she's the last person in the area, and one of the very few last people in the country, who still speaks Quapaw fluently. |
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He does not patronise. He speaks directly and not in the warmed-over platitudes of his successor. |
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This park speaks of a great bygone age, and now that the north is fast becoming the frappuccino quarter of the city it may yet thrive again. |
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Furthermore, the narrator speaks with the words, accents, and intonations of Golyadkin himself. |
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While she still speaks an accented Hindi, she is more confident in her speeches and is not shy of meeting the media. |
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A slight woman of 37, she trembles and tears fill her eyes as she speaks in accented English about the end of her family's life in America. |
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She speaks the equivalent of fifth grade Japanese and is in her third year of taking Mandarin. |
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So now we have a Japanese company, run by a New York-based Briton who speaks no Japanese. |
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However, a significant proportion of Ecuador's Andean population speaks the ancient Incan language of Quechua and a variety of related dialects. |
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Sipping from a bottle of water, he speaks quietly and carefully, rarely animated. |
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He speaks so quietly and so modestly that it is hard to envisage him as the authoritative playmaker that he is. |
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The group use the hand waves to signal their agreement or disagreement, and a minute-taker speaks only to clarify points raised. |
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Some of it pertains strictly to the needs and history of the Jesuits, but in other ways it speaks to the church as a whole. |
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I think it's good when the Senator speaks of God and quotes Old Testament Scripture. |
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A most affable man, his ready smile is always to the fore but underneath all that charm is a man of action who speaks by deeds as well as words. |
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Every language has its subconscious cues, such as rank and forms of address, which are often reflective of the social order that speaks it. |
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It speaks of jousts, tournaments, wizards, falconry, enchantresses, damsels in distress, wars, quests, and the code of chivalry. |
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First, Chapter III speaks of matters being adjudicated judicially, thus, according to law. |
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Though he speaks highly of Adler and cites his work, the psychologist doesn't identify himself primarily as an Adlerian. |
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His wife Tracey, 42, a hospital administrator, speaks to him most mornings by telephone. |
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It could be a particular song that just speaks to you, or a verse that jumps out. |
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When it comes to Germans and their relationship with dictators, Enzensberger knows whereof he speaks. |
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The back-cover biography assures you in rampant detail that he knows whereof he speaks. |
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Sharon Leach wrote in the Sunday Observer of the agonies of having to do without water, and she knows whereof she speaks. |
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His eyes dart around and he whispers as he speaks as if what he's telling me is top secret. |
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Tall and owl-eyed, he speaks in a voice barely above a whisper at his spacious flat in a bourgeois neighbourhood of Rome. |
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They now have a most unusual friendship and she speaks affectingly of his story as a peculiarly American tragedy. |
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Rationality in creation is a logical consequence of a rational God, who speaks to man through his Son. |
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He came to southern Africa from Holland when he was eleven years old, and he speaks English, Afrikaans, and some Xhosa. |
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While her mother tongue is Afrikaans, she speaks some Spanish and some Sesotho, learned while in Maseru. |
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He speaks of the numbness that takes hold of him after long periods of work. |
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When he speaks about the prejudices he has faced, the added issue of his sexuality is almost an afterthought. |
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Crato speaks against all herbs and worts, except bugloss, fennel, parsley, dill, bawm, succory. |
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The geometry of the khanda with its symmetry speaks to me of the perfection of the universe and its Creator. |
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He is a linguist and fluently speaks in Urdu, Persian, Tamil, Nepali, Bengali, Hindi and Assamese, besides English and Khasi languages. |
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Clare Francis speaks with the sort of received pronunciation you might expect from a former yachtswoman brought up in the Home Counties. |
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He is the league's all-time winningest starting quarterback with a record of 148-82-1, which speaks to his durability as well as his excellence. |
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Though she counts Chinese and Russian among the languages she speaks fluently, Fritzie has never played piano in either of those countries. |
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The reconciliation of which Paul speaks is possible only through the action of God in Christ Jesus. |
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In Satyagraha in South Africa, he speaks of the surpassing beauty of Cape Town situated at the foot of the Table Mountain. |
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The very next day he goes to the town gate and speaks with the other redeemer about Ruth. |
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She speaks softly but intently, cutting a striking figure in black knee-length boots with her prominent features framed by jet black hair. |
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Performed in Zulu, Afrikaans, English and Xhosa, each performer speaks in his or her native language. |
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Do we want a poor communicator who works at getting the job done, or a yaffler who speaks constantly but does little? |
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The pair now are good friends, and she speaks laughingly of her nonstop travel schedule and increased computer literacy. |
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The JNIR speaks the same language as the media buyers, and it makes people understand the medium. |
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Pongratz speaks with admiration of the young performers in this production, no bunch of amateurs. |
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My brother was raised over there so he speaks Yoruba which is akin to speaking Welsh or Gaelic. |
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Whether the laureate speaks for poets, poetry, or the public isn't entirely clear. |
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That the seller of your recent disc checked the condition without prompting speaks well toward their reputability. |
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The church itself often speaks too strongly out of reason and law and not enough out of spirituality. |
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Sid speaks up and points out that Aunt Polly used white thread to sew Tom's shirt, but now the thread is black. |
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By extension, it speaks to the resilience of a people who have endured a great deal of turmoil in a short span of history. |
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The lectors minister the presence of God who speaks when the scriptures are proclaimed in church. |
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As someone who speaks fluent Spanish, I found myself swearing in Spanish when my people got cantankerous. |
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The Rishi speaks in theistic terms, revealing the religious nature of the Vedas. |
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The man who speaks for these corporations aims for nothing less than to change the world. |
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Amphitryon then speaks to his wife, who is reviving after having fainted in his arms. |
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It will teach you how to pinpoint the specific language she speaks and interprets as expression of love. |
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To assist them, they hired an Italian liaison who lives in Italy and speaks fluent Italian. |
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Alone, Prospero speaks an epilogue, in rhyme, saying that now that he has no magic powers he needs the audience's indulgent applause to free him. |
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In his letters, he gossips, tells wicked stories and speaks the unguarded truth. |
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It speaks from a limbo whose inhabitants have uncomplainingly accepted the rightness of the judgement that placed them there. |
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His singing and dancing are comparatively weak, and he speaks all of his lines with an undisguised Australian twang. |
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The vocalist speaks rather than sings, and the band rocks out more than it has in the past. |
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Someone who only speaks Arabic has left five messages on my answerphone this morning for Yasmina. |
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Now he speaks Arabic, understands some grammar and recites and memorizes surahs of Quran. |
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Each of a dozen native groups speaks a different Carib, Arawak, or Warrau dialect. |
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He is a little Polish man who speaks Lithuanian and who works as a pants-finisher in the ghetto district. |
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He is the first member of his family to come to the United States from Lithuania, and speaks English, Lithuanian, Polish, and Russian. |
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Now, the accepted meaning of the term is, somebody who speaks Assamese as his or her mother tongue. |
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Massart speaks of it as occurring in the Algerian Sahara as a typical arenaceous plant. |
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He speaks about penguins having to cease making their rookeries and nests when the wind gusts are really strong. |
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As in spirit-possession, as we have seen, an actor speaks on behalf of the loa or deity. |
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The Armenian population speaks mostly Armenian or Turkish, while Assyrians speak Syriac. |
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Daly is laughing as he speaks, but those around him take his words extremely seriously. |
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He speaks this language like every other American, with a deep round voice that seems to come from somewhere below his knees. |
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The simple photograph taken with a long lens from relatively far, showing his wife Nancy touching the casket, speaks volumes. |
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Then who speaks for those whose grief, loss and suffering is not known to us? |
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The fact that the police are running a mile from wanting to enforce this speaks volumes. |
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That something is Adams' distinct voice, which only speaks loudly enough to be heard on a few occasions. |
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The quality of the material speaks as loudly as the color and can make the difference between sleaze and suave. |
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Try falling in love with someone who is from a different country and speaks a different language. |
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She also speaks German and Russian, and as a Czech speaker understands Slovak. |
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He gives the example of a girl with athetoid cerebral palsy with very little control over her limbs and who speaks through a specialist computer. |
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He's polite to a T, speaks generously about everyone who comes up in conversation and has a gentle demeanour. |
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One of the things I adore about my dissertation advisor is that his tactlessness means that he speaks the truth. |
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Paul Bergne, a former Ambassador to Uzbekistan who speaks fluent Tajik, was briefed earlier this week. |
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He speaks in slow English with some Tagalog, although most would prefer Ilocano. |
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But when she dances, it's her steely technical strength wrapped in luscious lyricism that speaks so eloquently. |
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He speaks seven languages including English, French, Italian, Dutch, Hungarian, and Romanian. |
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And even now, as he pushes the case for war, he is still held in high esteem overseas, a man who speaks with authority. |
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Fortunately one of our contacts speaks Taki Taki who is also the sister of our main lead at the HOPE Centre. |
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When one listens to talk radio or reads the daily broadsheets it is clear that Ireland no longer speaks with a single voice. |
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It speaks of his spectacular success, and of his equally awe-inspiring killing. |
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Far from it, Revelation is an inspired piece of writing in which God speaks to our hearts and raises our hopes and expectations. |
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The taut muscles of his face have relaxed, and he speaks with a confidence that is inspiring. |
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All her words make my blood boil with jealousy and anger as she speaks the taboo. |
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Instead, she speaks on behalf of mental health patients and the impact managed care has on their treatment. |
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This small moment speaks tellingly of the way that masculinity is defined for the main character. |
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The fact he is the first to record back-to-back victories since L' Escargot in 1971 speaks for itself. |
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He wears a white chef coat and sturdy kitchen shoes, and speaks with the appropriate reverence about the great aged balsamic vinegar of Modena. |
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She says that although the school does not have an immersion program, almost everyone who teaches or works there speaks Tewa. |
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He doesn't speak Spanish, he speaks Tex-Mex. I don't know what that other gibberish is he mumbles at times. |
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Although the crews speaks Thai, most of the directions on board are written in English. |
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She speaks admiringly of Madame Blavatsky, theosophy's founder, as well as England's leading theosophists Annie Besant and Charles Leadbeater. |
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It also speaks to the senses, the smell of the sand and the sea breeze, the warmth of the air. |
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He speaks about his life of crime, his wasted years behind bars and his hopes for the future. |
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The local Bajan culture encompasses a very helping attitude which speaks volumes about the goodwill of Barbadians. |
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He speaks with a thick south German accent that is difficult to understand, even if you speak German. |
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She speaks with a thick middle European accent, and she is difficult to understand. |
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I believe that the son speaks for so many sons and daughters out there, living out this nightmare in seclusion. |
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This alone speaks volumes to the happy state of matrimonial harmony in America. |
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He is a second-generation immigrant and speaks no Arabic, so he did not know what was said. |
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Unlike my hypothesis, she speaks in her baroque and breathless way not only when upset or anxious but also when she is up and effusive. |
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My mom would run across Palmer Square in the purple maxi coat she still speaks fondly of and buy coffee and cookies to share in the back pews. |
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Approximately one-third of the indigenous population speaks only a Mayan language. |
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Then he picks up a needle and threads it with thick black thread as he speaks to her. |
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Best of all, his choreography speaks unabashedly from and to basic human emotions. |
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Hardly anyone speaks any more of sound convictions or of conscious political action. |
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Who would think we would meet someone who speaks Low German at a volleyball match in Hong Kong? |
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He writes these magnificent sweeping sentences in this wonderful old BBC English that nobody actually speaks anymore. |
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It speaks of winter days sitting snug and cosy, the lamp lighting my page, toes gently toasting, and the quiet tick-tock of the clock. |
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The Aberdeen version may be notable for its tight-lipped silence, but still it speaks volumes, not least about Bacon himself. |
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Our instructor is a bean sprout chewing yogic matriarch who speaks in hushed tones so as not to upset the alignment of her shakras. |
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Julius is shown beating a drum and dancing at a Pow-Wow, and speaks sincerely about his tribe's core values. |
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The rest of the population speaks languages drawn from Indo-European, Ural-Altaic, or Semitic language families. |
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Zidane, and those close to him, claim that he rarely speaks because he is a naturally timid and modest person. |
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She speaks in thick paragraphs that her staffers probably wish they could condense and sharpen at times. |
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An expert with several books on the Marquesas to his credit, he speaks Marquesan, French, German, and Russian and has many friends on the islands. |
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His old timidity has completely left, as he speaks without fear. |
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He speaks as both the film's director and star, and rightly heaps praise on his cast, both leads and supporting actors, whose excellent work adds much depth to the film. |
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A very substantial minority speaks a form of Persian called Tajik. |
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When he speaks English, he does so with a soft, Aberdonian lilt. |
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His clotted rhetoric speaks to his 21 years as a civil servant, but his meaning and intention are clear enough. |
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Denton, who speaks in the clipped cadence of the Oxford-educated Brit he is, has built quite a castle. |
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He speaks and reads Chinese and Tibetan and knows more about the fantastical, complex history of the various forms of Himalayan Buddhism than anyone I've ever met. |
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I point out that Connery speaks with a brogue and that our character is an American from New York. |
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He talks to Rebecca Dana about book burning, his new HBO series, and whether he speaks to Oprah. |
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He squints slightly, has a squared jaw, and speaks in British-accented English, the product of a boarding school education. |
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Remus speaks English and Lithuanian fluently, and didn't have to take up Irish because he was over the age of 10 when he joined Rockfield national school. |
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The westernmost of the Pueblo Indian tribes, the independent Hopi Nation is the only Pueblo tribe that speaks a Shoshonean language of the Uto-Aztecan linguistic family. |
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In an awkward scene, Frodo speaks with his uncle about an ambiguous adventure he had long ago. |
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At thirteen years old, de Forest speaks with the confidence and the knowledge of someone much older. |
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Your anonymous writer speaks about the hypocrisy within the Church and then applauds a man for his views which totally contradict the faith that he claims to follow. |
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There are rock-survivor-y types in black, with sunglasses, whose demeanor speaks of lost nights and rare contact with daylight. |
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Over 500 entries were screened by four juries consisting of three judges each, which speaks to the growing strength of the film and television industry in Alberta. |
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He speaks of the history and sanctity of the order, and tells the crowd that it is the actions of a vile temptress, a witch, who brought them here. |
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She speaks to Doug Stanton about her love of very fast cars, mythology, and the Bulgarian bagpipes. |
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He speaks to Janice Kaplan about why the antiwar message of the play fits our time. |
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That the allegorical nature of Red Moon speaks to so many issues may be what contributes to an ending where things fall apart. |
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It speaks of culture as chiefly an economic matter, which is ahistorical and absurd. |
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The nurse's mouth is a tight line, barely moving when she speaks. |
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Walking around Freetown as he speaks to me on the phone, the typically upbeat Pratt sounds frustrated. |
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Far from being limiting, this acknowledgement allowed her to make a series that speaks directly to the epidemic as it is today. |
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Michnik knows whereof he speaks and writes, unlike so many of those in the European media who are busy gnawing at the supports of the trans-Atlantic alliance. |
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He speaks perfect English and is quite the little gentlemen. |
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I would describe his spoken English as perfect, and those able to appreciate it say that he speaks Romanian of a purity which is seldom heard today in his own country. |
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She waxes eloquent in accented English while he speaks chaste Urdu. |
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And Julie Copeland speaks to Indian artist Nalini Malani in Brisbane, whose timely installation reworks Hindu myth to reflect India's terrible, contemporary conflicts. |
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Her trademark long blond bangs strike out at odd angles, whirling to and fro as she speaks. |
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And although fellow academicians might assume that the value of research speaks for itself, making a memorable case often depends on timing and personal connections. |
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It speaks volumes that the President of the United States would believe his own human resources need to be managed in such a way. |
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He speaks of the discipline it takes to care for a baby and the overwhelming reward that comes at the end of every exhausting day. |
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Defense attorney abbe Lowell is a wiry man who seems to never stop moving when he speaks in a courtroom. |
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Most of the population speaks Mandarin Chinese, the national language. |
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How about nobody sings, nobody recites, nobody reads aloud, nobody speaks or tap dances or whatever it is the great media event people are planning. |
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As for getting swift action, our 30-year wait speaks for itself. |
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A wielding of language that speaks as a means to recapture and reanimate male power, it suggests a masculinity reasserting itself at the expense of women. |
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Its symbolism speaks to them of service, communion, mutual forgiveness, oneness, and recognition of the fact that their bodies are temples of the Spirit. |
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She speaks no English, but I could taste her warmth and her pride in her homemade, old-school Roman cuisine. |
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The narrator is an earnest, clear-eyed woman who speaks as if for all decent folks. |
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She speaks Pintupi-Luritja, Western Arrernte and Pitjantjatjara. |
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Another way that is just as effective as apple-polishing is flattery, giving someone high praise, telling him how good he looks, or how well he speaks, or how wise he is. |
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He may have been lucky in business, but his marriage is on the rocks, his daughter barely speaks to him and even his friend, Francis, holds little interest. |
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When the soldier speaks he drops his aitches and several other letters. |
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She speaks very fast, with a Spanish accent that rounds her vowels. |
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He speaks reverently about his fans and their dedication to his music. |
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She speaks French, Spanish, Italian, English, Tamil, Telegu and Malayalam. |
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Grenier speaks about his favorite writers, from Dante to Fitzgerald, as if they are his best friends. |
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Who speaks these terrible abjurations, Kafka the man or Kafka the artist? |
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He speaks great English, in fact, was schooled in the United States. |
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Newt Gingrich As the President speaks, we will be experiencing one of the coldest winters in recent history. |
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Misty White Sidell speaks to costume designer colleen Atwood about the changes. |
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A translation of his words appears in a small box as he speaks. |
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Kimberlin, who looks and softly speaks like a miniaturized clone of David Strathairn, could not lay a glove on his tormenter. |
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She has even invented a mechanical parrot that speaks bad French. |
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When storms are brewing, he speaks, and quietens the waters. |
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He speaks in heavily-accented English, but fluidly and lyrically, with both force and deliberation. |
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Representing the tour was H. Bartow Farr III, who is 56, looks 10 years younger, speaks carefully without being showy, and with a reedy tone in his voice. |
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She speaks very authoritatively and knowledgeably about this issue, she is committed to campaigning on it for the long term. |
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He speaks with the calm, level voice of a professional scientist. |
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But when Hawil, a tall man with a salt-and-pepper beard, speaks he's got the unmistakable, steely demeanor of a military man. |
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Similarly, if you filed in February your diligence speaks volumes about your overall responsible nature. |
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In addition to Aramaic, Raskas speaks Hebrew, German and Yiddish. |
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He's not a rah-rah guy, but his play on the ice speaks pretty loud. |
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For such an effort to have been mounted so quickly, and for the Russians to have assented to outside help so speedily, speaks volumes for all concerned. |
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He speaks of taking on all the top junior welters, and he has also toyed with the idea of going up seven pounds to take on welterweight champion Cory Spinks. |
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This sell-off speaks to the continuing anxiety that a world not led by the United States and Europe and Japan is a world adrift. |
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He speaks while sipping a soda in the restaurant of the Residence Victoria in downtown Kisangani. |
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He speaks, impressively but also vitally, fluent German, French, and Italian. |
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Even if everyone speaks the same language on a project, the departments involved assume and understand things differently from their own unique perspective. |
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The accusations from a Turkish-American who speaks Azerbaijani, Farsi, Turkish and English will reignite the controversy over whether the administration ignored warnings. |
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One-third of the Eritrean population speaks Tigre as a primary language. |
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He was educated, he tells us, at expensive private schools, speaks with a languid upper-class voice, lives in a very nice house and has a semi-dormant baronetcy. |
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The Talmud teaches that the Torah speaks in the language of man. |
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Former Florida gov. Jeb Bush, a potential presidential candidate, speaks nothing but Spanish at home, and has for years. |
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Casablancas speaks in a drowsy mumble and occasionally needs prodding, but once you do, becomes surprisingly engaged. |
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The majority of the population speaks regional dialects, like Punjabi, Baluchi, and Sindhi, which are taught is the nation's schools along with Urdu. |
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He speaks with more passion than ever, lighting into George W. Bush for fumbling the economy. |
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It is true that the wisdom of Maat is expressed apodictically in various Instructions, but the Confession speaks beyond what is merely wise. |
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Ahmadi-nejad, on the other hand, often speaks of the second coming as imminent, much to irritation of many clerics. |
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Younger readers may have trouble figuring out what Krazy Kat is saying, since he speaks in a dialect that is almost incomprehensible. |
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Education and Childcare Minister Sam Gyimah speaks about the future of childcare in England at the Family Childcare Trust conference. |
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We are excited to manage The Alexander, a beautiful new building that speaks to the evolution of Rego Park. |
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One informant, an Afghan money changer, speaks of young boys being kidnapped in the marketplace before the Taliban took over. |
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Wood speaks autobiographically about his own family and early life in Denver. |
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Nevertheless, Davidson speaks to us from the center of the Zeitgeist. |
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Thus, winning the DEA sets apart this battalion and speaks very well for the caliber of personnel assigned to it. |
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Lalo Cervantes, 38, a slick man who speaks English well, is directly responsible for bringing 50 men from Mexico City to Long Island. |
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And, like a lamebrain shouting English at someone who speaks nothing but French, they believe saying it louder makes it mean something. |
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Tan is fluent in English, Cantonese and Bahasa Malaysia, and speaks conversational Mandarin. |
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This new line speaks volumes to the company's rich, multi-generational heritage in leatherworking. |
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The Rig Veda speaks of three filters used to purify and prepare Soma for sacramental use. |
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He speaks of her much as he might of his elder son, the seal. |
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But while Xena wears a leather basque and wields a chakram she speaks in the slacker jargon of the shopping mall. |
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Boyd is tall and thickly muscled and speaks softly in a Piedmont drawl. |
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This speaks to the value of output, or what Swain refers to as the noticing function and the metalinguistic function of output. |
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Aside from a few words, neither Daniel nor Karla speaks English. |
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God speaks not the idle and unconcerned hearer, but to the vigilant and arrect. |
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One speaks of a babbitt habit, a babbitt era. Nothing is more true. America recognized itself in Babbitt, it demurred, but it also admired. |
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Report speaks you a bonny monk, that would hear the matin chime ere he quitted his bowl. |
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In the sixteenth century, Ruellius speaks of the cardoon as a food that was appreciated as asparagus is today. |
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She speaks her commitment to herself as an elder and to the aspects of cronehood she will celebrate. |
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I needed the title, because clients figured that I'm just a face-man. A face-man is a person who looks good, speaks well, and presents the work. |
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It speaks in general terms, avoiding illustrations and details of practice. |
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Asser speaks grandiosely of Alfred's relations with foreign powers, but little definite information is available. |
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Like the song, love-lies-bleeding speaks of abundance and thankfulness for the cycle of life. |
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Many of them are missing, so that one cannot understand her easily when she speaks quickly. |
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Unlike the judge, who speaks sitting down, the barristers always stand to address the court. |
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When Audre Lorde speaks of her Amazon lovers from Dahomey, the words resound lesbianically. |
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Clancy himself, who rarely speaks publicly, declined an interview. |
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They've got a live one in the crowd, he's scary, he looks dangerous, demon possessed, he doesn't know who he is, he speaks in strange voices. |
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The second official language is the recently standardized Haitian Creole, which virtually the entire population of Haiti speaks. |
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God speaks to us, especially through scripture read and proclaimed and through symbols and sacraments. |
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Similarly, the Old English poem Seafarer speaks of the high stone walls that were the work of giants. |
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The use of small capitals is a reference to how the character of Death speaks in Pratchett's works. |
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Modern discourse generally speaks in terms of state power, indicating both economic and military power. |
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It speaks volumes for the conceptual quality of these codifications that they all, albeit with many amendments, are still in effect today. |
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Currently about 33 percent of the population in the Basque Autonomous Community speaks Basque. |
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Conversations where one party speaks a language that is different from the other partner are hard to maintain, and intimacy is reduced. |
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In it the author not only addresses the reader in his preface but speaks directly to him or her in his fictional narrative. |
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On 6 July 2011, Absolute Radio uploaded a video to YouTube where Noel Gallagher speaks about the night Oasis ended. |
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In this context, passages written by Popper are frequently quoted in which he speaks about such issues himself. |
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The King speaks, besides, the language of the savages who live in some parts of Scotland and on the islands. |
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The majority of the community speaks English, with a minority of residents speaking both English and Gaelic. |
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Conversations in which one party speaks a language different from the other persons both are hard to maintain and have reduced intimacy. |
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Ceredigion is considered to be a centre of Welsh culture and more than half the population speaks Welsh. |
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Since the sentence speaks to the imagination, it is often erroneously stated as the oldest Dutch sentence. |
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The vast majority of the population also speaks Indonesian, often as a second language. |
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More than 99 percent of the population speaks Japanese as their first language. |
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Scottish writer Nan Shepherd speaks of the heather in her book The Living Mountain. |
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The New Testament speaks of the importance of maintaining orthodox doctrine and refuting heresies, showing the antiquity of the concern. |
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The dominant language of Latin America is Spanish, though the most populous nation in Latin America, Brazil, speaks Portuguese. |
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If eventually no one speaks the language at all, it becomes an extinct language. |
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George of Amastris, which speaks of a raid that had extended into Paphlagonia. |
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No record survives of the outcome of the case, but no contemporary account speaks of the trial by battle actually taking place. |
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The Flemish population in the north speaks Dutch, the Walloon population in the south speaks French or German. |
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He speaks so calmly and polysyllabically that people fail to appreciate the Machiavellian ambition inside. |
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Megasthenes lived with Sibyrtius, satrap of Arachosia, and often speaks of his visiting Sandracottus, the king of the Indians. |
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Of these writers, Arrian speaks most highly of Megasthenes, while Strabo and Pliny treat him with less respect. |
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Three percent of the population speaks an indigenous language, which is lower than the national average of six percent. |
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It speaks well for Barrett's presence of mind that he had grasped the situation and decided on his line of action before Welch went. |
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By contrast, a second language is any language that one speaks other than one's first language. |
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Set in Haworth, the servant Joseph speaks in the traditional dialect of the area, which many modern readers struggle to understand. |
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Dominic Monaghan speaks with a notable Manc accent, and his characters in both Lost and FlashForward have made note of it. |
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The transaction speaks for itself and a court of equity ought not to hesitate long in characterizing it as unfair competition in business. |
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To consecrate the bread and wine, the priest speaks the Words of Institution. |
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However, the British monarch often undertakes visits and speaks to the devolved bodies in a less official capacity. |
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But they'll scrag you for it, you know, if you do. They scrag anyone who speaks to me. |
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He won't have a pleasant morning, I can tell you! I shall snap his head off every time he speaks to me. |
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This definitely speaks to the fact that at Georgetown, beginning at the admissions process, you're not a number but a real person. |
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Bengali speaks with courtly floweriness even when sticking the knife in, and Thompson's well-meaning British bluntness was not appreciated. |
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He's an uncomplicated working-class kid who speaks, jab-like, straight from the shoulder. |
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She walks, albeit a little uneasily, and speaks in two-word sentences. |
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He speaks distinctly of the Trinity of the godhead in the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost. |
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You see that the Apostle speaks as one who had distinct and certain knowledge of the grounds whereupon he was standing. |
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The first time a president speaks at Brandenburg Gate it is historic. |
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Frank White is a humble man when he speaks about his journey as a woodturner and his distinction as an artist. |
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Like the vast majority of older generations in the altiplano, she speaks only Quechua. |
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The presence of the American lion, whether experienced personally or sensed from afar, speaks volumes about the overall health of the ecosystem. |
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Clegg speaks five languages and once worked for the european commission. |
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