The match, tight as it inevitably will be, could be decided by one stroke of genius. |
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Though fixing the tower in this way was thought to be a stroke of genius, it was also considered a hazardous way to go. |
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What may strike some as a naive grab for mainstream acceptance is in fact a stroke of genius. |
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A bad idea does not become a stroke of genius just because you place it on the web. |
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The party's openness to second preferences, more pronounced than ever before, was the real stroke of genius. |
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Arnie was already a dead cert to win the recall election in California, but getting Buffett on board is a stroke of genius. |
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This bundle is a stroke of genius in our minds, and means that you can decide what content you want your kids to use. |
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A stroke of genius and ideal for TV and hi-fi furniture, or a cocktail cabinet conjured up from nowhere and made to disappear again. |
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His stroke of genius was to realize, around 1860, that cast iron of sufficient quality was now being produced. |
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With a stroke of genius, Dominique Pierru has become the king of snail caviar. |
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It was a stroke of genius he paid a high price for, but it brought excellence to his domain. |
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I think it was a great stroke of genius for us to draw a distinction between equity and non-equity securities. |
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In other words: At the EPFL we are part of a melting pot that sometimes produces nothing, but sometimes gives rise to a stroke of genius. |
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It took a stroke of genius to see the medicinal promise of the basic observation. |
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The appointment by the Prime Minister of Russell Mills as NCC chair also was an inspired stroke of genius. |
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In a stroke of genius, he visited the Hasan Kikic High School and asked the principal if his students could help. |
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The real stroke of genius given by Josef W. Manger is to be found in the side radiating sound transducers. |
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So the HeiQ success story proves that even perspiration can inspire clever minds to a stroke of genius. |
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Signing Kazu was a stroke of genius because it's generated massive interest for us here and it's given the Japanese people someone to shout for. |
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The idea put forward on 9 May 1950 by French Foreign Minister Robert Schuman was nothing less than a stroke of genius. |
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This bit of the information was Robert Shields' idea, a stroke of genius. |
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Someone had hit upon a bold concept, a stroke of genius, in fact. |
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In a stroke of genius, he enlisted bundy to vouch for him on tape. |
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The Réservoir version contains a stroke of genius in the haunting strains of the melodica which follow the melody line down, before handing back to the lead singer just before the end of the song. |
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The stroke of genius of the founding fathers was precisely to propose an original institutional structure that is neither federal nor intergovernmental. |
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But another stroke of genius from Mrs Pommery cellars was to automate its. |
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Edison's development of a complete electrical system, however, proved to be his stroke of genius, and by 1910 more than 3 million people in the United States had electric lighting. |
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Mr. Speaker, in a stroke of genius, the Minister of the Economic Development Agency of Canada for the Regions of Quebec decided to cut the budget for 60 not for profit organizations in Quebec. |
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The latest stroke of genius in the Web 2.0 landscape, the micro-blogging tool Twitter, is currently still regarded with a certain amount of scepticism. |
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However, the manoeuvre would later be acknowledged as a stroke of genius as the fully recuperated German team cruised to a 7-2 win in the deciding game against Turkey to progress to the next round. |
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Rolex succeeded the stroke of genius of reediting this Datejust. |
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