De Niro delivers an incendiary performance as Johnny Boy, in the process supplanting Keitel as Scorcese's ideal on-screen alter ego. |
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Large steamships were supplanting smaller sailing vessels as the main carriers of slaves. |
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It's truly a euphoric piece, supplanting the vocalists' rage and rediverting it to become almost an affirmation of life. |
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He feared the danger of excitement replacing understanding, and the awakening of feelings supplanting the indoctrination of the understanding and the cultivation of the heart. |
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In continental Europe, similar movements have thrived, even supplanting the traditional parties of the working class. |
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This inimitable project aside, the search for visual rather than textual material has been dominant in Courbet studies, supplanting the logocentric premise of iconography. |
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The breed remained popular until World War I, when the Boston terrier gained overnight celebrity, supplanting the French bulldog as high society's favorite little dog. |
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Optimists see robotic and cyber warfare largely supplanting human conflict. |
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If selected, he would have to give up his seat in the House and any hope of supplanting John Boehner as speaker. |
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While earning millions, reality-TV stars are supplanting the role of movie stars in some ways. |
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Web sites are supplanting mosques, madrassas and cafes as the incubators of Islamist radicalism. |
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Monuments to martyred Tigers overshadow temples and churches, seemingly supplanting the local religions. |
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Will this achieve Mr Farage's short-term goal of supplanting the Lib Dems as Britain's third party? |
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Mandatory breach notification rules are on the drawing board, supplanting the voluntary guidelines in place now. |
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Where movies rarely deal in any realistic way with the problems of work and family, these shows tell the modern story of the work-family supplanting the real-family. |
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From this point some reckon a kingdom of the Germans as supplanting that of the Franks. |
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Not that Dodd, his closest friend in the Senate, is supplanting Kennedy. |
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This food is sent all over the continent, supplanting local production, because the price of the food is not reflecting the 'real costs' associated with its production. |
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The latter type prevailed in Late Paleolithic times in Europe, supplanting Neanderthal man there. |
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The decision about whether to introduce a British bill of rights, supplanting the European convention on human rights, is to be passed to an independent commission. |
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English is gradually supplanting French as the language of business, an indication of the growing international orientation of the new business class. Of late, Egypt has become an even more eager reformer. |
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In other words, the Amorin Report was not recommending a supplanting of previous resolutions, but rather a building on those resolution so that they still apply. |
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The greatest success for intermodality has not been in supplanting wagonload traffic, but in entirely new traffic to and from ports, driven by the continuing growth of deep-sea container traffic. |
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At no time, should our comments be construed as supplanting our position that federal public sector workers should fall under the jurisdiction of the Canada Labour Code, or new legislation that incorporates its principles. |
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As public servants are thrust into more public consultation roles, for example, they should be seen as supporting ministers, not supplanting them. |
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The responsibility to protect principle offers a powerful new tool for implementing, not supplanting, human rights, humanitarian norms and humanitarian law. |
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In line with the industrial policy approach adopted by the Commission in November 1990, the Commission has no intention of supplanting industrialists in this sector. |
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The Government also intervened in procedural and administrative decisions of the Eritrean Orthodox Church by supplanting the patriarch in favor of its own candidate. |
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In general, the structure of the mission should complement existing United Nations country team capacity and avoid replicating existing programmes or supplanting local processes. |
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Its use is found worldwide, originating in Rome and spreading throughout Europe, influencing and eventually supplanting local rites. |
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Scots, often referred to as English, began supplanting Norn in the early 14th century at the time of the Wars of Scottish Independence. |
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To some degree this business about titles supplanting last names also applies to nonroyal peers, such as your run-of-the-mill dukes. |
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What the pupil already knew was indeed rather taken for granted than expressed, but it performed the useful function of transcending all textbooks and supplanting all studies. |
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It provided the foundation upon which the Royal Academy came to dominate the art scene of the 18th and 19th centuries, supplanting the earlier art societies. |
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Hapa is supplanting terms like Amerasian, biracial, and blasian. |
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