In our slavish devotion to pop culture, is there any hope of taming the monster of celebrity? |
|
Audience loves to watch the taming of ferocious animals by daredevil ring masters. |
|
Many women deal with issues of power and conformity, not to mention chemically taming their hair. |
|
Perhaps it's not surprising to find evidence of taming cats and their habituation with human settlements at such an early date. |
|
Unfettered by the strictures of plot, the movie homes in on local talent and captures the attitude towards taming the islands' cold waters. |
|
Through the quantification of fire risk, underwriters reconceptualized fire in abstract, economic terms, taming it on paper. |
|
Emotion, though we believe we can control it, is so volatile that is like taming the storm. |
|
Some live out their circus fantasies by taming lions or elephants, but aerial acts combine macho cool and athletic grace. |
|
If anyone's succeeded in taming their black dog, drop me a note sometime and let me know what worked for you. |
|
Africans, for example, were criticized for not taming the elephant, which had proved so valuable in Asia. |
|
He ran a hand over his blonde hair, grimacing slightly at the rebellious strands that refused his taming attempts. |
|
It was rare that he got excited to the point of babbling about anything, but the thrill of catching and taming a wild horse was something she could easily understand. |
|
The taming of nature extends to the skiing as well as the village. |
|
Perhaps, we should refer to the sublime, partial taming of instinctual drives rather than a clear cut deaggressivization and delibidinization of them. |
|
There is little doubt that the government interfered and was more interested in taming its own military than producing justice. |
|
Now the UN seems to have embraced a method of taming the rapists and killers rather more familiar in Congo by trying to kill them. |
|
The whole of Buddha's teaching, then, is directed towards taming this mind, and keeping our heart and mind pure. |
|
It's a real source of pride for everyone who has worked the past three years on taming the cursed animal. |
|
Another way of minimizing stress on livestock is to spend time taming them, and exposing them to many different experiences in their lives. |
|
Knowing what causes or increases your stress can be the first step in taming it. |
|
|
We, women human rights defenders, learn to live with fear every day, taming it. |
|
Nation building has been central to the success of taming ethnicity in Ghana, and was especially so during the Nkrumah era. |
|
At its core is a liquid-cooled 550 H1 EFI engine capable of taming almost any terrain. |
|
Aries hide doubts about themselves behind a pretty convincing show of bravado, but taming your wild side and behaving considerately will express your best qualities this week. |
|
She shows him the quick sketch she has done of him lying on the grass smoking a cigar, and then takes out another sketch she made of him years ago, back home, taming a horse. |
|
I was working on taming my out of control curly black hair, it wasn't going so well, I had given up on trying to blow dry it straight, so I just let it go. |
|
Here are the 2014 winners: Jean Tirole of Toulouse University, won for his work on market power and regulation, and his work on taming powerful firms. |
|
Large cash inflows have driven market valuations higher, however, and taming inflationary pressures has now become the main concern for policy makers in the emerging markets. |
|
Under Margaret Thatcher's government, the taming of inflation displaced high employment as the primary policy objective. |
|
However, humans have had success taming certain species, such as the elands. |
|
Carpenter, the English are credited with first taming common ostriches outside Cape Town. |
|
The countryside was not the only thing in want of taming. |
|
Consumers, both foreign and domestic, are taming agrarian unruliness. |
|
The dialogue requires taming and evolves with the work. |
|
It was such a splendid opportunity, anyhow, for breaking contracts, cutting salaries, and taming the stars. |
|
As he rose to the top of his profession, Paul Bardinet continued to work on taming the fieriness of his demon spirit, blending the various origins, followed by long years of maturing in oak casks. |
|
The meeting had begun with predictable whingeing from the premiers about the miserliness of the federal government, whose share of health spending plummeted when Mr Martin, as finance minister, was taming federal deficits. |
|
There is the question of whether President Wahid, for all his apparent success in taming some of his more insubordinate generals, can really bring the country's armed forces under the rule of law. |
|
By taming his once infamous fiery temper, he has coaxed the best out of the world famous orchestra and earned the reputation as the elder statesman of his profession. |
|
This time, the debates have more closely resembled the political theatre of continental countries: a babel of voices seeking your attention and your votes with the specific intention of taming a Labour or Tory regime. |
|
|
The taming of the auroch probably began with rounding up those animals that would tolerate humans. |
|
The equity Sub-Advisor has also found opportunity in China where growing companies are finally falling in value due to the efforts at taming inflation in the local economy. |
|
This association provides rehabilitating services for injured, orphaned and pollution-damaged wildlife with the objective of returning healthy animals to their natural habitats, without taming or habituating them. |
|
Democratization and access combined with confinement and the taming, the 'bureaucratization' of the artistic dynamics, are responsible for this paradox. |
|
We can imagine a camp fire surrounded by primitive people communicating in grunts and sign language with a stranger who tells them about taming goats or planting grain, perhaps handing them a few seeds to try out. |
|
Whether your specialty is speed and horsepower, plowing through the deep powder or taming mountains, or whether you're looking for a comfortable sled you can take long-distance, Arctic Cat has what you need. |
|
In that respect, money for research will not be wasted, even if we never succeed in taming the actual fusion process so that more energy is produced using it than is needed to get the process started. |
|
These combinations represent, at the same time, the patience of the training necessary for this extreme taming and the harmony of the relation man with horse. |
|
The practical sciences were of great interest to colonial Americans, who were engaged in the process of taming and settling a wild frontier country. |
|
The first challenge to shaping and taming this emerging world is the will itself and the human problem of unwill, especially in relation to femininity. |
|
Christopher Sly, a drunken old tinker, is conned into watching The Taming of the Shrew as it is presented by a company of players. |
|
The play is a kind of reversal of The Taming of the Shrew, where the man-hater Kate is replaced with a woman-hater Cavaliere. |
|
This week it's The Taming of the Shrew, Franco Zeffirelli's 1967 adaptation of Shakespeare's comedy about two squabblers who fall in love. |
|
The stock argument against The Taming of the Shrew is that it is degradingly misogynist. |
|
He and I were auditioning for a part in a play entitled A Small Town's Taming of the Shrew. |
|
And The Taming of the Shrew without a shrew and a bully is like Hamlet without the Prince and the King. |
|
Miss Gazdowick will play Lady McDuff in Macbeth and Bianca in The Taming of the Shrew, while Mr Smith will play Duncan in Macbeth. |
|
The matinee performance of The Taming of the Shrew has already sold out! |
|
The Taming of the Shrew recalls a tradition of stories about scolds. |
|
The Taming of the Shrew is plainly the work of a woman-hater. |
|
|
In The Taming Of The Shrew, courtship and marriage are not so much the result of love but rather an institution of society that people are expected to take part in. |
|
The Taming of the Shrew also became a notable critical and commercial success. |
|