This year we looked for music that I can feel comfortable with and tell a story which helps me not to over think my elements. |
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To tell a story of character in flash fiction clearly poses special challenges. |
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Most of my paintings have sheep in them, or boats, or washing lines, and I try very hard to tell a story of what is happening in my paintings. |
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But the goal of this film is not to tell a story, it's to develop a reputation by stringing together a series of macabre scenes. |
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Essentially they used the noir style of 1940s Hollywood thrillers to tell a story set in 1960s swinging London. |
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These stats tell a story but it's like comparing oranges and lemons or figure skating with snowboard cross. |
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Before we talk about the breakup, you want to tell a story about his generosity. |
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His paintings tell a story, with their depth and subtlety continuing to satisfy and inspire after countless viewings. |
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Carved by the Haida people who live on the west coast of Canada, each pole can tell a story or mark a life or death of a member of the tribe. |
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Golding brings emotion, thought, and symbolism together in Lord Of The Flies to tell a story of survival by adaptation and ingenuity. |
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These faces tell a story of loss, of despair, and of complete helplessness. |
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It's tricky to tell a story on TV about an invisible gas that might be injected deep underground sometime in the distant future. |
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The long format used to tell a story, taking the listener on an emotional journey. |
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The question was how far a director should compromise in order to tell a story. |
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Benz is easy and confident on stage, an actor who knows how to tell a story and make it roll with a wink and a punchline at just the right spot. |
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He was an engaging character who delighted in good company and was a good man to tell a story. |
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For instance, when you tell a story, you may have a character who enters, speaks his lines and then exits. |
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However that may be, his book embodies an energetic, sustained, and praiseworthy effort to tell a story that has not previously been told in the same detail. |
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You tell a story, but leave it open to personal interpretation. |
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If you're feeling creative, why not tell a story with a photo book or add that personal touch with our wide range of photo gifts? |
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You talk about the necessity to tell a story if we're going to possibly look at a national strategy to preserve our railway heritage. |
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It's wildly implausible, it's a cheap and uninvolving way to tell a story, and it shows the film's willingness to betray its characters for the sake of a laugh. |
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It is the best to assign a subject to those learning and to have each person tell a story about the subject. |
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Television news stories are short pieces that need to tell a story in a very compressed amount of time. |
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These numbers also tell a story about connections, and the interdependence of all the elements of sustainable development. |
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Each two-hour episode will build upon itself to tell a story that takes place between the third and fifth seasons of the show. |
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The islanders tell a story of an American officer of the occupation named Whitney, who found a stone on the island that contained the power of a god, a loa. |
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I will tell a story and then culminate with a question and perhaps shed some light on why some of us get fairly emotional about this. |
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Uppermost is paying attention to what is going on there, so I can come home and tell a story that in some way or other is useful to the community. |
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You can tell a story from the points of view of multiple characters. |
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More specifically, the efforts of IFIS tell a story about each crime and who's involved, through quality evidence recovery. |
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This musical has a different feel to it, because the cast is trying to tell a story all through song, which makes some of the singing sound very unmusical. |
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I insist on the mise-en-scene through a relation between the model and the props: I tell a story between fiction and documentary. |
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Images tell a story and also form a rhetoric of travel, a way to make a compelling argument and bring back conclusions from the realm of the unknown to the known. |
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Afterwards, ask the participants to tell a story themselves in a way that makes it understandable by simply listening. |
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I love creating routines that tell a story and individualize my style and identity as a gymnast. |
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Calderwood starts to tell a story, then stops, chuckling to himself. |
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The Opening Ceremony for the 2010 Olympic Winter Games is an event of historic importance that presents Canada with a once-in-a-generation opportunity to tell a story that inspires a world audience of three billion. |
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Certainly he could outdraw just about anybody, and he knew how to tell a story, seamlessly weaving words and pictures together. |
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Something like this perception is at work in a section of Float where Carson uses a series of bullet points to disconnectedly tell a story about a border crossing. |
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Many farm business specialists tell a story about two farms virtually identical in every way except one one is prospering, the other is struggling to survive. |
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Such snapshots can be combined over time to tell a story about the relative successes or failures of an urban intervention, thus providing an effective evaluative mechanism. |
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All of the stories that we are honouring tonight have this in common the commitment of an organization and everyone working for it to allow the journalists to tell a story. |
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His mission is to build sequences using a particular language, to produce an illusion and to generate emotion, the overall aim being to tell a story well. |
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This vocabulary forms a narrative that could indicate the function of an object, tell a story, identify the lineage of a social group or explore philosophical ideas. |
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My ambition is to tell a story, without having to prove anything. |
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Although an inuksuk is often perceived as an art form, it was originally envisioned as a valuable communication tool used by nomadic tribes to tell a story or to provide practical information to those who come upon it. |
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The Opening Ceremony for the 2010 Olympic Winter Games presents Canada with a unique opportunity to tell a story that inspires a world audience of 3 billion people. |
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The dentist can tell a story to divert the child's attention. |
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For social studies, they could choose an explorer and create a box of artefacts, such as maps, letters, illustrations, and other texts, to help them tell a story about that explorer in a presentation to the class. |
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He is a pulp writer who had to tell a story in as few words as possible so it could fit in one of the numerous pulp magazines. |
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Locals tell a story that she was taken to hospital in a straitjacket, but only after the loaded revolver she kept by her bed was removed. |
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As these 16 goddesses trace the phases of the moon from new to full, they tell a story of literal and metaphorical sexual union. |
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He was a!ways ready to tell a story that seemed fraught with significance. |
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He has reached the point in technical prowess where he can truly tell a story with a drumkit. |
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But what it is is an insipid, boring and punishingly long attempt to tell a story that has been told too many times already. |
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Whereas a film is really just an assemblage of images to tell a story, in a film, you have close-ups, you have jump cuts, you have all those elements. |
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The Samoan word for dance is siva with unique gentle movements of the body in time to music and which tell a story, although the Samoan male dances can be more snappy. |
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Songs with a fixed set of verses, or ballads, which tell a story, were not so well suited to tasks that could end abruptly at any time or that might require extending. |
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I think we all found it hard to predict where Chris was going to go and how he was going to tell a story faithful to season one without underselling the veracity of it. |
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