On a plus side, it could also play records, cassette tapes, CDs, and even tune in to radio stations. |
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And yet, my mother would tune in every morning without fail, to follow the latest exploits of the main characters. |
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No. 2 is the longer by 13 minutes, and notable for the emergence of a poignant viola tune in the big lento finale, and for a shocking last bar. |
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With the introduction of a new Asian family in Eastenders I decided to tune in and watch what the new clan had to offer. |
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Millions of viewers will this week tune in to watch a man playing Russian roulette on live television. |
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I tune in for the fashion firsts, the fashion faux pas, and to see what's in fashion. |
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Once again I was thwarted in my attempt to understand how to tune in to the audio on the bank of TVs mounted above the treadmills. |
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You and I have our own tastes in music, and we tune in to whatever radio station suits us. |
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With tvguide, I can grab what's on the site quickly, grep it and tune in something interesting on my TV card. |
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As long as you are fit and are able to mentally tune in to the game and go with the flow, and adapt, it is fine. |
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I am not a regular listener to his radio show, but when I do tune in I tend to like his irreverent style. |
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My brother is a priest in Zimbabwe and we would be interested to know how both he and I can tune in to the broadcasts. |
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Many hundreds of millions of people around the planet are expected to tune in to watch the announcement. |
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Listeners can also tune in to BBC Radio Cambridgeshire who will broadcast from many of the buildings on the day. |
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Emotional logic is a language that sometimes isn't easy for Libran minds to tune in to. |
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With the theme tune in the background of your mind, it is just too much to handle! |
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Night after night, viewers tune in to witness their attempts to curb their children's disruptive behaviour. |
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The Speaker of the House of Commons, Michael Martin MP, said he hoped that many people would tune in to the new service. |
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We could tune in and tune out, reassured that our American values were safe and sound. |
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If you want to watch me being awkward and unknowledgable on international TV this evening, feel free to tune in. |
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In the key of A minor, this lively marching tune in triple meter uses only two fingers in the right hand and four in the left. |
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Order a steak, tune in to that trendy trip hop and soak up a classy laid back vibe. |
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Listening to recorded birdsong is only one of many ways on the Internet to tune in to real animal voices. |
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No one's forcing anyone to buy skybox seats, tune in to Monday Night Football or plunk down a Ben Franklin for that replica jersey. |
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Observe that would normally be followed up by the speaker actually humming or singing the tune in question. |
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I'm doing BFBS next Friday at 1.30 pm, so if you know any squaddies, get them to tune in. |
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They tune in to the soft voice of an instructor, gently urging them to forge a union between mind and body. |
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This is essential listening for guitarists, but fans of left-of-centre music would be well advised to also tune in. |
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Within a couple of hours, however, they had changed their tune in the wake of negative feedback and agreed to discuss the situation further. |
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Eric strummed a random tune in his guitar and continued speaking as he closed his eyes and bent his head. |
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Do this until you feel so comfy with every note you could sing the tune in your sleep. |
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Central is a grand piano which was apparently always out of tune in Tchaikovsky's day. |
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Within a couple of hours, however, they had changed their tune in the wake of negative feedback. |
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The singer recorded the story of Charlie as a pop song after hearing an impromptu performance of the tune in a San Francisco coffee house. |
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He would play with his lip ring, roll his pencil around on the desk, jiggle his knees and shake his head to the tune in his head. |
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Don't forget to tune in to Bach's St John's Passion on Good Friday. |
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A chorale tune in Dorian mode is fragmented and turned in on itself. |
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The discussion will be live-streamed, so if you're interested, tune in. |
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A truly democratic medium, the radio is accessible to everybody, and as a result the famous and infamous, the royalty and commoners, all tune in and talk to each other. |
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Tip up or down on the center bar to tune in the station you want assigned to the selected preset number. |
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Few Democrats even in South Carolina will bother to tune in to the dutiful TV stations that are running the 90-minute gabfest on May 3rd. |
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A typical fuging tune places the tune in the tenor voice and harmonizes it with block chords. |
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He re-recorded the tune in 1964 and that version has been used ever since. |
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If it is good old-fashioned, nail-biting, tension gripped, nerve jangling action you are looking for, then tune in to the weekly Championship episode. |
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The canonic working of the tune in the accompaniment is most ingenious. |
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It's quite catchy, but so is influenza, and the exposure needed to set the tune in your brain suggests that the response is Pavlovian rather than genuine in nature. |
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Its a beautiful jazzy tune in a style Sarah hasn't really explored before. |
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It has localised the format to bid for new FM licences in Glasgow and the West Midlands so more listeners outside London don't have to tune in to the station in medium wave. |
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Why should he care, if even more listeners tune in to his radio show for the next installment of troglodytic tastelessness? |
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There was more brio than substance, and not a memorable tune in sight. |
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I shall be videoing the television coverage, and may even tune in if rain stops play in the Sri Lanka test match, but shan't give it much thought. |
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The jockeys will charge the tape and bolt to the first fence anyway, and in far flung outposts of the old Empire and beyond, they'll tune in as well. |
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Robert Shaw, the actor who sang the tune in Jaws, also sang it years earlier in a 1956 episode of the television show The Buccaneers. |
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With a December 12 submission deadline now upon them, both advocates and opponents of the proposal are ramping up their lobby efforts and landowners outside the present greenbelt boundaries may want to tune in to the action. |
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We tune in to AFFLECK's interior monologue. |
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Every other Friday starting May 28 you can tune in to CJAD Radio 800 AM to listen to Dr. Richard Haber as he dispenses health information to parents. |
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Leave this channel on all day and night to set the atmosphere to chill, or tune in as an ideal aural landscape for a dinner party or evening cocktails. |
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So you either stay shut in your own world, which is what I used to do, or you get caught up in the merry-go-round of life, like when you're touring, and you can't tune in to yourself anymore. |
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Those seeking intense competition can tune in to murderball, or wheelchair rugby to use its more common name. |
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Thanks to Escape's standard new auxiliary audio input jack, you can plug your personal MP3 player into the vehicle's sound system and tune in to your own road trip sound track. |
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Former diver and trampolinist Jon, plus thousands of fans on Twitter, tune in to see John's performance on Tumble every week. |
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Most modern detectors can also tune in any commercial radio stations, which is particularly useful due to their high power and location near major cities. |
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But given the amount of lowbrow series insulting the intelligence of so many out there, it's often a pleasure to tune in and get at least a few questions right. |
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Providing no-one scarpers they can tune in whenever they want for the football even though many of the matches kick off in the middle of the night local time. |
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