Despite the brightness of the day, there is a somber undercurrent about the race as news of the cyclist's death quietly spreads. |
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This story has a disturbing undercurrent that our soft policies allow to happen. |
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It's like music is almost unmusical, it's like a weapon, it's got this contrary undercurrent. |
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Puccini's genius for the dramatic undercurrent, often heard in bold brass interjections, heightened the tension throughout. |
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Some people mistakenly call this an undertow, but there's no undercurrent, just an offshore current. |
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Thus an undercurrent, called the Western Boundary Undercurrent, travels along the continental slope and rise. |
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It splices the twin themes of peace and humanity with an undercurrent of Indo-Pak relations. |
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There was an undercurrent of anger and jealousy that wouldn't let me admit that I'd done wrong. |
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Gradually, his neighbors become increasingly hostile and the small talk takes on an undercurrent of meanness. |
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Despite the undercurrent of levity, the activists were quite serious in their intent. |
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An obsession with hair is a peculiar undercurrent throughout films of this genre. |
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Under its smooth surface lies the seething undercurrent of teenage insecurity. |
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From time to time there is an undercurrent of remorselessness, and it is obvious here. |
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The film manages to have a strong undercurrent of threat and despair, which will aid in snaring a viewer. |
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And Hunt's character, a humourless, hatchet-faced harridan with an undercurrent of insecurity, gives very little for the audience to engage with. |
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Despite the heaviness of the subject, there is an undercurrent of hope in the book. |
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This humorous play has a serious undercurrent and will give audiences as much food for thought as it does laughs. |
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If the original film was something of a feminist diatribe, the undercurrent of the remake is plainly reactionary. |
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My concern is this undercurrent because it is much more dangerous than the overt acts of anti-Semitism. |
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I enjoyed my lassi, particularly for the undercurrent of coconut I detected. |
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The highly textured surface of these poems does not, however, obscure the continuous emotional undercurrent. |
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Most books that aim at putting your life back on the rails have a strong spiritual undercurrent. |
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But Martin balanced his ambition with an ear for winning melodies, well-turned phrases, dry wit, and an undercurrent of moroseness. |
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Stanley has one of the most joyless birthday parties imaginable thrown in his honour, with an undercurrent of menace never far from the surface. |
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There is an undercurrent of fear in our society that we may disappear without media acknowledgement of our existence. |
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Drinking coffee at night still seems naughtily bohemian in this city, and there's an undercurrent of guilty complicity in the air. |
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I have no idea, having not really watched it, but there seemed a real undercurrent of anger going down. |
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We cannot, must not, live our lives expecting the worst, but neither can we ignore the undercurrent of anxiety flowing through the capital. |
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Jonny Quest's brand of two-fisted action draws from all of these themes, updated with a strong undercurrent of cold war science. |
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There is also a humorous undercurrent as Seventies rock iconography gets a look-in with speaker cabinets of all shapes of sizes. |
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Beneath this undercurrent of grumbling is the philistine assumption that it is elitist or irrelevant to consider art which does not excite the mass market. |
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Meena manages to inveigle her way into Anita's gang, but exams, puberty and an undercurrent of racism in their small community turns the friendship sour. |
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Their greeting was coolly polite with an undercurrent of dislike. |
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Such carryings-on are wildly incorrect, politically speaking, and there is indeed a disturbing undercurrent. |
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Marvin's contemporary sportiveness versus Scott's terse misanthropy is the real undercurrent here. |
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Right from the start, there's also an ominous undercurrent to the Wallace-and-Gromit wackiness. |
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Four Friends has a decidedly sad, pessimistic, and disturbing undercurrent that belies its characters' joie de vivre with a cautionary, almost remonstrative subtext. |
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The man's expression betrayed an undercurrent of suspicion and mistrust. |
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The tone is ruminative, eccentric, and affectionate, yet the humor also carries a strong undercurrent of self-seeking. |
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And Beardsley fired home from close range in the dying minutes of a game marred by a niggling undercurrent on both the pitch and touchline. |
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From some of these participants there was also an undercurrent and unstated emotion of fear of what would happen to them should the veteran die. |
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The placid waves of the Hillsborough belie an undercurrent of activity by the population on her shores. |
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There is a humming undercurrent to the critique of modern batting, that increasingly idiosyncratic and macho pursuit. |
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But the Leninist undercurrent, though repressed, persisted in the Communist underground opposition to Stalin. |
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I've just moved to a small town not known for its broiling undercurrent of political tension. |
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On the surface, the country is fully integrated into the Soviet Union although a strong undercurrent of national feeling remains. |
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However, there is a worrying undercurrent in the way human rights and terrorism have been addressed. |
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It even demands an undercurrent of humour, which flows from the relaxed part of the being. |
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Needless to say, comparisons with Fela continued to run like an inevitable undercurrent through most reviews. |
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There is an undercurrent that someone not from diving should be selected, due to our strong external relations. |
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That clearly demonstrates the undercurrent of exclusion and intolerance that permeates the province. |
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This contrast still translates into a permanent undercurrent of anxiety and uncertainty. |
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Organised on these themes, the Conference has as its undercurrent the intensification for the dialogue with representatives of civil society. |
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The story is a simple one, but a darker undercurrent runs through it. |
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He can work himself into a holy roller's lather on his motivational tapes, but in person he's reassuringly low-key, with an undercurrent of no-nonsense intensity. |
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I had to snare one final helping of Annapurna's yogurt rice, an exotic rice salad lit up by a creamy tang, coconut undercurrent and racy flavor bursts of mustard and cilantro. |
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Also at this time, the Church was under attack by popular preachers amid an undercurrent of anticlericalism aimed against the corruption of the priests and abbots. |
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Watching it, it's got all the fun of a murder mystery musical, but the undercurrent of aggression never lets it slip into the realm of a wispy bagatelle. |
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When caught in the tractor beam of an alien vessel, drift sideways against the beam and be careful not to let the undercurrent pull you into the ship. |
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His voice is quiet, melodic, and often tinged with an undercurrent of mirth. |
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The buoyant mood of his audience was certainly out of kilter with the deep undercurrent of frustration evident elsewhere in Bournemouth this week. |
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Nonetheless, an undercurrent of anxiety ran through the newsroom. |
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Sabriel felt a strong undercurrent of understanding pass between them, and received the profound impression that she had made a loyal friend for life. |
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The undercurrent tugged lightly at her, but it was easy to fight. |
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If this was society, where a man can't even go to a pub without a reminder of the bubbling undercurrent of social unrest, give me back my bothies in the wilderness. |
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Both works have a strong undercurrent of grief and bitter nostalgia. |
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But the break seemed falsely idyllic with an undercurrent of doom. |
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The children's cheerful faces belie the undercurrent of tension in the situation. |
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The quartet's first movement opens with a seemingly light-hearted theme set to the polka rhythm, but there is an almost relentless undercurrent of mordant wit and grotesquerie throughout. |
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Many of the announcements had an undercurrent — one-upping Apple. |
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The political undercurrent, as all films based on Clancy novels, is suitably underplayed and the focus is more on suspense and action. |
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The undercurrent of the present world economic expansion is held in balance by a rise in commodity and energy prices, including oil and oil-related products, and the high level of liquidity. |
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Despite nearly unanimous agreement as to the concept of EPD, there is a negative undercurrent in some sectors that goes back to the original formation of EPD when sectoral staff and budgets were regrouped. |
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Mr. Speaker, let the record show that was not totally unanimous as there was a latent undercurrent, but I thank members of the House for allowing me to say a few words on this subject. |
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Despite the goodwill at this meeting, it is clear that a lack of trust among parties remains a potentially strong undercurrent in the negotiations. |
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There is a huge undercurrent of popular opinions, fears and prejudices. |
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She's up close to the audience, and hints of superciliousness surface on her otherwise impassive face, an undercurrent of contempt that runs through the whole show. |
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The drifter, who calls himself George Briggs, is a dissolute, selfish, but redoubtable old gunfighter, whereas Cuddy is scrupulously neat and pious, with an undercurrent of yearning vulnerability. |
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The undercurrent goes way beyond the superficial, and the strange or original receive the support and opportunities – courtesy of some strong government initiatives – to flourish. |
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Canuxploitation films form a constant undercurrent in both English Canada and Quebec, swelling at certain points to near-tidal proportions. |
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Against the background of social unrest, there was a steady undercurrent towards militancy among many traditionally marginalized groups, especially in the Terai region. |
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The two visions of the state and the non-state groups for the future of Timor-Leste share a common, often strong undercurrent of millenarianism. |
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This may account for the sociological undercurrent of his work. |
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Another major undercurrent was the sense that drinking water guidelines have become excessively focused on trace chemicals of an unknown, but likely insignificant health risk. |
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But attentive listeners noticed an undercurrent of self-incrimination. |
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The trouble is still there though and as two attempts have been made within the week on Calles' life, the place is teeming with an undercurrent of excitement. |
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The meeting was pervaded with an undercurrent of dread, as the managers tried not to admit firings were looming. |
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There is a surface current inwards in the eastern channel, but a strong undercurrent outwards in the western channel. |
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Thus, Soviet perceptions of the West left a strong undercurrent of tension and hostility between the Allied powers. |
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While reason three occupies much of Bunch's attention, the undercurrent of anger and fear that anchors the amalgam will command consideration here. |
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Yet there is a natural undercurrent tending to a national feeling and toward a union of the Germans into one great nation, ruled by one common head as a national unit. |
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For all the success that outsourcing firms have claimed in the past few years, a recently released study finds a notable undercurrent of dissatisfaction among their customers. |
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In Normandy some of the border barons rose up and, although the majority of the duchy remained openly loyal, there appears to have been a wider undercurrent of discontent. |
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But it also recognizes the undercurrent of despair and sometime downright loopiness that emerges when most everyone thinks they know most everything that's going on. |
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