I do not remember the last time I was so viscerally affected by a literary account of another person's experience. |
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The jack arch reached its artistic apogee in the 1960s in the viscerally moving St Peter's church, Klippan, Sweden by Lewerentz. |
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That I am a westerner is viscerally obvious to me every time I have to fly east. |
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Ira is portrayed as a sentimentalist who is viscerally and passionately indignant about the inherent inequalities and injustices of America. |
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With aging, a greater proportion of the fat is located internally, or viscerally. |
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The experience is so viscerally thrilling, so primeval and satisfying, a huge laugh of relief and joy escapes from my chest. |
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They operated so close to the lookers-on, we responded viscerally to their feats. |
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But I am intellectualizing this book, which can only give you the experience of dislocation viscerally, through the flow of its language. |
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The British were always wideners, viscerally opposed to all moves toward political union. |
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All elements of his sprawling film resonate with each other intellectually, emotionally, and viscerally, while notably avoiding concrete statements of theme. |
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The mistreatment of child orphans, the poor and the women in this era is viscerally staged, making the audience squirm agonizingly in their seats. |
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The key to a successful revenge film is a viscerally satisfying ending. |
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Anthony was viscerally upset by the presence of a re-enactor portraying the wartime governor of New York, Edwin D. Morgan. |
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The fringe and the mainstream were at the time viscerally opposed: the Upstairs offered a kind of wobbly bridge between them. |
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One says viscerally because once it is integrated by the deep brain, it is integrated in all the cells of our body. |
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Ronald K. Brown and his award-winning company connect viscerally and emotionally with audiences around the world. |
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Sometimes the dancer is responding viscerally to a spiritual force emanating from deep within. |
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Somehow the party which was defeated and annihilated in 1993 decided to use the approach of attacking people viscerally and personally. |
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It seemed to me that the music was too viscerally tied to Mingus himself, leaving little room for interpretation. |
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No matter how wordy the material he begins with, this Russian-born director's work always emphasizes experiencing the story viscerally, through the senses. |
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But this sort of abstract use of hooks in the context of beat-heavy but rhythmless compositions somehow comes together in a really viscerally graspable way. |
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And when he shaved clean the perfectly coiffed hair, she was viscerally horrified. |
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Is there a moment like that which viscerally inspired you to write Third Person? |
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I could just sort of viscerally feel that there was something real going on there. |
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A president whose absence we feel to this day is suddenly there, viscerally present, in meeting after meeting. |
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Yet Americans viscerally sense a lack of gratitude among these countries when we see anti-American protests hit the streets. |
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They understand viscerally, in a way that we cannot, that a dollar is nothing but paper and an electronic bank account denominated in dollars is something even less. |
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It's a masterpiece of short-form tension – a confluence of sound and image so viscerally evocative it feels almost domineering. |
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Scuff it up, patinate it, so that it feels more physically, viscerally real, and a little less perfect. |
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Anti-globalist critics are in fact often reacting viscerally to a much larger issue: the victory of capitalism over its arch rival,communism. |
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Our European leaders and civil servants know viscerally that legitimacy and good governance is enhanced by dialogue and partnerships with all stakeholders in society. |
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When this A is integrated in the long term memory, viscerally as one says. |
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The shock of my friend's decapitation affected me viscerally, and I became paralyzed with dread. |
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Canadians are viscerally attached to the values of democracy and freedom. |
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The Walk is genuine big-screen cinema, a chance for moviegoers to viscerally experience the feeling of reaching the clouds. |
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This time there were few of the viscerally ebullient speed changes that conductors from Robert Kajanus to the 1980s Rattle brought to the coltishness of the third symphony. |
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Sturgeon leads the left-wing Scottish National Party, which is viscerally anti-Conservative. |
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Our body fat is made of some 40 billion fat cells, or adipocytes, and their supportive matrix, with most of the bulk stashed under the skin but also threaded viscerally, around and between other organs. |
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The body's impossible, unreal presence functions as a horridly exaggerated emblem of how mental anguish, the grief for a buried alternative life, might be viscerally present in a marriage. |
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Everyone is excellent, even the child actors, who are so viscerally obnoxious. |
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The other dark horse at the Baftas is Kajaki, picking up a debut nod, a viscerally powerful British war film based on a real incident in Afghanistan, directed by feature newcomer Paul Katis. |
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The most viscerally shocking of these recent crimes though, was not fatal. |
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So what is the connection between achieving the viscerally important goals that each organization, and the people in them care so deeply about, and the idea of raising awareness about Canada's voluntary sector? |
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The soldier was wounded viscerally and was expected to die of gangrene. |
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Ours is a viscerally grounded aesthetics, a neurological vehicle with thousands of years of momentum before language stood hitchhiking and kibbitzing at the side of its road. |
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