There were too many critics in the crowd who were instantaneously giving running commentaries. |
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Included among these critics are analytic philosophers, film aestheticians, sociologists and cultural theorists. |
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And the unique twists in the overlapping subplots demand that critics like myself keep our fat yaps shut and give away as little as possible. |
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Viciously attacked by critics and rejected by the public, the Impressionist painters were outcasts in the art world. |
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But critics have attacked the BBC for lavishing public money on non-programming activities at a time of massive cost-cutting in the organisation. |
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Because addicts who are sent to the drug court go on a methadone programme immediately, critics say criminals are jumping the queue. |
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Religious critics lacked fervor and moral authority, while surviving Populist and Progressive skeptics were dismissed as killjoys or cranks. |
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This new film, Full Frontal, was savaged by critics and stayed in theaters for roughly four hours. |
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Now, the G-8 summit in years past, critics would say, was a bit of a yawner. |
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Some critics have also found it ironic that many people who purchase bottled water end up refilling the containers from a tap. |
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And then, when a third party defends the targets against the unfair criticisms, the critics seem upset. |
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The play was fiercely attacked by critics and made headline news in the tabloids. |
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Don't get me wrong, this is not me talking, I am just saying what his critics have said over the years. |
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How do you respond to critics who say that the juicy returns you promise for Social Security accounts will likewise prove elusive? |
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Kilcummin were confounding the critics as they played with dash and flair, first to every ball as they attacked in waves. |
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Many critics raved about the bust but others found it ghoulish and disgusting. |
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But some critics are concerned that the fond remembrances are coming off as distorted hero worship. |
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It will be judged by six critics from around the world with the public providing one vote. |
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If anything, it allows for a reverse form of cultural prejudice, through which critics idealize large groups of people they barely understand. |
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These critics argue that the restriction upsets the logic we use to reason with such predictions. |
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Seemingly confident just a few weeks ago, she is now prone to utter sharp words about her critics in public. |
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He attacks the critics of postmodernism by calling them sociological reductionists. |
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Its critics claim that some downed animals are passed by inspectors because they are just conscious enough to respond to a kick. |
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His critics are quick to point out, however, that his success owes at least something to his use and reformulation of conservative ideas. |
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That's what she got, getting high marks from critics for wringing every ounce of effort from her team. |
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Only with the decline of auteurism as a critical framework did critics turn to a closer examination of Hitchcock's sources. |
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Their albums are usually acclaimed by critics and music nerds, but fail to become major hits. |
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Since Gilbert and Gubar's The Madwoman in the Attic, critics have assumed that attics house madwomen. |
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Though critics saw him as quick-tempered, harsh, abrupt, and arbitrary, practically everyone recognized his genius as a chief of staff. |
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But sugar is less expensive in that country than in the United States, where critics contend import quotas artificially raise sugar prices. |
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See what the critics say of your harmless jokes, neat little trim sentences, and pet waggeries! |
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Beautiful and well-bred, she suffered the hostile treatment of critics who believed that as a painter she must be a woman of easy virtue. |
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I mean, your critics are saying you can't be lawmakers and lawbreakers at the same time. |
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The analysts and critics have all been outputting their views as to the reason why the West Indies came out of the game with such distinction. |
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But critics fear more tragedies could occur unless reckless behaviour is tackled. |
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It was an attempt by a weakened government to placate right-wing critics in Britain. |
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Some critics carp that the trip is just a tourist jaunt by a lame-duck president. |
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Many critics have lambasted the female characters in his plays as two-dimensional and unrealistic portrayals of subservient women. |
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It was a commercial flop, but made waves with critics and industry kingmakers. |
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Even the stores' harshest critics concede that they provide employment, albeit in primarily low-level service jobs. |
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This is also true of newspaper critics who cover the arts, films, music, and books. |
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Among the loudest critics are members of the port's powerful longshoremen's union. |
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Faculties often take it amiss when critics appeal over their heads to alumni, trustees or parents. |
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And yet a lot of jazz musicians and critics and fans, in print and on the web, have been complaining that it's too constrictive. |
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However, even his most severe critics now agree that the alleged flaw is largely a thing of the past. |
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Selectors and critics forget that this is a window on Indian cinema, good Indian cinema. |
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Congressional critics today lashed out at the administration for failing to deal with the massive trade deficit with China. |
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But critics point out that John Paul II was not killed by the attempt on his life, as the text foretold. |
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But his critics say he has needlessly antagonized professors with his autocratic style. |
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It enjoys demonising the elected representatives of the labour movement and treats its left critics as heretics to be cast aside and scorned. |
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He will also confound critics by claiming the economy is still on target to hit the growth forecasts he set out earlier this year. |
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Avowedly inspired by Emerson, Whitman's Leaves of Grass is regarded by some critics as the most revolutionary volume in American poetry. |
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If there's one thing you can say about critics on the NBCC board, it's that they never pick the safe choices. |
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When the companies announced their merger, the nation's media reporters autodialed the usual critics of media conglomeration. |
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Stuck in limbo for 37 years, the album has finally been unveiled to adoring acolytes, frothing critics and celebrity fans by its creator. |
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This in no way means that God is powerless, as some critics of kenotic theology have complained. |
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His most ambitious music was abominated by conservative critics and also baffled concert audiences. |
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This is not the first time a controversial film has been attacked before its critics have seen a single frame. |
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It complicates the way critics employ stereotype-centered criticism to produce absolutist, value-based judgments. |
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As the rumblings of the critics grow louder, the performer insists he is better than ever. |
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Over the years critics have noted that Terry often found it difficult to hold the line on a budget. |
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It is just not true, as his critics assert, that he always took the easy way out. |
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I grumbled to a small assembly of newspaper book critics who immediately began scribbling notes. |
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Like many critics of Federation Square, this guy emphasised the harshness, angularity and general uninvitingness of the development. |
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Early in his career, Pinter denied that he wrote symbolically, partly because critics tried to associate him with absurdism. |
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The basic charge is that these men, critics of capitalism, were racists, anti-Semites, and elitists. |
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Jones says he was a bit puzzled by feminist critics who took the film to task for being misogynist. |
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When Stephen King won the National Book Award he used the opportunity to admonish critics for not reading more John Grisham. |
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I also remember how many times Roone was jumped on by the critics when one of his many news or sports experiments tanked. |
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But some critics have questioned the wisdom of a costly project that could go horribly over budget. |
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Flanagan writes with verve and vim, but she's not as single-minded as her critics make her out to be. |
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However, the government's critics have replied by urging it to make better use of empty homes. |
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Some critics are worried about what they are calling the Talibanization of that country. |
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The gruff and blustery painter was alternately rejected and embraced by critics and the art public over his subject matter and style. |
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Many other critics and many, many dance lovers can no longer bear to watch the awfulness of his work. |
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He does not ignore the psychological complexities of Ellison, who was not the drab, neutered literary lion some critics made him out to be. |
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The issue for her critics is the extent to which her populist approach has compromised the channel's public-service remit. |
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He lambasted the law's critics for alleging that limiting the use of force in making arrests would make police sitting ducks. |
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Other critics have endorsed his conclusions, and now even Wordsworthians are cautious in commenting on the poem. |
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As Toronto theatre critics dispense increasingly disparate opinions, some shows are savaged in one rag and lionized in another. |
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All this is taken by Derrida's critics for an attack on truth itself, referentiality and the stability of interpretative contexts. |
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Eleven years later, even his harshest critics would have to concede that Barry has been as good as his word. |
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But if the critics were anticipating a recantation of his views on politics and art, they were sorely disappointed. |
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The standard rubric is that critics care about literary quality, not commercial success. |
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But for every loony tune there are several solid symphonies, whose excellence few critics will decry. |
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Although the open admissions policy was weakened, its critics continued to assail it. |
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Clarke has responded to his critics with a dollop of wistful regret, followed by an adamant refusal to back down. |
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The critics will point to this as irrefutable proof of their argument that vouchers undermine the public school system. |
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His critics say he should resign because he has lost the moral ascendancy to govern and to save the plummeting economy from collapse. |
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It is a sort of sampling session for senior musicians and critics to measure the potential an upcoming artiste. |
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Is the leader becoming a liability, or can he convince his critics he's not a racist? |
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His broadside against his critics seemed more like the rantings of a schoolboy than a literary lion. |
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If a novel was riddled with the flat-footed cliches that plague so many science books, the critics would skewer it. |
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But these young folk in the suburbs are in general more consumers than critics when it comes to American capitalism. |
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In the late Seventies and Eighties the production of westerns declined to the point that several critics affirmed the death of the genre. |
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His steadfastness and resolve in the face of his critics are deserving of praise. |
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Bottled water critics grumble about the price and the heavy bottles they have to lug home. |
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But what about the regular roll call of comparisons critics love to reel off? |
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The book, influenced greatly by him, had largely been savaged by Australian critics and I wanted to see what he himself would make of it. |
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It hardly seems to matter that the critics have universally savaged this show. |
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Few critics will agree with all her assessments but most Wildeans will find her survey a valuable resource. |
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His 19 years in the Senate have provided plenty of ammunition for critics to portray him as inconsistent. |
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The tone and tactics of globalisation critics may need some adaptation, but debating on who makes and manages global policies remains vital. |
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But not all of the critics who have attacked the President for being dishonest are peddlers of these way-out notions. |
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Reviewers and critics paid Swinburne the compliment of identifying him with Sappho and praising his talent as Sapphic. |
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However, critics claim that the awesome size and alien appearance of the plants will spoil the landscape. |
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This collection of essays brings together a number of major feminist critics of early modern literature. |
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But critics claim the decision is premature and that the PCT has gone back on a promise made last spring to find an alternative site. |
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Even philosophical critics of rationalism pay reason the back-handed compliment of arguing against its pretensions. |
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San Marino were beaten, Croatia were held, and Brown's escapology confounded his critics once more. |
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Undoubtedly, critics will once again struggle to find adequate adjectives and metaphors to describe the width and breadth of their unique sound. |
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Amazingly, the film went down a storm among critics who had the chance to catch up with it, in America. |
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So, everyone's waxing nostalgic in some way or another, from designers and critics to the audience. |
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Other than the political quibbles, London critics were mostly rapturous about this modern-dress revival. |
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Though the building received accolades from the architecture community, many critics considered it inhospitable to the display of art. |
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Intimidation of critics and the press is the hallmark of dictators and other absolutist weaklings. |
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Proving his critics wrong Danny rolled up his trousers and let leg waxers loose on his thick hairy legs. |
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He minced no words in lashing out at critics who charge the administration manipulated pre-war intelligence to justify going to war. |
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Indeed, he has become a whipping boy for critics who are afraid to attack a popular Commander-in-Chief. |
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The mention of critics can only bring us to the topic of Nunn's sworn enemy. |
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Film critics have rarely been so united in their antipathy, so vitriolic in their condemnation. |
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Most British food critics make little effort to go undercover at restaurants and many openly mix with chefs and restaurateurs. |
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At different times in Labour's history the party's left wing critics have been told they open the door to letting the Tories back in. |
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This is supposed to reassure critics that certain groups, like anti-abortionists, will not grab control of hospitals. |
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A close-up on the 56-year old Magande reveals much more than what some armchair critics and sceptics may be raving about. |
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As far as my other critics are concerned, the envy seems to have corroded down to hatred. |
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The critics and the knockers were out in force to quickly write off their chances. |
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In the West, critics of detente and arms control argued that the Soviets were acquiring nuclear superiority. |
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Most critics savaged his comedy when it was released last fall, but really, what were they expecting? |
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Vocal critics abound and many new dietary regimes suggest limiting grain products rather than encouraging them. |
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Again the government admitted, before the election, that its critics were right. |
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After a few years, I yielded to the pressure of fellow critics who couldn't understand why I wasn't raving about the film. |
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More conservative critics found the root of his decline in his abandonment of religious faith. |
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There is a steel determination between both panel of players to lift Carlow to new levels and silence the critics once and for all. |
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However, critics note these same states run equally addictive national lotteries and accuse them of hypocrisy. |
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The Tory leader hopes to see off his critics by unveiling a raft of policies this week on pensions, health, education and policing. |
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The author roundly silenced his critics when the densely illustrated, alliterative animal alphabet book sold 1.3 million copies worldwide. |
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The backlash from the dance music critics and cognoscenti has been neck-snapping. |
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The leader will this week defy his growing band of critics within the government and the country by publicly restating his intention to stay in power until the next election. |
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I suppose, too, there is a feeling among Eurocentric critics that the Latins received their due decades ago. |
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The small band of French critics helped shift the view of Hitchcock from a clever, popular entertainer to a Significant Artist. |
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A preface would have to make the case before critics read the book, or an afterword would have to cause them to reassess their initial impressions. |
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Yet critics of the right to be forgotten argue that by removing Google search results, the law is enabling censorship. |
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His critics like to joke that at 67, he still wears lifts in his shoes. |
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That campaign didn't exactly become the quagmire critics predicted. |
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Sachin Tendulkar wades into critics of his new batting style. |
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The skinny Minnie even had some critics asking if the famed mouse had binged on celery and cocaine over the summer. |
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Hailed by some critics in Britain, where Graham is a professor at Newcastle University, it deserves more attention stateside. |
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Already critics are buzzing about the series, garnering necessary and positive word of mouth. |
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The deal, critics charge, was at best a bad one and at worst, a callous political move. |
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While critics are blasting her for losing too much weight, she reveals the workout routine that helped her do it. |
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No campaign can afford a multitude of competing strategies, or row upon row of bullfight critics publicly questioning every move. |
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Sure, they got awards, but critics were also raving over junk. |
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Restaurants have a soft opening and weeks of tweaking before critics come calling to bestow stars. |
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Still other critics are baffled that Borges was influenced by such strange and disparate sources. |
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Some critics have made the same sorts of arguments about the remote and effete president. |
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Refuting critics who say he is anti-contraception, Gardner is calling for over-the-counter sale of birth control pills. |
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One of these critics was William Borden, executive director of the congressional joint committee on atomic energy. |
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Contrary to some critics of parsimony methods, cladists neither deny the possibility that true ancestors are being sampled nor reject the reality of anagenesis. |
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While CBS is taking a gamble on a relatively unknown talent, to many critics this decision was all too predictable. |
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Some critics believe that the problem is a result of the military not adequately enforcing its own regulations. |
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Having reviewed anti-Israeli agitprop masquerading as theater, I was prepared to join critics in hating The Death of Klinghoffer. |
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By the late nineties, many critics had begun to find Iranian films cloying and repetitious, and The Silence doesn't exactly help that particular cause. |
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Now capitalism is receiving severe rebukes, with its critics given powerful evidence that they are right in seeing it as a system that works for insiders and their cronies. |
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His views and attitudes were formed in naval wardrooms and are more usually representative of public opinion than the constipated gripings of his critics on the left. |
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Indeed, some critics have suggested that Evan was misdiagnosed to begin with. |
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One of the biggest complaints that critics have is that companies have an incentive to selectively publish data. |
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To his critics he was a lightning rod, attracting fear and vituperation. |
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Predictably, her worst critics have come out with Bibles held aloft. |
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They still managed to produce a perfectly reasonable constitutional document that deserves far more respect than it has received from the knee-jerk critics here at home. |
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Granted, hard-core globalization critics were skeptical from the start because the Compact lacked a rigorous system for monitoring corporate behavior and punishing laggards. |
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I'd like to think I've answered those critics who had lambasted me for my disciplinary problems and, under some provocation at times this summer, I've held my composure. |
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On a global scale the critics of the system are labelled heretics and on a micro scale people like me still seek refuge in shopping when it all gets too much. |
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The anti-MMR campaign has repeatedly smeared its critics either as stooges of the medical establishment or as lackeys of the vaccine manufacturers. |
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Many critics have disdain precisely for this strange messiness of his, this showmanship that dares to create a new order. |
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While critics felt the season was inspired, some fans voiced their disapproval. |
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Hailed as a prodigy in the US, critics have frothed over her ability to switch from elegant jazz to rap to complex satirical songs worthy of Sondheim. |
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And some critics will then take us to task for flouting ordinary usage. |
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But critics suggest they constitute only a slap on the wrist. |
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Because of her delight in flouting traditional or fashionable bottoms and tops, Morrison has been taken to task by feminist critics for not supporting the party line. |
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He was the human sampling machine, selling millions of records and drawing degree-level analysis from critics impressed by his magpie eclecticism and arch intelligence. |
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Unlike Axler, Pacino says he has yet to lose his, though many critics would beg to differ. |
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But the other major issue for some critics is the idea that the Tennessee law creates a slippery slope. |
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Inness's painting was given a cordial reception by the newspaper critics if not the worshipful praise that often greeted the pictures he exhibited at this stage of his career. |
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Milutinovic has shaken off many of the critics who bayed for his blood after sloppy performances and infighting just before the World Cup qualifiers. |
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What gratified her was that critics and other novelists embraced her book with no idea as to who actually wrote it. |
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But here the critics drop their ideological mask as surely as the court dropped it in the Gonzales ruling. |
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Perhaps inevitably, critics have commented unfavourably on the lack of action in Michel Thaler's work, The Train from Nowhere, which runs to 233 pages. |
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While some critics say it took too long for the president to come to this bottom line, others say that he seemed to rush the proposal out with a sinister motive. |
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Sometimes the critics love you and sometimes they hate you. That's showbiz. |
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Why take risks, when the very name of the opera secures sold-out performances, assuming the critics don't assail it, or the conservative crowds don't shun it? |
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But it was too late, as critics and audiences had already written it off once the show failed to dazzle them from the outset. |
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Some critics of the president's handling of Iraq are expressing deep concern the mission there is turning into a situation similar to what happened during the Vietnam War. |
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By 1915, mourning attire had begun to draw more attention to the mourner than to the deceased, drawing critics to the practice. |
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It is loathed by some critics who find it patronizing, silly, and superficial. |
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At age 38 Lewis' critics have counted him out more than once. |
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In Northanger Abbey, Jane Austen defends the novel against critics who dismiss it as frivolous and feminine. |
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But, his critics wonder, does having a name synonymous with street art put him at odds with the anti-establishment ethos of it? |
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In earlier centuries academies existed to decide what was art, while today we have gallerists and critics at the gate. |
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No one since Garbo has been so deft at ducking fans, especially most of the writers and critics prophesizing with their pens. |
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Some critics would argue that that is seven campy, poorly made, arguable offensive films too many. |
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They are the most enthusiastic laughers, pointers and critics of us all. |
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Some critics say that the movie reinforces negative stereotypes about the military. |
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Yes, in their wisdom, rather than spend a little money to fix the holes in their device, they're spending a lot of money to hunt down their critics and sue them. |
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Despite the organization's kinks and flaws, even some of FSC's fiercest critics acknowledge its needed role in the movement to help forests regain their balance. |
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And yet, while most of us basked in these literary offerings, less generous critics ruthlessly savaged these works. |
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We have been critics of domain dispute arbitrators since the beginning. |
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No wonder some critics think that Shanghaiese are not ready to see a Pina Bausch show because they have not surpassed the stage of merely appreciating linear narrative. |
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In fact, we've been strong critics of politics of extremism and reactionaryism here at the frum blog. |
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There were plenty of critics who had noted the self-revelatory nature of Shakespeare's plays, and whose articles and commentaries could easily have set him right. |
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The current firestorm should galvanize critics of education reform, but not in the way they think. |
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This has led critics to regard advance directives as living wills. |
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The garage rock revival has gotten so much press the last year that critics have had to invent the term New Garage to keep track of bands like The Strokes and Yeah Yeah Yeahs. |
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But the hard-nosed movie critics in America were harder to impress, as the first reviews of the film published across the Atlantic showed yesterday. |
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Do the critics know that it is taken along with anti-emetic tablets? |
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But not everyone is keen about Horvath's circles, especially Gyrotonic's reliance on weighted repetitions, which, some critics say, can cause muscle strain and unwanted bulk. |
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But its critics say it would be far better if companies had to excise such data before sharing what is left. |
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Can we find a framework of values that could be shared by both the defenders and critics of the materialistic, economic and liberalistic approach? |
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It is the version now generally available although some critics consider the silent version superior. |
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Prominent film critics have also been outspoken in their appreciation of Oldman. |
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In any case, Herman's book is one that must be taken seriously by committed Kantians and critics of Kant alike. |
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Overall, critics raved about the reputed conclusion to Kage Baker's Company novels. |
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He conducted the orchestra for the 1930 season, and music critics commented on the improvement in the playing. |
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His Romeo was not well reviewed, but as Richard II Gielgud was recognised by critics as a Shakespearean actor of undoubted authority. |
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A running time of nearly five hours did not dampen the enthusiasm of the public, the critics or the acting profession. |
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In his scenes of decline and madness towards the end of the play some critics found him less moving than his finest predecessors in the role. |
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Olivier's performance received strong praise from the critics for its fierce athleticism combined with an emotional vulnerability. |
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These critics so lacerated the film for two hours to David Lean's face that the devastated Lean did not make another film for fourteen years. |
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In the 2000s, critics regularly noticed the influence of goth on new bands. |
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Music journalists and critics also noticed a dubstep influence in several pop artists' work. |
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Almost every tribute paid to Sir Alfred in the past by film critics and historians has emphasised his continuing influence in the world of film. |
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MacAskill created the JCR post in 2011 but critics blame fierce judicial opposition for its lack of teeth. |
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The film was well received by critics but performed poorly at the box office. |
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Robinson notes that this was an innovation in comedy films, and marked the time when serious critics began to appreciate Chaplin's work. |
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Rooney hit back at critics who thought United were taking a gamble by so lucratively rewarding a player supposedly past his peak. |
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Music critics praised the band's performance and there was widespread speculation about a full reunion. |
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However it received harsh reviews from critics and closed in May 2006 after 39 performances. |
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The results indicated that critics of government-sponsored religion are part of a fairly small minority in the Yellowhammer State. |
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The film premiered in New York City on 20 October 1976, but was given a lukewarm reception by critics and fans. |
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While some critics have targeted the use of ammonium hydroxide in the product's production, Staples said the meat has been deemed safe. |
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Yearners are their own worst critics says Mr Phipps, always expecting great results. |
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Through the decade, heavy metal was used by certain critics as a virtually automatic putdown. |
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Released in June 1968, the film was praised by critics for its music, humour and innovative visual style. |
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The Web is an effective enabler of listmakers everywhere and Reader critics are no exception. |
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The Larkhall potter was Crucible king in 2006 but five years on is still angered some critics labelled him the worst world champion ever. |
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Blyton's depictions of boys and girls are considered by many critics to be sexist. |
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It seems Bala has not let his fans down with the movie receiving positive feedback from film critics who termed it as Bala's career best. |
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The American public liked it, but the critics did not, and it fell into neglect until interest revived near the end of the composer's life. |
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But critics argued the ASBOs too often became viewed as a 'badge of honour' by the disaffected or feckless youths it was aimed at curbing. |
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In the case of Greece, there can be little question that, as critics have charged, Greece is seemingly addicted to welfarism. |
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Southampton had been hoping to get back to winning ways to prove to their critics there was substance to their sterling start to the season. |
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Some critics value it highly, pointing to music such as that written by Erich Wolfgang Korngold, Aaron Copland, Bernard Herrmann, and others. |
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For the most part these commentators and critics were Russophobes of strongly hawkish views. |
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Despite mild praise for his acting, Child 44 was reviewed negatively by critics and was a box office failure. |
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While heavy metal was growing in popularity, most critics were not enamored of the music. |
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Today, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall is considered by most of the critics to be one of the first sustained feminist novels. |
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Many critics in the 20th century identified Carlyle as an influence on fascism and Nazism. |
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During the 19th century, critics deemed them unworthy of attention, distractions from his poetic works. |
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Today, the Restoration total theatre experience is again valued, both by postmodern literary critics and on the stage. |
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All the reviews of the work were positive, with critics especially appreciative of Burke's quality of writing. |
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By the 1930s, though his public success remained considerable, many literary critics saw Walpole as outdated. |
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In time, however, Weber became one of the most prominent critics of German expansionism and of the Kaiser's war policies. |
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It is considered by critics to be Milton's major work, and it helped solidify his reputation as one of the greatest English poets of his time. |
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Feminist and psychoanalytic critics were largely responsible for the recovery from neglect of Shelley as a writer. |
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While Adam attempts to build an altar to God, critics note Eve is similarly guilty of idolatry, but in a different manner. |
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He pats on the back young men whom sterner critics would knock down, because even in fantastic incompetence he perceives the good intention. |
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Many critics since the 18th century have ranked Jonson below only Shakespeare among English Renaissance dramatists. |
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Eno, Origen was one of the most famous critics of the episcopal corruption. |
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Jonas Barish was the leading figure among critics who appreciated Jonson's artistry. |
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The speedy transfer of power maintained the goodwill of the new nations but critics contended it was premature. |
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Kublai's actions were condemned by traditionalists and his critics still accused him of being too closely tied to Chinese culture. |
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Joseph Inikori has written that the British slave trade was more profitable than the critics of Williams believe. |
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Feminist critics often focus on how authorship itself, particularly female authorship, is represented in and through Shelley's novels. |
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The work is generally dismissed by critics and seen as vastly less important than The Sun Also Rises, published in the same year. |
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Carr is held by some critics to have had a deterministic outlook in history. |
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The performance garnered other major accolades as well, some critics echoing McKellen in calling it the definitive Hamlet performance. |
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Leo Tolstoy and Fyodor Dostoyevsky have been described by literary critics as the greatest novelists of all time. |
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Feminist literary critics argue that the blame for the family feud lies in Verona's patriarchal society. |
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Some critics of globalization argue that it harms the diversity of cultures. |
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Her comments struck a chord with discerning critics and writers. |
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By later Kleinians and critics alike, phantasy is often seen as identical to Freud's concept of psychic reality. |
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Then too, critics started to focus on Hamlet's delay as a character trait, rather than a plot device. |
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Many fans and critics feel they have been overlooked over their past 30 years in the music industry. |
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Kott's views were controversial and contemporary critics wrote, either in favour of or against Kott's views, but few ignored them. |
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In the 20th century, feminist critics opened up new approaches to Gertrude and Ophelia. |
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Some critics characterise Thomas's trip to Antigua as nothing more than an excuse for his long absence. |
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Many critics felt that the station concentrated too heavily on its news output and lost sight of its finances. |
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In addition, GCSE grades have been rising for many years, which critics attribute to grade inflation. |
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Its critics saw this type of Medieval art as unrefined and too remote from the aesthetic proportions and shapes of Classical art. |
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Distinguished scientists, such as Harold Jeffreys and Charles Schuchert, were outspoken critics of continental drift. |
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Great Western's design sparked controversy from critics that contended that she was too big. |
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The Methodists responded vigorously to their critics and thrived despite the attacks against them. |
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The attribution to John Massey is not, however, widely supported by modern critics of the poem. |
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Yet it was in Athens where his most formidable contemporary critics could be found. |
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It is considered by critics to be a concert hall with some of the best acoustics in the world. |
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Unlike the original, the film was disliked by critics and was a commercial disappointment. |
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The film enjoyed moderate financial success, and scored with critics who had otherwise dismissed Russell's work. |
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In 1969, Michael Taylor argued that previous critics offered a too cheerful view of what the play depicts. |
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Not until the late 18th century did critics and performers begin to view Hamlet as confusing and inconsistent. |
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The word is also used in a pejorative manner by critics of this type of political rule. |
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