Lyrics should be poetic, concise, imaginative, theologically strong and expressive of worship to God. |
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The ornamental patterns are clear-cut, expressive, varied and unconstrainedly rhythmical. |
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Emotionally expressive individuals are perceived as more visible, more attractive, and more likeable than unexpressive individuals. |
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What I do know is that the chickadee was, in an obvious and unproblematic sense, responding to me in its expressive, chickadee-like manner. |
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Her once beautiful, animated and expressive face has been Botoxed for so many years now that it's become an immovable mask. |
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He shows an expressive solidness, which may be improved with more practice. |
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One selection should be song-like and slow, emphasizing the expressive side of your playing, and the other should be more technical. |
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The ensemble sound was bright, with the trumpets and woodwind producing particularly expressive sounds. |
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There are some beautifully expressive moments in the second Andante sostenuto movement in this concerto. |
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What struck him the most though were her gorgeous, expressive, soulful, pale blue eyes. |
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The stylization of the Lichtenstein, as well as its humorous deflation of expressive brushwork, is echoed in Fukui's own approach to realism. |
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The brushwork is fresh and lively, the texture of the paper leaving unsaturated textures and tactile, expressive shapes. |
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Instead, he often chose subjects from the kitchen table and gave them their own character through expressive brushwork and bold colors. |
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Many emotions were playing across Carly's expressive face, speaking volumes without saying a word. |
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Carradine had a wonderful mellow speaking voice which he uses to good effect in Bluebeard as well as a very expressive face. |
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Is it that Graphic Design will be thought of as a species of decorative art or some kind of crazy expressive thing? |
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During this time, his paintings were brightly coloured abstracts executed with violently expressive brushwork. |
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The vital energy and expressive dances got me in touch with my inner Greek poet. |
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These scores required singers with a beautifully produced, expressive sound and great vocal agility. |
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Probably due to his reliance on the score, much of his vocalism lacked emotional or expressive nuance. |
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Rather, he is a musician's musician, one who harvests a composition for its intimacy and expressive nuance. |
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Robin Rose is known for subtly nuanced, richly textured paintings that examine the expressive possibilities of monochromatic abstraction. |
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Their expressive, almost-human faces and brief, tragic captions brought me to tears, and I had to sit down and wipe my eyes. |
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I constructed visual shocks by mixing the technique with the expressive means of oil painting. |
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Over the last few years harmony has regained its importance in my music as well as becoming a crucial expressive device. |
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But I moved from the realm of cartoons and comic strips to really studying a lot more expressive art. |
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He's never been the most expressive of actors but here is deadpan to the point of catatonia at times. |
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In the pit, Bruno Campanella conducts a purposeful yet expressive orchestral performance. |
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The painterly freedom of the Fauves and their expressive use of color gave splendid proof of their intelligent study of van Gogh's art. |
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Perhaps in an attempt to portray the character as cerebral rather than outwardly expressive, he ends up conveying very little emotion. |
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Her voice was so expressive because of its incredible calm and internal fortitude, never needing to do too much or to over-elaborate. |
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Discuss with your students how such minimalist painters could influence an artist who uses color and light in such an expressive variety. |
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Discovered at the end of the eighteenth century, lithography allows artists to make painterly expressive marks. |
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They had in common the repudiation of such painterly qualities as expressive brush strokes and personalized facture. |
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A rich brew of extended lines, sweeping curves, off-kilter balances, de Schynkel's vocabulary is expressive without being literal. |
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But the performers are expressive, and the cinematography is absolutely gorgeous. |
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The overall effect of these works is that Tippett was a symphonist of great technical skill and expressive ability. |
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The passive voice gives a sense of detached and objective authority that, in contrast to the imperative mode, is expressive of neutrality. |
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Orlando communicates with Shel in a secret language of hyperbolic expressive power. |
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The range of Orlando Gibbons can be savoured first in another expressive and touching pavan. |
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Whether working in pencil or oil, her fine draftsmanship gives each animal its own expressive identity. |
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I wondered if I was alone in this emotional cocoon and eagerly sought the solace of expressive uniformity from other movie goers. |
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It means there is an expressive logic immanent to the medium as such, immanent in the material as it were. |
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Her sensitive and expressive playing lacked colour and projection in the live concert situation. |
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Some may be put off by the sheer ferocity of her coloratura and expressive devices, but I find them apt, thrilling, and awesomely accurate. |
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Third, erroneous responses on expressive naming tasks by both good and poor readers are often phonologically similar to the target item. |
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It discusses the development of photomontage as a radical and expressive outlet. |
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Maya Homberger's phrasing on the Baroque violin is peerless, her tone warm and expressive. |
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He is a living dream of pianism, having broken through an expressive barrier that other players do not know exists. |
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His face is simultaneously expressionless and expressive, his eyes communicating deep emotion and intelligence. |
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Therefore, their images are an important expressive and communicative resource and should be part of the cultural debate. |
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The black and white art greatly contrasts with the open and expressive looks of Sana and the inexpressive looks of Hayama. |
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No architectural medium is more infinitely expressive and endlessly challenging. |
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They are physically expressive and convey emotional information through touch. |
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It forced me to acknowledge the inseparability of the coded world and the creative, expressive world. |
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Stamps also serve important instrumental and expressive functions in the lives of heroin distributors. |
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On the one hand he's very enthusiastic and intense and can be serious, but he's also such a laugh, and so expressive that he wins you over. |
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He thrived on the atmosphere and whipped the crowd into a frenzy with his expressive displays of emotions. |
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The crowds in the St Jakobshalle took instantly to Murray's style of play and his expressive personality. |
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After a second or two the rabbits tumble into the light, their convulsive movements expressive of a primordial terror. |
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For as well as a term relevant to expressive theories of poetry, voice is a narratological concept. |
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The last decade has seen them corner the market in expressive and experimental electronic music. |
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She's more of a cabaret popster whose uncluttered arrangements leave plenty of room for her expressive voice. |
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One year an English teacher would say my writing was too flowery, another year it was not expressive enough. |
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Turner elevated English landscape painting from its inferior position below history painting and portraiture and gave it a new expressive role. |
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People in the paintings were drawn and painted with such intricate poses and expressive details. |
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Or is it a meager, yet expressive hint that the forgiveness of sins is a foretaste of eternal life? |
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Dafoe's character doesn't say much, but his cragged face is as expressive a tool as his voice. |
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Who, back in 1991, would have guessed that his clenched-teeth complaining-voice came along with such an expressive croon? |
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Fred could see the compliment was sincere in her expressive eyes and gave a curt nod then started down the stairs. |
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Emptiness is as full as fullness, and the whiteness of the paper is as expressive as the marks made upon it. |
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It's a Jim Henson studio creation, ugly but expressive and earthily magical. |
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We'd just prefer a composer who, rather than hiding his expressive potential, expressed something, dammit! |
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He gets a consistent amount of laughs with that rubbery, expressive punim of his. |
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The puppetry itself is top-notch, right down to the Cat's expressive eyebrows. |
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She was beautiful in an unconventional way, triangular elfin face with big, expressive eyes and a lithe body. |
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I guess it's fairly predictable that I would instantly fall in love with a song that has such an expressive title. |
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Indeed, brain research shows that boys are actually more empathic, expressive, and emotive at birth than girls. |
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Buildings are not only artefacts of expressive culture, but important sites for the continuous enactment of culture in everyday life. |
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It still fulfilled prescribed ecclesiastical functions, but its euphony and its expressive power showed the way toward artistic autonomy. |
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This sentimental literature exalted spontaneous and expressive emotion springing directly from the heart. |
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Rembrandt was an innovative printmaker, and was especially devoted to expressive etching. |
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It's wonderfully expressive of a hot night and the feeling of expectancy, that someone is about to step out of the dark. |
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His expressive, playful and emotion-loaded voice is appropriately soft but never soppy. |
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Her work is particularly vibrant and expressive, and her animals come alive on the canvas. |
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As passionate and expressive as she is in her acting roles, as an interviewee she can be extremely difficult. |
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Each of the twelve songs on this album are composed of beautifully expressive and intimate lyrics. |
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Bertie gave an expressive grunt, which conveyed his opinion that there was no accounting for tastes. |
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You can be bold and expressive at this point to get your message across in high places and to important people. |
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Her pleasing voice met the demands of the wide vocal range with assurance and expressive colour. |
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Some of these highly expressive conversations took place in very public places. |
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Iwan is an expressive performer, jumping around the stage, screaming and shouting. |
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The prints range in subject from expressive individual figures to more complex detailed narrative scenes. |
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Her face was expressive and her emotions streamed through like light streams through glass. |
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Caroline is more than just a pretty face and expressive voice on the stage. |
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According to Conrad, there are limits to the expressive capacities of narrative film. |
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The Chamber Choir brought the first half to a climax with an expressive performance of Cantique de Jean Racine. |
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We're both very expressive of our thoughts and feelings but she'll tell me straight up what she thinks and what she feels. |
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The pose is natural and expressive of the sitter's obvious intellectual impoverishment. |
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What if it was expressive of the redundancy of these men's thoughts, their emptiness and circularity? |
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The invitation to become members of a surrogate family not based on blood ties yet expressive of the inter-personal values of sibling kinship. |
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I just have to be me, unique and expressive of all that is inside just waiting to bust out. |
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Of all the journalistic stereotypes regularly committed to celluloid, none has been more expressive of its times than the war correspondent. |
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Some 1,800 of his sayings are collected here, most of them expressive of his wit and erudition. |
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His ideas are no more expressive of sophistic thought than of some very ancient Greek traditions. |
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He was happy to set Shakespeare, Herrick or Christina Rossetti to music that was clearly expressive of Victorian or Edwardian English taste. |
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Reduced to a series of numbers, desire is digitized and is no longer expressive of the individual. |
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Whether it is funky or elegantly dreamy, avant-garde designs and expressive concepts in eyewear continue to attract modern men and women. |
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Derived mostly from French, Creole is particularly expressive and idiomatic, using a relatively simple grammatical structure. |
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In expressive politics, people prefer to give vent to their opinions instead of rolling up their sleeves to work for change. |
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Both actors perform well above the average, with Faulkner having the added benefit of physical grace and a radiantly expressive face. |
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Modern artists like Kirchner explored the rough, expressive aesthetic of woodcut. |
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Curtis was asleep, limbs akimbo, his usually expressive face was relaxed and serene. |
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His writings were always engaging, thought-provoking and reflective, and expressive in their style and delivery. |
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Is de Oliveira making a statement about the futility of verbal intercourse, or the expressive language of feet? |
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The pearly grey colour and rough texture forms an expressive contrast with the smooth white render. |
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Not the most expressive of actors, he plays the bewildered amnesiac suffering inner demons with mostly a quiet desperation. |
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On the other hand, among friends with whom you feel at ease, you are expressive, witty, and quite charming. |
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The stroke also caused a severe expressive aphasia, which left her able to say only two words. |
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Thus I can offer to produce expressive, characteristic likenesses that completely represent the nature of the subject. |
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Keith's comic timing and expressive delivery made for a truly riveting performance. |
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The simple structures of the wire armatures were developed into more expressive forms. |
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Cleft lip and palate and other craniofacial disorders can interfere with expressive speech and articulation, and lead to delay. |
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Any CPMC patient can get guided imagery, spiritual counseling, and expressive art therapy free of charge. |
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It says that as a result, she was left with expressive language difficulties and some symptoms of attention deficit disorder. |
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She's tall and attractively thin, with long, expressive limbs, a graceful neck, and a face Raphael would dream of painting. |
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Silence is more expressive than dialogue and poetic lyricism dominates spectacle. |
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She showed great form, expressive dance and world class difficulty on bars and beam. |
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His camera remains unobtrusive when facing the talking heads, but becomes expressive in times of transition. |
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From the start, his themes were expressive of his personal traumas, his aversions and aspirations, and above all conflict with authority. |
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Even though they weren't the most sophisticated culture, or the most refined compared to, say, the Maya, the Aztecs were highly expressive. |
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Few things are as characteristic or expressive of Portuguese architecture as its painted ceramic tiles, or azulejos. |
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In doing so, he proves himself to be one of the more expressive singers around, free of melismatic acrobatics and, fortunately, scatting. |
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His arias became more expressive in the 1840s, but he also continued to use popular song types such as barcarolles, ballades, and chansons. |
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This year she's gotten me out of more scrapes than usual, and bought us our own home-use stomach pump, so I needed to be extra expressive. |
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In these works she deals with mythical beasts who are used as symbols of the masculine and feminine in a painterly and expressive manner. |
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Two of the more expressive and powerfully structured compositions show the artist in three-quarter view, dramatically lit. |
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Do these not include the expressive and deliberative interests people have in formulating their own conceptions of the good life? |
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From 1912, this piece, in the key of E minor, is very expressive and melodious with an element of sadness. |
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Every gesture of this mime can be watched with delight, and every flicker of emotion across his expressive face. |
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Both these monuments burst into sculpture at the top, and arguably sculpture is the most expressive and dramatic way to memorialize the dead. |
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Instead of returning his smile, she widened her expressive eyes, eyes that conveyed a mix of surprise and a tint of fear. |
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Her subtle shading, elegant phrasing, and expressive tonal colors were even more impressive. |
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In a naive but expressive style of drawing and understated, tongue-in-cheek text he manages to insert subtle and serious food for thought. |
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The counting must be expressive, however, reflecting the rhythmic character of the music, not merely a metronomic rattling off of the numbers. |
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For Brown, the goal was merely the most expressive part of a towering performance of assurance and influence. |
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If Durer's art is one of representation, in which the role of mimesis is paramount, Grunewald's is an expressive art akin to poetry or music. |
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Dishes clang, waiters shout, children laugh and people chatter away in expressive, nine-tone, high volume Cantonese. |
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So my face is still mobile and expressive, and while it won't ever look 25 again, there is a marked difference. |
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The cook was a huge singing head whose mobile features and acting skills exceed the expressive capacities of most live opera singers. |
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He looked up, anger and frustration still showing plainly on his expressive face. |
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The faces and hands of the saints are beautifully modeled, expressive, and elegant. |
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Panettiere channels her best teenage Elizabeth Taylor with wide, expressive eyes and a quivering lip to signal imminent emotion. |
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He's from the old school, motioning you ahead of him through doorways with a graceful wave of his expressive hands. |
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Though expressive of the secular modernist gospel, this is an un-American concept, with un-American consequences. |
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He sits rather still on his couch, rarely gestures, and speaks in a relaxed yet expressive tone. |
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His art is less disciplined than that of his putative colleague Altichiero, but it is vivid, expressive, and adventurous in the Bolognese tradition. |
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Scottish English can be so much more expressive than English English. |
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With no distracting background or props, all attention is focused on the actor's face and costume, and their expressive qualities as rendered by the artist. |
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Sometimes the effects are so expressive you can't believe chance did this. |
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When his physician announced an unfavourable change in his condition, he expressed entire resignation, and requested his friends to sing a hymn expressive of that feeling. |
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He developed his expressive skills and, simultaneously, found a comfortable social niche, allowing passers-by to see what he was doing and occasionally exchanging a few words. |
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They range from reserved and courtly to warm and expressive. |
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In Mozart and Salieri he wrote in a highly expressive declamatory idiom, while in Tsarskaya nevesta he used traditional forms and smooth melodies. |
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Stylistically, she has moved from a highly detailed, expressive idiom to a pared-down rendition of place in which the gestural mark is less pronounced. |
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If they're trying to reach the general public and fall on their face with loads of credit card bills and unpaid invoices, then it is merely art, an expressive flight of fancy. |
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By carefully orchestrating an expressive surface, he perceptively salvaged the internalized characteristics and secured them for posterity through the act of photography. |
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The recording is close, and the playing, though more expressive than was usual half a century ago, is rather too obtrusively articulated to serve as a model. |
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Peirce aimed to extend Venn's system in expressive power with respect to the first two kinds of propositions, i.e., existential and disjunctive statements. |
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They're also forming support groups for the base's children, using art therapy and other expressive techniques to help the children manage their fears. |
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He makes expressive, figurative paintings and assemblages that are passionately engaged with the political, social and emotional environment of his community. |
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Its power and persuasiveness can be found in its expressive form. |
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Thus descriptive claims cannot entail the extra expressive or imperatival component that according to the non-cognitivist is part of the meaning of moral terms. |
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It lends the photos a quality that I'm finding hard to put into words, other than that somehow, these places seem far more expressive in false colour than in reality. |
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After drugs, the most frequent references and most expressive colloquialisms in The Hippie Dictionary deal with sexual intercourse and sexual organs. |
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This hardly seems an authentic and fully expressive mode of Being. |
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Their art style was bolder and more expressive than early impressionism. |
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Clare Lesser responds with some stunning vocalism whilst keeping a clear, expressive purity of tone, though I still felt that she could have had more feel for the words. |
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Dance students of all ages will perform a variety of song and dance including tap, classical ballet, jazz, national character and expressive dance. |
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The motives of characters, which are part of James's expressive form, whether they become known or remain densely mysterious, are luminously present on the surface of the art. |
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The difference between the East and the West is a difference between the nonspeaking but laboring hands of the East and the expressive and affective culture of the West. |
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The soprano blew her audiences away by flawlessly mixing her registers, phrasing with magisterial grandeur, and nuancing her voice with expressive color. |
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They are just as observant of dynamic, expressive and colouristic detail, but the sound they make, enhanced by beautiful state-of-the-art recording, is much easier on the ear. |
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Because of expressive language difficulties, it may not be clear whether an individual with AD is indeed hallucinating or experiencing illusions or agnosias. |
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She makes her predecessor Brad Womack, who's not very expressive, seem like Ryan Seacrest by comparison. |
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For style in its widest sense is not merely the beauty or the grace or the conventional deportment of language, but its whole expressive apparatus, its breadth of capability. |
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Intensely expressive, she pulsates with angst in contractions, whips up her leg like a command, distorts her body into a stylized, modernist geometry. |
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The ongoing debates over memorials, memoirs, and the diminishing possibilities of authentic memory are given erudite, expressive, and eloquent treatment. |
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She possessed a commanding stature, with a very quick, expressive face. |
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During the performance, gamelan players are required to display both music and dance skills, exhibiting a perfect blend of expressive dance movements and harmonious music. |
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There is no provision for real-time instrumental or expressive input at all, unless you use a separate MIDI sequencer and do a lot of file swapping. |
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They eagerly turned to literature printed in the East to acquire fluency in the expressive, if nonverbal, rhetoric made possible by this new sensibility. |
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Both gestures celebrated the Italian gift for connecting the intellect with warm human feelings, a gift so admired by many, and expressive of the spirit of the colloquium. |
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However, the film looks a treat, Jack McElhone is an expressive, unaffected child actor and Gibb makes sure that the film still takes a persuasive hold on the heartstrings. |
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Participles and verbals afford excellent means to build up periods, in the most breviloquent and expressive manner, by subordinating certain acts or facts to the main verb and incorporating all into one sentence. |
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Ever since, she has explored the formal, expressive and technical possibilities of the photo-grid, creating an inexhaustibly inventive body of work. |
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Somewhere, stylistically, between country rock and folk roots, this songwriter has an original, weathered and understatedly expressive voice for a 23-year-old. |
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One therefore commits a linguistic fallacy if one translates the expressive language of doxology and thanksgiving into explanatory speech acts about God as a first cause. |
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The combination of expressive painterliness and deft realism characteristic of Sargent's painting was admired internationally and imitated by many lesser artists. |
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Her aim now is to explore a more expressive, fine art interpretation. |
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At the expressive level, responses are unanalyzed expressions or feelings, which, in themselves, do not constitute any kind of justification or reason for the response. |
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One lingering shot of his unbelievably expressive face is enough. |
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With a free wheeling expressive mind-set the band seem incredibly focused, displaying fetching guitar rifts demonstrating a resemblance comparable to a Libertines stage show. |
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For Sheeler, perhaps even more than for Stieglitz, Strand, and others, photography was a socially uncommitted art, whose purpose was to seek and reveal expressive form. |
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His highly expressive style combines a jagged-edged turbulence with a Mediterranean hot-bloodedness, seen most recently in his works for New York City Ballet. |
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Robin Williams, as I knew him, was warm, gentle, expressive, nurturing, and brilliant. |
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With me, finding out how expressive people could be in music really saved me. |
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Superbly formed and highly expressive, these extraordinary buildings emerge from the most basic of materials, earth and water, and in the harshest of conditions. |
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In the singing department, his Bolan-esque warble is as expressive as it is idiosyncratic and lyrically, I somehow can't see him being one to slave over a couplet. |
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The music, in an expressive orchestration for harpsichord and strings, was a filigreed structure upon which Miller's wonderfully individual dancers climbed and played. |
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For those expecting the talking kazoo he increasingly resembles these days, nearly every track reminds us of how wonderfully expressive Dylan's voice was three decades ago. |
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That idea of communality is not expressive of contemporary experience. |
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Edouard Collin is a tall wisp of a French teenager, all well-tanned Parisian sinew with a sharp-angled, warmly expressive face born to be placed in front of a camera. |
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Those expressive black eyes seem to violently call the visitor to witness. |
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Through all the variations in mood and technique, he seeks to combine social realism with stylistic experiments, bold photography, and expressive use of the widescreen shape. |
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Relatively misshapen and formless, the dorsal figure is perhaps even more expressive of physical torment. |
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This may be due to the possibility of vibrato and of slight expressive adjustments in pitch and timbre. |
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Bozo had a strange way of talking, Cockneyfied and yet very lucid and expressive. |
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Receptive language is the phrases and vocabulary that we understand, whereas expressive language is what we actually use. |
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Through the woodcut medium, Holbein refined his grasp of expressive and spatial effects. |
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He then set about an exploration of the expressive possibilities of the human anatomy. |
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This can yield stiff and lifeless performances in slower more expressive cues. |
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All of Chopin's works involve the piano and are technically demanding, emphasising nuance and expressive depth. |
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Pantomimus combined expressive dancing, instrumental music and a sung libretto, often mythological, that could be either tragic or comic. |
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The violin is also considered a very expressive instrument, which is often felt to approximate the human voice. |
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People with a lesion to this area develop expressive aphasia, meaning that they know what they want to say, they just cannot get it out. |
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The tale thus underscores in expressive form the semiparadoxical fact that traders can lie by telling the truth. |
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The two sisters could hardly have been more different, one so boisterous and expressive, the other so taciturn and calm. |
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The sentiments, as expressive of manners, or appropriated to characters, are, for the greater part, unexceptionably just. |
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Yet in the face of the mutely expressive, itchily inert objects themselves, Fer's scrupulously tentative ruminations leave me in doubt. |
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Bitcoin serves a purpose that is at once expressive and purposeful. |
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It is utterly ahistorical to suggest that he might have privileged the expressive culture belonging to Afro-American slavery. |
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Prefiguration thus bridges strategic and expressive motivations for radical democracy. |
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His early work is characterised with expressive force through muted tonality and brutal forms. |
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The Pennon was used exclusively by the monarchs of the Crown and was expressive of their sovereignty. |
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The extravert likes to be around people and is friendly, outgoing, expressive, funny, and active. |
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The toys have been updated with expressive LCD eyes, and the modern Furby is able to adapt its personality around interaction with its owner. |
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We exploited the expressive power of Petri nets with inhibitor arcs in order to have conciser models. |
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Joao's extraordinary expressive range reached from guttural croaks to coloratura trilling, with scatting and vocalizing in between. |
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After Cezanne, Klee was the finest modern watercolourist, and his responsiveness to the expressive and significatory dimensions of fabric was incomparable. |
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Why is it that the metaphysically thin, or natureless, or lightweight concept of truth should be a sure-fire sign of expressive and proof-theoretic strength? |
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To be sure, the advantages of having children actively involved in expressive role-play should be self-evident in comparison to structured drill and practice. |
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The attacking three have also been allowed to bloom. Liberated from deep defensive duties Eden Hazard has become more expressive, more obviously, flashily complete. |
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Stefan Ceder for his broadly painted and sombrely expressive landscapes. |
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Over the course of two months, the young people have worked with professional graffiti company, Newline, to produce this expressive and dynamic exhibition. |
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Its advocates, including Bruno Taut, Hans Poelzig, Fritz Hoger and Erich Mendelsohn, wanted to create architecture that was poetic, expressive, and optimistic. |
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They preface the actual mouddin with religious remarks, sung in freely embroidered florid style, each man inventing his own key, mode, appoggiature and expressive devices. |
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Untitled thus disarticulates the calligraphic power of the logo to name itself by opening up its expressive plane so that it can be filled with new content. |
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His face was remarkably mobile and expressive when he talked. |
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Characterised by an expressive freeness of form and evocative use of natural colours, these paintings speak of Kerr's deep engagement with the surrounding landscape. |
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These mods, while usually having the distinctive bleep and beep quality of transistor-generated tones, are often astonishingly creative and rich in expressive nuances. |
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In the natural substratum, there was a change in the number of desmids taxa, in December 6th, when we registered an expressive contribution of diatoms. |
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The expressive aspects of their work have been linked to the subjective heroism of earlier forms of Expressionism as well as to the Surrealist technique of automatism. |
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It is shown that antidomain semirings are more expressive than test semirings and that Kleene algebras with domain are more expressive than Kleene algebras with tests. |
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Seals can be traditional or modern, or conservative or expressive. |
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The gray wolf's expressive behavior is more complex than that of the coyote and golden jackal, as necessitated by its group living and hunting habits. |
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The Xhosa are a proud and patrilineal people with an expressive and euphonious language and an abiding belief in the importance of laws, education and courtesy. |
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Modernist art thus sought to extinguish the affective content of authorial personality, sublating that content in objective forms memorializing their expressive origins. |
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The expressive power of intonation in communication with preverbal infants was a topic of considerable interest in the early literature on language acquisition. |
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Its expressive element no more immunizes its functional aspects from regulation than the expressive motives of an assassin immunize the assassin's action. |
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The forms he has captured by isolating and framing the letterform details are like artworks, expressive of the oversized and colourful spirit of the Kumbakonam streetscape. |
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Techniques being taught include glass-blowing, furnace building, beadmaking, hot glass casting, kiln-forming, glass painting and expressive flameworking. |
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In this brilliant new collaborator, Carsen has found someone capable of translating his wildest dramatic impulses into an expressive and effective scenography. |
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The overarching aim of the proposal is to provide philosophy with an expressive and coherent framework that could represent a valid alternative to modal logic. |
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