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Admiring and great
Admiring Sam's great success, and desiring to reclaim the store ( and franchise rights ) for his son, he refused to renew the lease.

Admiring and talent
Admiring her talent and bravery, he decided to give her a future as an operative for UNITY-an international agency charged with combating terrorism around the globe.

Admiring and for
Admiring the critics who wrote about music and theatre for The Manchester Guardian, he consciously attempted to adopt their writing style.

Admiring and by
File: Eugene, Stieglitz, Kühn and Steichen Admiring the Work of Eugene. jpg |" Eugene, Stieglitz, Kühn and Steichen Admiring the Work of Eugene ," by Frank Eugene from 1907.
Admiring the extraordinary courage possessed by his father, Simba tries to prove himself as brave as Mufasa by venturing into an known an " Elephant Graveyard " with his closest friend Nala and, to his annoyance, the hornbill Zazu, who tracks him them down.

Admiring and Le
Admiring Senger's criticism of Le Corbusier, he found that, in the 1920s architecture was petrifying into mere architectural technology, creating soulless buildings.

Admiring and ),
Walt Flanagan plays four roles in this film: The " Woolen Cap Smoker " in the beginning ( which he reprises in Clerks II ), the " Egg Man ", the " Offended Customer " ( during the " jizz mopper " scene ) and the " Cat Admiring Bitter Customer ,".

Admiring and .
Admiring the country, he landed bullocks and men with firearms, following which local Aboriginal peoples in the Sydney area were massacred.
Admiring William of Wykeham's achievements in creating his twinned institutions, King Henry VI modelled the establishment of his own new colleges, King's College, Cambridge and Eton College, upon Wykeham's foundations of New College and Winchester College.
Admiring his courage, Mary Todd ( Marjorie Weaver ) -- later to be his wife — invites Lincoln to her sister's soiree and expresses an intense interest in his future.
Admiring officers from his old 10th OVI presented him with a jeweled Maltese cross in September 1863, just eleven days before his death.
Admiring visitors included Ernst Haeckel, a zealous follower of Darwinismus in a translation favouring progressive evolution over natural selection.

Radiguet's and works
In addition to two novels, Radiguet's works include a few poetry volumes and a play.

Radiguet's and for
Learning of Radiguet's plan for her, Grey attempts to talk Maria out of it to no avail.

Radiguet's and by
Among the other cinematic versions of Radiguet's story, the heavily adapted version by Marco Bellocchio, Il diavolo in corpo ( 1986 ), was notable as being among the first mainstream films to show unsimulated sex.
Eventually forfeiting their contest, Maria accepts Radiguet's proposal of ruling by his side in return of becoming even stronger than she is now.
As a result, Maria is infected by a parasite born from Radiguet's blood that turns her into a vampiric being as she targets men, though unaware that she would transform into mindless puppet overtime.
By the time Veronica returns, now powered by three of the Jetman, it overpowers the Great Icarus until Radiguet's sabotage manifests.

Radiguet's and Le
In 1947 Claude Autant-Lara released his film Le diable au corps, based on Radiguet's novel, and starring Gérard Philipe.

Radiguet's and .
There is disagreement over Cocteau's reaction to Radiguet's sudden death in 1923, with some claiming that it left him stunned, despondent and prey to opium addiction.
But before Veronica could finish them off, it is damaged as a result of Radiguet's attempt to take the controls from Tranza to deal the final blow.

great and literary
Even the great god Faulkner, the South's one probable contender for literary immortality, has little concerned himself with these matters ; ;
I am not aware of great attention by any of these authors or by the psychotherapeutic profession to the role of literary study in the development of conscience -- most of their attention is to a pre-literate period of life, or, for the theologians of course, to the influence of religion.
One might, indeed, argue that the history of ideas, in so far as it includes the literatures, must center on characterizations of human nature and that the great periods of literary achievement may be distinguished from one another by reference to the images of human nature that they succeed in fashioning.
He displayed great literary skill in his exposition of the laws, and was one of the first to interpret the civil law by the history, languages and literature of antiquity, and to substitute original research for the servile interpretations of the glossators.
In contrast to literary prizes in the United States, the Booker Prize is greeted with great anticipation and fanfare.
They contain passages of great literary beauty.
As Solomon Schechter noted, " however great the literary value of a code may be, it does not invest it with infallibility, nor does it exempt it from the student or the Rabbi who makes use of it from the duty of examining each paragraph on its own merits, and subjecting it to the same rules of interpretation that were always applied to Tradition ".
Hume achieved great literary fame as a historian.
Kraepelin's great contribution in classifying schizophrenia and manic-depression remains relatively unknown to the general public, and his work, which had neither the literary quality nor paradigmatic power of Freud's, is little read outside scholarly circles.
* Author William Goldman claims in his book The Princess Bride that the story he tells is an abridged version of the Florinese literary masterpiece by the great ( and fictional ) S. Morgenstern.
As with genre in a literary context, there is a great deal of debate over how to define or categorize genres ..
Gregory's great nephew Nichobulos served as his literary executor, preserving and editing many of his writings.
The style of the book has been praised by many scholars, suggesting that its author was a man of great literary talent.
* The purists, headed by Venetian Pietro Bembo ( who, in his Gli Asolani, claimed the language might be based only on the great literary classics, such as Petrarch and some part of Boccaccio ).
Jerome's letters or epistles, both by the great variety of their subjects and by their qualities of style, form an important portion of his literary remains.
The reformatory activities of Wycliffe effectively began here: all the great works, especially his Summa theologiae, are closely connected with the condemnation of his 18 theses, while the entire literary energies of his later years rest upon this foundation.
He was a participant in one of the all-time great literary hoaxes, I, Libertine ( Ballantine Books, 1956 ), along with Jean Shepherd, Ian Ballantine and Theodore Sturgeon, incorporating several hidden jokes and references into his cover painting for that book.
The Septuagint, the Greek version of the Hebrew Bible, influenced Longinus, who may have been the author of the great book of literary criticism, On the Sublime, although the true author is still unknown for certain.
Not only was Suleiman a distinguished poet and goldsmith in his own right ; he also became a great patron of culture, overseeing the golden age of the Ottoman Empire's artistic, literary and architectural development.
In addition to Suleiman's own work, many great talents enlivened the literary world during Suleiman's rule, including Fuzuli and Baki.
The period following World War II saw a great flowering of literary short fiction in the United States.
Today, this version of the novel is considered to be a significant literary event in the history of Argentine literature ; however, when published it did not bring any great renown to the author, nor did the publication of Gombrowicz's drama Ślub in Spanish ( The Marriage, El Casamiento ) in 1948.
In France, it saw the nadir of the monarchy and the zenith of the great magnates, especially the dukes of Aquitaine and Normandy, who could thus foster such distinctive contributions of their lands as the pious warrior who conquered Britain, Italy, and the East and the impious peacelover, the troubadour, who crafted out of the European vernacular its first great literary themes.

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