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Page "Battle of Vimy Ridge" ¶ 30
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even and more
You need her even more than you need him ''.
And you love Ahmiri, that black bastard of a servant even a little more, because he's a beautiful man.
The sambur buck, the jungle stag that is even more noble than the Scottish elk.
He bounced exuberantly on the sagging bed and was even more delighted when Madame Lalaurie -- after closing the door -- showed the slave that the bed was designed for something other than slumber.
The race problem has tended to obscure other, less emotional, issues which may fundamentally be even more divisive.
But even for them it remains a museum, or perhaps it would be more accurate to say a tomb, a tomb in which Persia lies well preserved but indeed dead.
Truman Capote is still reveling in Southern Gothicism, exaggerating the old Southern legends into something beautiful and grotesque, but as unreal as -- or even more unreal than -- yesterday.
Nothing can show more than this the immensity of the danger to democratic peoples that lies in even relatively slight deviation from their true concept of sovereignty.
As cells coalesced into organisms, they built new `` unnatural '' and internally controlled environments to cope even more successfully with the entropy-increasing properties of the external world.
I granted this might be so, but found the result to be even more attention to form than was the case previously.
The Charles Men has a tremendous range of characters, of common folk even more than of major figures.
In contrast to cocktail parties, military organizations, even in the field, are more formal.
Let me quote him even more fully, for his analysis is important to my theme.
It may be that in this comment he has broken from the conventional pattern more violently than in any other regard, for the treatment in his books is far removed from even the genial irony of Ellen Glasgow, who was the only important novelist before him to challenge the conventional picture of planter society.
I do not suppose you ever heard of F. Scott Fitzgerald, living or dead, and moreover I do not suppose that, even if you had, his legend would have seemed to you to warrant more than a cluck of disapproval.
Whether you experienced the passion of desire I have, of course, no way of knowing, nor indeed have I wished with even the most fleeting fragment of a wish to know, for the fact that one constitutes by one's mere existence so to speak the proof of some sort of passion makes any speculation upon this part of one's parents' experience more immodest, more scandalizing, more deeply unwelcome than an obscenity from a stranger.
and the laughter and the happiness are even more pronounced when no company is present.
The President was even more generous with the First Lady than he had been before the tragedy.
The observer of television or other products for a mass audience has only a permit to be, like the models he sees, even more like everybody else.
His nationalism was not a new characteristic, but its self-consciousness, even its self-satisfaction, is more obvious in a book that stretches over the long reach of English history.
Nogaret is hardly an impartial witness, and even he did not make his charges against Boniface until the latter was dead, but there is some truth in what he said and more in what he did not say.
If his circumspection in regard to Philip's sensibilities went so far that he even refused to grant a dispensation for the marriage of Amadee's daughter, Agnes, to the son of the dauphin of Vienne -- a truly peacemaking move according to thirteenth-century ideas, for Savoy and Dauphine were as usual fighting on opposite sides -- for fear that he might seem to be favoring the anti-French coalition, he would certainly never take the far more drastic step of ordering the return of Gascony to Edward, even though, as he admitted to the English ambassadors, he had been advised that the original cession was invalid.

even and ambitious
Since the complicated process of establishing new communes and reviewing the rudimentary plan left by the French did not even begin until the fall of 1957, this goal appears somewhat ambitious.
Will it be short stories, fiction, nonfiction, biography, poetry, children's stories, or even a book if you are really ambitious??
An even more ambitious theory that includes all fundamental forces, including gravitation, is termed a theory of everything.
" Also in this case, even though there are classical precedents, Machiavelli's insistence on being both realistic and ambitious, not only admitting that vice exists but being willing to risk encouraging it, is a critical step on the path to this insight.
He studied Greek literature in Alexandria, and, having in addition to this great power in magic, became so ambitious that he wished to be considered a highest power, higher even than the God who created the world.
The ambitious initiative was widely criticized as being unrealistic, even unscientific as well as for threatening to destabilize MAD and re-ignite " an offensive arms race ".
An even more ambitious use of the conservatorship model has been proposed by Duke Professors Lawrence Baxter, Bill Brown and Jim Cox.
A later term coined in Europe was " photocollage "; which usually referred to large and ambitious works that added typography and brushwork or even actual objects stuck to the photomontage.
This event was repeated in 1947, and in 1948 an even more ambitious one was held, the Gran Premio de la América del Sur from Buenos Aires to Caracas, Venezuela — Fangio had an accident in which his co-driver was killed.
An ambitious redistributive programme was carried out, with the Swedish welfare state significantly expanded from a position already one of the most far-reaching in the world during his time in office, while tax rates rose from being fairly low even by European standards to the highest levels in the Western world.
But by her own admission, she was " ferociously ambitious, even as a young girl " and planned to overcome her deficiencies through careful camouflage, sheer determination and charm.
This precocity convinced his ambitious parents that he was ready to begin studying at the Conservatoire, even though he was still only nine years old ( the minimum entry age was 10 ).
During most of the union the navy was subjected to low funding, even though there were ambitious plans to expand it.
Although it was a commercial flop, the film broke stylistic ground by being more focused and less visually ambitiousand thus easier to emulate on a tight budget – than either RHPS or Ken Russell's 1975 adaptation of The Who's music and storyline from the album Tommy, or even a lower-budget affair like The Ramones ' Rock ' n ' Roll High School ( 1979 ).
Over the next three years, the Ministry of Railways drew up more ambitious plans to extend the line to Beijing ( through a tunnel to Korea ) and even Singapore, and build connections to the Trans-Siberian Railway and other trunk lines in Asia.
The proposal – backed by William Cavendish, 6th Duke of Devonshire, Richard Arkwright junior, and several Manchester bankers – was ambitious ; it was expected that steam locomotives would be used on the line, even though the technology was in its infancy and George Stephenson did not build his revolutionary Rocket until 1829.
A Second Programme was launched in 1963, with even more ambitious targets.
In Denmark, the Lejre Experimental Centre carries out even more ambitious work on such diverse topics as artificial Bronze Age and Iron Age burials, prehistoric science and stone tool manufacture in the absence of flint.
That is an extreme case, but even for less ambitious missions there are years when the planets are scattered in unsuitable parts of their orbits.
For example even the politically ambitious Kai Winn sought religious guidance from the Emissary, and Akorem Laan was able to single-handedly reinstate the observance of the obsolete D ' Jarra caste system in 2372 when he briefly claimed the title of Emissary.
Cassander has been perceived to be ambitious and unscrupulous, and even members of his own family were estranged from him.
It is hard to recapture the radical and exciting nature of early neo-classical painting for contemporary audiences ; it now strikes even those writers favourably inclined to it as " insipid " and " almost entirely uninteresting to us "— some of Kenneth Clark's comments on Anton Raphael Mengs ' ambitious Parnassus at the Villa Albani, by the artist who his friend Winckelmann described as " the greatest artist of his own, and perhaps of later times ".
Her mother educated her in strict seclusion, but even this measure failed to tame her imperious and ambitious temper.
The Charlottetown Accord was even more ambitious than the Meech Lake Accord, but it failed to win support in a nationwide referendum.

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