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epitomised and slogan
As epitomised in the slogan, For a Democratic Dictatorship of the Proletariat and Peasantry ”, a revolution in underdeveloped Tsarist Russia required an allied proletariat of town and country ( urban workers and peasants ), because the urban workers would be too few to successfully assume power in the cities on their own.
If anything epitomised the NF under Tyndall and Webster it was the events of August 1977, when a large NF march went through the largely non-white area of Lewisham in South East London under an inflammatory slogan claiming that 85 % of muggers were black whilst 85 % of their victims were white.

epitomised and
Weimar republic Gilgi epitomised the New woman ” that so fascinated contemporaries.

epitomised and example
For example, Joel Fineman suggests that the play draws a distinction between male and female language, and further subcategorises the latter into good and bad, epitomised by Bianca and Katherina respectively.

epitomised and
Both he and O Brien had become increasingly perturbed with the tenor of Irish politics as epitomised by Timothy Healy.
According to J. Mordaunt Crook this edition concentrated ‘ on supplying an epitomised history of world architecture such that ‘ Fletcher turned a useful handbook into a veritable student s bible .’ Fletcher produced the sixteenth edition shortly before his death in 1953.
Kelly attempted to steer the band towards the ' Goth Opera ' style that had served them so well, but the band wanted to move in a new direction, with a psychedelic rock flavour epitomised by their cover of Love s " Alone Again Or ".
" If there is truth in the saying that ‘ a man in his life plays many parts then this adage is surely epitomised by Sligo author and historian Joe Mc Gowan.

epitomised and
The shift in Aalto's design approach from classicism to modernism is epitomised by the Viipuri Library ( 1927 35 ), which went through a transformation from an originally classical competition entry proposal to the completed high-modernist building.
Though mainstream audiences in the early sixties preferred a clean-cut style epitomised by the acts that appeared on the Nine Network pop show Bandstand there were a number of ' grungier ' guitar-oriented bands in major cities like Sydney and Melbourne, who were inspired by American and British instrumental and surf acts like Britain's The Shadows who exerted an enormous influence on Australian and New Zealand music prior to the emergence of The Beatles and American acts like guitar legend Dick Dale and The Surfaris.
While this influential book takes ' enlightenment ' as its target, this includes its 18th century form which we now call ' the Enlightenment ' epitomised by the Marquis de Sade.
It reflects the arrival in New Zealand of the influence of the Oxford Movement and The Ecclesiological Society, developments in thought about the Gothic revival epitomised by the work of William Butterfield ( 1814 1900 ).
* Brigitte Mira: Character actor who epitomised the spirit of old Berlin The Guardian, 2005-03-25.
The movement had faced significant opposition from the British government and from mainstream media, epitomised by the authorities ' attempts to prevent camps at Stonehenge, and the resultant Battle of the Beanfield in 1985 the largest mass civil arrest in English history.
The intensity of this rivalry was epitomised in Altrincham's 3 0 defeat of Northwich at Moss Lane of Boxing Day 2006.
He was very much concerned with the issue of a phenomenology of place, epitomised by the Student Union building Dipoli ( 1961 66 ) at Helsinki University of Technology.

epitomised and ),
However, difficulties in South Africa ( epitomised by the defeat of the British Army at the Battle of Isandlwana ), as well as Afghanistan, weakened his government and led to his party's defeat in the 1880 election.
The locus classicus of this view is Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno's " Dialectic of Enlightenment " ( 1947 ), which traces the degeneration of the general concept of enlightenment from ancient Greece ( epitomised by the cunning ' bourgeois ' hero Odysseus ) to 20th century fascism.
During his heyday Mitchelson owned a 38-room Beverly Hills mansion ( which now belongs to Johnny Depp ), four Rolls-Royce automobiles, and he epitomised the 1970s California champagne-and-cocaine lifestyle, consuming both in increasingly large quantities until a series of unpaid tax bills and malpractice complaints caught up with him.
Iterated Systems was initially devoted to fractal image compression ( epitomised by the Barnsley fern ), and later focused on image archive management and was renamed to MediaBin.
In the early part of the century French painters had to go to Rome to shed their provinciality ( Nicolas Poussin, Claude Lorrain ), but Simon Vouet brought home the taste for a classicized baroque that would characterise the French Baroque, epitomised in the Académie de peinture et de sculpture, in the painting of Charles Le Brun and the sculpture of François Girardon.
In a time of agitation by tenant farmers in the Land Wars of the late 19th century, epitomised by the action of tenants at nearby Lough Mask House ( home of Captain Charles Boycott ), he was considered by many to be an ' improving ' landlord.

epitomised and was
This mood was epitomised in the Beveridge Report.
Gothic was also supported by critic John Ruskin, who argued that it epitomised communal and inclusive social values, as opposed to Classicism, which he considered to epitomise mechanical standardisation.
Gullit epitomised the ethos of Total Football as he was naturally adept in several positions.
In nineteenth century Britain there was a liberal internationalist strand of political thought epitomised by Richard Cobden and John Bright.
Jaguar's motto of " Grace, Space, Pace " was epitomised in the 1958 Jaguar Mark IX | Mark IX
The visual style of these later episodes was noticeably different from earlier episodes: particularly, austere art deco settings and decor, widely used earlier in the series, were largely dropped in favour of more lavish settings ( epitomised by the re-imagining of Poirot's home as a larger, more lavish apartment ).
The conservative government's benevolent attitude towards Ansett was epitomised in the 1950s when it forced TAA to swap a number of its popular turbo-prop Viscount aircraft with Ansett-ANA in return for slower and older, piston-engined Douglas DC-6Bs.
Its tempo of 3 beats to the bar ( 3 / 4 time ) meant that it was similar in rhythm to the waltz, but the emphasis of the polka-mazurek was on the first beat of the bar as opposed to the waltz which places its beats on the last two as epitomised by the Viennese waltz with its heavily accentuated final two beats to the bar.
" This he believed has been present throughout Israel's confrontations with the Palestinians, but was epitomised by the thoughts and actions of Ariel Sharon.
His drawl epitomised the band's slacker ethos and relaxed attitude ; author Michael Azerrad said " even Mascis seemed removed from the feelings he was conveying in the music ".
There was also overt tones of anti-English sentiment amongst this grouping, epitomised by the publication of a leaflet The English: Are They Human ?.
The match that epitomised the phenomenon of NZ's two star players ( R. Hadlee and M. Crowe ) putting in match winning performances and other players making good contributions was NZ v Australia, 1985 at Brisbane.
Also critical to the university's reputation was its distinguished record of public education, epitomised by the establishment of 5 private and public colleges.
One such player was the legendary Johan Cruijff, who epitomised the Total Football ideology by being able to play in almost every outfield position.
Innuendo with little subtlety was epitomised by Benny Hill and the Nudge Nudge sketch by Monty Python openly mocks the absurdity of much innuendo.
The JA was also accused of " isolationism ," epitomised by the JA practice of sometimes rebaptising new members who had already been baptised by other Baptist churches, implying that Christian baptism elsewhere may have been invalid.
This trend was epitomised by limited-edition vehicles, such as the SV90 in 1992 with roll-over protection cage, alloy wheels and metallic paint and the 50th Anniversary 90 in 1998 equipped with automatic transmission, air conditioning and Range Rover 4. 0-litre V8 engine.
The earlier outburst aside, Phatudi was considered the most tactful of the bantustan leaders, with a modus operandi directed more at calm negotiations with Pretoria and dissident bodies than the angry outbursts epitomised by leaders like the Transkei's Kaiser Matanzima.
The sweeping conquest of India by Islamic rulers, epitomised by the far-flung military campaigns of the Delhi sultans, was thus in direct contrast to the regionalistic aspect of the above-mentioned ventures.
Ironically, it was a similar style that dominated Scandinavia in the early decades of the 20th century, so-called Nordic Classicism, epitomised by the work of Kay Fisker in Denmark, Gunnar Asplund in Sweden, and the early work of Alvar Aalto in Finland.

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