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often and speaks
Origen often speaks of Ambrose in affectionately as a man of education with excellent literary and scholarly tastes.
His top gums are often exposed due to a small upper lip and he speaks nasally with a deep voice and a slight lisp.
These statements, soon dubbed " esternazioni ", or " mattock blows " ( picconate ), were considered by many to be inappropriate for a President and, often, beyond his constitutional powers ; also, his mental health was doubted and Cossiga had to declare " I am the fake madman who speaks the truth.
In the synoptics, Jesus speaks often about the Kingdom of God ; his own divine role is obscured ( see Messianic secret ).
When someone speaks of a mishap involving an audible arcing of electricity, the word " zap " is often used ( and has subsequently been expanded and used to describe non-auditory effects generally connoting the same sort of localized but thorough interference or destruction similar to that produced in short-circuit sparking ).
In 2002, DC Comics introduced a villain named Onomatopoeia, an athlete, martial artist and weapons expert who often speaks sounds.
In high-low split games one often speaks of " nut-low " and " nut-high " hands separately.
Prima facie is often confused with res ipsa loquitur ( literally, " the thing speaks for itself "), the common law doctrine that when the facts make it self-evident that negligence or other responsibility lies with a party, it is not necessary to provide extraneous details, since any reasonable person would immediately find the facts of the case.
It could refer to the Messiah because it often speaks of the Davidic king Solomon.
A Latino North Hollywood resident who speaks with a thick Cuban American accent, and often refers to himself in the third person, insisting on the English pronunciation of his name rather than the Spanish.
Rather is it to be said that the Scripture speaks often " figuratively " and " in riddles.
For this reason one often speaks of the limit of F.
The character Ralph Garcy ( stage name for Raul Garcia ) played by Barry Miller speaks often of growing up with Prinze and seeing him as the local neighborhood hero.
He is often assumed to have been a member of the Novatian church, but this is based on the fact that he gives a lot of details about the Novatians, and speaks of them in generous terms, but he also speaks of Arians and other groups in a similar fashion, but speaks of himself as belong to the mainstream Church.
He would often appear as a character in a sketch ; in the second series, when Horne decides he wants to be a seaside end-of-the-pier-show impresario, one of the acts he auditions is Dentures as ' The Great Omipaloni, the world's fastest illusionist-and also the dampest '; in the third series he was Captain Ahab in the first part of The Admirable Loombucket ; also in the same series, in The Big Top, Luigi Omipaloni, the trapeze artist at Cuckpowder's Mammoth Circus, and Buffalo Sidney Goosecreature, the fearless desperado and adversary of The Palone Ranger ; in the fourth series in Apache Story, he is Rain In The Face-Kenneth Williams, as Billy Two Cheeks, exclaims " He speaks with forked tongue!
Idle's work in Python is often characterised by an obsession with language and communication: many of his characters have verbal peculiarities, such as the man who speaks in anagrams, the man who says words in the wrong order, and the butcher who alternates between rudeness and politeness every time he speaks.
In the BBC television sitcom May to December, solicitor Alec Callender ( portrayed by Anton Rodgers ) is a huge Perry Mason fan ; he often speaks privately to a large poster of Raymond Burr hanging on his office wall.
When he rambles he often speaks incoherently in run-on sentences without pauses.
Ebert often speaks of having attended films at the Virginia while growing up in Champaign-Urbana and attending the University.
The use of the word tomte in Swedish is now somewhat ambiguous, but often when one speaks of jultomten ( definite article ) or tomten ( definite article ) one is referring to the more modern version, while if one speaks of tomtar ( plural ) or tomtarna ( plural, definite article ) one could also likely be referring to the more traditional tomtar.
" Plutarch commended " the saying of Simonides, that he had often felt sorry after speaking but never after keeping silent " and observed that " Simonides calls painting silent poetry and poetry painting that speaks " ( later paraphrased by the Latin poet Horace as ut pictura poesis ).

often and out
The men crying love poems in an orchard on any summer's night are as often as not the lutihaw, mustachioed toughs who spend most of their lives in and out of the local prisons, brothels, and teahouses.
As things turned out, however, we have not profited greatly from the lesson: instead of persistently following a national program of our own we have often been satisfied to be against whatever Soviet policy seemed to be at the moment.
Scientists often turn out to be idiosyncratic, too.
The whistle of Sherman's locomotives often drowned out the rattle of the skirmish fire.
When Papa went out to do God's work, Stevie often accompanied him in the buggy, which was drawn by Violet, the new black mare.
As another Thanksgiving draws near, let us take time out from the often hectic pace of our lives to try and recapture the feelings that filled the hearts of the Pilgrims on the first Thanksgiving.
Action taken today is often far more valuable than action taken several months later in response to a situation then out of control.
It might be pointed out that the integrating function of religion, for good or ill, has often supported or been identified with other groupings -- political, nationality, language, class, racial, sociability, even economic.
Thus the films seen as they came in ( coordinated for the regular sections ), were often out of context.
These were often carefully written out with a great deal of thought behind them.
Actual practice does not often work out this way.
While women had always attended ball games in small numbers ( it was the part of a `` dead game sport '' in the early years of the twentieth century to be taken out to the ball park and to root, root, root for the home team ), they had often sat in patient martyrdom, unable even to read the scoreboard, which sometimes seemed to indicate that one team led another by a score of three hundred and eighty to one hundred and fifty-one.
In fact, he often disappeared, from time to time, -- off to paint the sea, aboard a dragger out from Gloucester.
But instead of delivering the ration -- either in actual commodities or in cash -- at intervals of perhaps two weeks or a month, the Belgians felt obliged to dole it out more often.
unfortunately his voice was out of focus and often spread in quality.
The sonatas, `` La Francaise '', `` La Sultane '', `` L'Astree '' and `` L'Imperiale '', are often more elaborately worked out and, in fact, show a strong Italian influence.
* That ethnographic work was often ahistorical, writing about people as if they were " out of time " in an " ethnographic present " ( Johannes Fabian, Time and Its Other ).
Although they are often considered to be weeds in gardens, this viewpoint is not always necessary, as most of them die when the soil temperature warms up again in early to late spring when other plants are still dormant and have not yet leafed out.
You feel an intense fear when you think of dying, or you may think of it more often than normal, or can ’ t get it out of your mind.
An amateur who dabbles in a field out of casual interest rather than as a profession or serious interest, or who possesses a general but superficial interest in any art or a branch of knowledge, is often referred to as a dilettante.
Abbreviations have been used as long as phonetic scripts have existed, in some sense actually being more common in early literacy, where spelling out a whole word was often avoided, initial letters commonly being used to represent words in specific application.
When thinking about orbitals, we are often given an orbital vision which ( even if it is not spelled out ) is heavily influenced by this Hartree – Fock approximation, which is one way to reduce the complexities of molecular orbital theory.
Of very variable intensity, the color of amethyst is often laid out in stripes parallel to the final faces of the crystal.
When derived from natural resins it is most often created out of labdanum.
" Amazing Grace " is emblematic of several kinds of folk music styles, often used as the standard example to illustrate such musical techniques as lining out and call and response, that have been practiced in both black and white folk music.

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