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Page "Dinosaur Jr." ¶ 31
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drawl and relaxed
His relaxed drawl and quick wit concealed a formidable intellect and with him as Principal the House maintained high standards of liturgy, scholarship and morality.

drawl and ;
Tall ( 6 ft 2. 5 in ; 189 cm ), lanky, and handsome, Scott displayed an easygoing charm and courtly Southern drawl in his early films that helped offset his limitations as an actor, where he was frequently found to be stiff or " lumbering ".
Affectionately known as " Mr. New Year's Day ," Nelson subsequently did the play-by-play of the Cotton Bowl Classic for 26 seasons on CBS television, where he earned widespread recognition for his Tennessee drawl and signature opening greeting: " Happy New Year ; this is Lindsey Nelson in the Cotton Bowl in Dallas.

drawl and Michael
They all spoke in English ( Drooper with a Southern drawl ala Michael Nesmith, Fleegle with a pronounced lisp ), except for Snorky who " spoke " in honking noises.
* Michael Wright as Eddie King, Jr.: ( Because of a thick southern drawl, this is often heard as Eddie Kane ) Eddie comes from an area that features predominantly poor individuals, his own father believing his attempts to start a career in the music industry will be unsuccessful.

drawl and said
Gibson said that when the count reached 3 – 2, he stepped out of the batter's box and, in his mind, could hear Didier's voice, with its distinctive Southern drawl, reiterating that same piece of advice.

drawl and even
After 20 years on the rodeo circuit, his distinctive Oklahoma-Texas drawl ( even though he was a lifelong Californian ), his wide eyes and moon face and strong physical presence gained him a role in the western Rocky Mountain ( 1950 ) starring Errol Flynn.

drawl and Mascis
Some of the singing was done by Mascis in his trademark nasal drawl, often compared with Neil Young, but the majority of the lead vocals were by Lou Barlow.
This time around, Mascis did most of the lead singing, often in a detached drawl that presented a contrast with the extreme music.

drawl and removed
This is similar to the West Country drawl heard in south-western England, but less removed in sound from the Estuary English of the South East.

drawl and from
He was a wiry, inscrutable, silent country boy from the red clay of rural Alabama, and he spoke with the broad drawl that others normally make fun of.
Whether it was from, as he once wrote, " a desire to climb the family tree ," or that his fraternity brothers nicknamed him for his thick southern drawl, no one seems to know.
Ann Powers of Blender called " Do Somethin '" " a decent bit of crunk where she raps in a cutesy-poo drawl that suggests she could have nabbed the Dukes of Hazzard sexpot role from Jessica Simpson ".
Unlike his elder brother Martin, who adopted a New York drawl, Owney kept his Northern English accent and saved clippings from the Yorkshire Post until he died.

drawl and was
MGM's first order of business was to provide her a speech coach, as her Carolina drawl was nearly incomprehensible to them.
Perot's behavior during the debate was a source of mirth thereafter, including his repeated pleas to " let me finish " in his southern drawl.
His southern drawl and willingness to sing " My Old Kentucky Home " with very little encouragement led some sportswriters to opine that he was too undignified for the office.
* Bunnie Rabbot ( Christine Cavanaugh )-A friendly cyborg with a southern drawl, Bunnie was briefly captured, and had half of her body roboticized before she was saved, mid-transformation.
His distinctive tenor voice retained a touch of its Southern drawl and was very recognizable.
Warren Martyn and Adrian Wood, the authors of the book I Can't Believe It's a Bigger and Better Updated Unofficial Simpsons Guide, praised Fierstein's performance, saying the episode was " brought to life by the superb character of Karl, helped no doubt by Harvey Fierstein's unique vocal drawl.
Finally, Jordan himself mentioned that the Seanchan's slurring method of speech was supposed to sound like a " Texas drawl ".

drawl and ".
Malkovich is known for his distinctive voice which The Guardian describes as " a reedy, faintly orgasmic drawl ".
Liz has a verbal drawl, and is frequently heard to say " Oh Gawd " or " You're weird Arthur ".
Mercer has been described as speaking with " a mushy-mouthed Southern drawl " and his style of comedy has been described as " not exactly obscene ... border on offensive ".
Reiterating its A-sides ' catchphrase (" Yeah ") and assuming the heavy scouse accents conspicuous in their early records, Lennon and McCartney " drawl their way through a mock-naïve love lyric ".

epitomised and ethos
Gullit epitomised the ethos of Total Football as he was naturally adept in several positions.
... was one of the finest players of his generation, one of the finest players ever to represent Ireland and the British & Irish Lions and a man who epitomised the very ethos of the Game and its values.

epitomised and attitude
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.

epitomised and ;
As epitomised in the slogan “ Freedom in Discussion, Unity in Action ”, Lenin followed the example of the First International ( IWA, International Workingmen ’ s Association, 1864 – 1876 ), and organised the Bolsheviks as a democratically centralised vanguard party, wherein free political-speech was recognised legitimate until policy consensus ; afterwards, every member of the Party would be expected to uphold the official policy established in consensus.
Sulfur embodied the soul, ( the emotions and desires ); salt represented the body ; mercury epitomised the spirit ( imagination, moral judgment, and the higher mental faculties ).
This constraint is said to be epitomised by verse 127 which explains that the consequences of actions are inescapable ;
1767 ; reissued in 1640 as Index Rhetoricus et Oratoricus cum Formulis Oratoriis et Indice Poetico, and epitomised by T. Stephens in 1660 for Bury St. Edmunds school under the title Tροποσκηματολογία.

epitomised and author
" 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 seemed
At the point it seemed Creation would collapse into receivership, the recently signed Manchester band Oasis began selling albums in huge quantities, as they epitomised the cultural Britpop movement of the mid-1990s.

epitomised and from
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.
Sims ' characters evolved from objects of desire in the early films to frumpy, nagging wives in the later ones, epitomised by the Emily Bung role in Carry on Screaming.
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 ).
During the Bourbon Restoration, the Navy at first suffered from the compounded damage sustained during the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars, and from the incompetence and derilection of the royalist officer corps, as epitomised by the disaster of the frigate Méduse and her proverbial Raft of the Medusa.
However, there is a sense of a universality in modern music, which is epitomised through the current significant support, especially among youth, of pop / rock artist Emma Marrone and pop / soul artist Alessandra Amoroso, both from Lecce, Salento, southern Italy.
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.
The relatively down-market status of this location is also epitomised by W. S. Gilbert in these lines from Iolanthe
One was the short-lived but very popular British-originated music craze known as Merseybeat, the pop style epitomised by the early songs of The Beatles, which combined popular song structures and rock ' n ' roll instrumentation with rhythmic inflections taken from bossa nova.
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.
Despite such setbacks, the love borne by him and his wife Olive, daughter of the 3rd Earl of Bantry, for the castle and the estate was deep and best epitomised by that fact that when he was ennobled in 1880 he derived his title from the island of Ardilaun, which formed part of the estate on Lough Corrib.

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