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Page "Kinkaku-ji" ¶ 8
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is and evocative
After several rounds of debate between Job and his friends, in a divine voice, described as coming from a " cloud " or " whirlwind ", God describes, in evocative and lyrical language, what the experience of being the creator of the world is like, and rhetorically asks if Job has ever had the experiences or the authority that God has had.
I've also run it in Sherpa, which is oddly evocative of the original rules.
The resulting pitch bend is evocative of the sound of the pedal steel guitar.
< nowiki >[...]</ nowiki > There are irregularities not tolerated later, such as hypometric lines ; there are evocative place names and makurakotoba ; and there are evocative exclamations such as kamo, whose appeal is genuine even if incommunicable.
While Ned Jordan is credited with changing the way advertising was written with his " Somewhere West of Laramie " ads for his Jordan Playboy, Reo's Flying Cloud — a name that provoked evocative images of speed and lightness — changed the way automobiles would be named in the future.
The song is an evocative waltz-time ballad, with an extra beat in the fourth bar.
Among his most unusual and evocative compositions is the choral Abendzauber ( 1878 ) for tenor, yodelers and four alpine horns.
Close has credited her early years for her acting abilities: " I have no doubt that the days I spent running free in the evocative Connecticut countryside with an unfettered imagination, playing whatever character our games demanded, is one of the reasons that acting has always seemed so natural to me.
The box itself is also evocative of Pandora's box from Greek myth, which also contained dangerous secrets.
The blocky cross on his chest is evocative of the kind of bold symbols used by fascists.
Each parish strives to come up with the most artistically and religiously evocative arrangement in which the Blessed Sacrament, draped in a filmy veil, is prominently displayed.
The building is evocative of San Francisco and has become one of the many symbols of the city.
Certainly much of the power of his work derives purely from his prose style, one of the most fluid, dense and evocative in all modern literature .... His eye for the details and resonances of even the most mundane objects, and his ability to express them crisply and almost prose-poetically, give to his work at once a clarity and a dreamlike nebulousness that is difficult to describe but easy to sense.
Membership in the school is not generally extended to Schoenberg's many pupils in the United States from 1933, such as John Cage, Leon Kirchner and Gerald Strang, nor to many other composers who, at a greater remove, wrote compositions evocative of the Second Viennese style, such as the Canadian pianist Glenn Gould.
While the music of Les pêcheurs is atmospheric and deeply evocative of the opera's Eastern setting, in La jolie fille de Perth Bizet made no attempt to introduce Scottish colour or mood, though the scoring includes highly imaginative touches such as a separate band of woodwind and strings during the opera's Act III seduction scene.
" The second type uses an " arching ascent-descent structure " and is less dependent on lyrics, making it " more evocative of rolling waves on the open sea.
The iconography is evocative of the head-hunting exploits of the Celts, who hung the heads of their battle victims from their saddles, according to classical writers.
The use of a comparable metaphor in the Gilgamesh epic suggests that the reference to " dragonflies the river " is simply an evocative image of death rather than a literal description of the flood Moreover, the very preceding line in Atrahasis mentions " the sea ".
The 20-novel series is known for its well-researched and highly detailed portrayal of early 19th-century life, as well as its authentic and evocative language.
A single minute of ". 22 Rifle for Christmas " is a representative example of the evocative sound effects featured on " Dragnet ".
A nocturne ( from the French which meant nocturnal, from Latin nocturnus ) is usually a musical composition that is inspired by, or evocative of, the night.
There is a wonderfully evocative portrait of Edgewater in the early 20th century in Joseph Mitchell's essay The Rivermen, which was published in The New Yorker and is included in his book The Bottom of the Harbor.

is and Shinden
The last Shimomura-ha ( claimed ) headmaster, Nakayama Hakudō who is considered the 16th, created a sword drawing art called Musō Shinden Battōjutsu that was heavily influenced by his Shimomura-ha training, but also took elements from other iaido-arts and would later become the Musō Shinden-ryū.
In Shinden, the start of the nōtō is done on the horizontal plane, then rotated to the vertical plane by the end of the nōtō.
* Kashima Shinden Jikishinkage-ryū is a koryū teaching kenjutsu
Shinden is associated with several usages:
The name Toyoshina is an acronym of the four antecedent villages: Toba, Yoshino, Shinden, and Nariai.
Toyoshina, Nagano is an acronym of the four antecedent villages: Toba, Yoshino, Shinden, and Nariai.

is and palace
Hence the natural setting of tragedy is the palace gate, the public square, or the court chamber.
While down there, along with the dead, he is shown the place where the wrongly convicted reside, the fields of sorrow where those who committed suicide and now regret it reside, including Aeneas ' former lover, the warriors and shades, Tartarus ( where the titans and powerful non-mortal enemies of the Olympians reside ) where he can hear the groans of the imprisoned, the palace of Pluto, and the fields of Elysium where the descendants of the divine and bravest heroes reside.
* The Bürgerfest is celebrated on the first weekend of July, when the palace gardens with their ancient walls are transformed into a medieval camp.
While the emperor's palace no longer exists, the church built by Charlemagne is still the main attraction of the city.
In old versions of the story: " The scene of the murder, when it is specified, is usually the house of Aegisthus, who has not taken up residence in Agamemnon's palace, and it involves an ambush and the deaths of Agamemnon's followers too ".
The Trojan War is supposed by many to have occurred at the height of the Mycenaean civilization ( see discussion of Troy VII ), roughly the point at which this palace appears to have been abandoned.
There is no conclusive evidence for the existence of a Mycenean palace on top of the Athenian Acropolis.
There is ongoing discussion among academics over the nature of the Nimrud lens, a piece of quartz unearthed by Austen Henry Layard in 1850, in the Nimrud palace complex in northern Iraq.
Altdorfer's figures are invariably the complement of his romantic landscapes ; for them he borrowed Albrecht Dürer's inventive iconography, but the panoramic setting is personal and has nothing to do with the fantasy landscapes of the Netherlands A Susanna in the Bath and the Stoning of the Elders ( 1526 ) set outside an Italianate skyscraper of a palace shows his interest in architecture.
He is entombed in St. Emmeram's Basilica at Ratisbon, which is now known as Schloss Thurn und Taxis, the palace of the Princes of Thurn and Taxis.
Also located on the island and adjacent to the Lustgarten and palace is Berlin Cathedral, emperor William II's ambitious attempt to create a Protestant counterpart to St. Peter's Basilica in Rome.
Schloss Charlottenburg is the largest existing palace in Berlin.
Schloss Charlottenburg, which was burnt out in the Second World War and largely destroyed, has been rebuilt and is the largest surviving historical palace in Berlin.
Located in the City of Westminster, the palace is a setting for state occasions and royal hospitality.
The transformed Picus continually appears in this, trying to warn Ullyses, and then Eurylochus, of the danger to be found in the palace, and is rewarded at the end by being given back his human shape.
Sluter was also responsible for the main part of the work on Philip's tomb, which ( restored and partly reconstructed ) has been moved to the Museum of Fine Arts which is housed in the former ducal palace in Dijon.
* Gradačac Castle is a citadel, also a palace of Husein " Dragon Of Bosnia " Gradaščević who was a renowned 19th-century military Bosnian Captain, overlooking the historic core of Gradačac-National monument of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Caligula, by French author Albert Camus, is a play in which Caligula returns after deserting the palace for three days and three nights following the death of his beloved sister, Drusilla.
In this reality, the only proof that Charles Xavier ever existed is a secret monument in Magneto's palace garden, with the engraved message " He died so Genosha could live ".
The palace is preserved in great part to this day and forms the historic core of the largest city of modern Split, Croatia.
" Just as the various trades are most highly developed in large cities, in the same way food at the palace is prepared in a far superior manner.
Bede does not state that Æthelberht had a palace in Canterbury, but he does refer to Canterbury as Æthelberht's " metropolis ", and it is clear that it is Æthelberht's seat.

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