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vividly and stands
He often stands in a corner, gesturing with his hands and arms while vividly speaking to imaginary people.
A stone olive press, probably of the 7th century, stands vividly placed in the centre of the former main street at Sbeitla, Tunisia.

vividly and out
Driven into the ropes and battered with a fusillade of short, crisp blows from every angle, Schmeling turned his back to his opponent and clutched onto the ropes, letting out a scream that even years later, many spectators could recall vividly.
Later, Tarbell would vividly recall this situation in her work, as she accused the leaders of the Standard Oil Company of using unfair tactics to put her father and many small oil companies out of business.
East of Desolation ( 1968 ), A Game for Heroes ( 1970 ) and The Savage Day ( 1972 ) stand out among his early work for their vividly drawn settings ( Greenland, the Channel Islands, and Belfast, respectively ) and offbeat plots.
Played out against a vividly rendered landscape and filled with allusions to myth and magic, Murdoch's novel exposes the jumble of motivations that drive her characters-the human vanity, jealousy, and lack of compassion behind the disguises they present to the world.
This is because Old World wine producers tend not to put a premium on the tropical fruit flavors and aromas that come out more vividly with cooler fermentation temperatures.
The nave of the basilica was covered in mosaics representing Old Testament events most vividly of Moses leading the Jews out of Egypt across the Red Sea.
" In particular, Shaffer would recall vividly one specific audience member, " an enormously fat man in front of me, who hadn ’ t laughed once, he was the only man in the theatre, I think, who wasn ’ t laughing, and I decided that if he disliked it, it was a failure -- I didn ’ t know who he was, just that he was in my eye line, and if he liked it it was a success, you know how rational one can be — suddenly laughed like ... a volcano about to erupt, and he fell in the aisle and began to crawl towards the stage ... sobbing with laughter — and calling out to the actors — this was on the first night — crawling down among the knees of the critics and all that saying, “ Oh stop it, please stop it, please stop it!
I remember vividly how he ran with the children ; how long were his strides, and how far his coat-tails stuck out behind, and how we tried to hit him with the ball, as he ran the bases.
As the historical novelist Clive Ashman so vividly puts it in “ MOSAIC – the Pavement that Walked ” ( Voreda Books ) his fictionalised account of not only the true-life, 1948 theft of a Roman mosaic from Brough, but also the original fate of the Roman villa it came from ( and of the Ala Picentiana itself ): “ As for the glorious Ala traceable back to Julius Caesar ’ s Gallic Wars, it is an inevitable truth that hundreds of years later there came one final day when its men rode jingling out of Derventio fort, never to be seen there again .”
Johann Strauss II's polka however, stood out with his vividly descriptive polka with triangles imitating train bells whereas horns suggest the train's chuffing.
In the UK, Radio Times awarded the film four out of a possible five stars and commented, " This simple story is rich with precise observation and it tugs at the heartstrings without being maudlin or manipulative ... With its sincere and perceptive script, the beautifully shot film vividly captures the raw emotions of its complex characters ...
The dialogue is Mametspeak at its most raw, as secrets are shared, picayune matters are debated, and fantasies are laid out, vividly.
The heat of the furnace would blacken the niello and make the other ornamentation stand out more vividly.

vividly and when
An inquisitive gust of air would at one moment with quite lubricious affection blow this garment aside, so that when wafted away it revealed her virgin bloom ; at another moment it would wantonly breathe directly upon it, clinging tightly and vividly outlining the pleasurable prospect of her lower limbs.
One unusual development was the Geisslerlieder, the music of wandering bands of flagellants during two periods: the middle of the 13th century ( until they were suppressed by the Church ); and the period during and immediately following the Black Death, around 1350, when their activities were vividly recorded and well-documented with notated music.
This move was in response to Cork Corporation ( City of Cork ), which remembered vividly the city events of eleven years earlier when serious food riots erupted and four people died.
This idea is vividly illustrated in book 2 of the Republic when Glaucon, taking up Thrasymachus ’ challenge, recounts a myth of the magical ring of Gyges.
Susan L. Nickerson of Library Journal writes in a review that " Imaginative readers know the story doesn't end when the covers close ; the magic to be found in books is eternal, and Ende's message comes through vividly.
Most vividly does Eliphaz describe such a revelation: " In thoughts from the vision of the night, when deep sleep falleth on men, fear came upon me, and trembling.
She vividly recalled being photographed — she had been photographed on only three occasions: in 1984 and during the search for her when a National Geographic producer took the identifying pictures that led to the reunion with Steve McCurry.
Fred " Poppa " Calhoun, piano player for Milton Brown, vividly remembered how people in Texas and Oklahoma danced when Bob Wills played.
Because of their plangent cantabile melodic lines, evocatively free, non-strophic construction and adagio pace, operatic laments have remained vividly memorable soprano or mezzo-soprano arias even when separated from the emotional pathos of their operatic contexts.
But he is referenced perhaps most vividly in an entry for 1665 when we read,
In 2009, Harper and Harvie vividly demonstrated the Greens were not in an alliance with the SNP when they voted to reject an SNP government budget.
In order to prove this most vividly, take some colors before daybreak, when it begins slowly to get lighter.
Its lyrics vividly tell the tale of a " nightmare ", which was the title of the song when it was first introduced in Floyd's The Man and the Journey tour shows.
Plus, I ’ m of an age where I grew up in the ’ 90 ′ s ( like Jaime ), and can vividly remember the earth figuratively shaking when Video Days first dropped.
Certainly, all this is best captured by the readers when they finally have all the time to read him and absorb the quality of his mind, a mind vividly alive and alert to catch every flow and flux of the goings-on in the contemporary historico-political scene and beyond.
The cricket writer, Colin Bateman, noted, " built like a battering ram with finesse to match, Fred Rumsey crashed on to the Test scene for a few vividly entertaining performances of left-arm fast bowling when England were hit by injuries ".

vividly and conditions
The truth is that while his political ideas are founded upon great moral or philosophical generalizations, often vividly recalling and sometimes anticipating the broad conceptions of Edmund Burke, they are at the same time imbued with precisely those practical qualities which have ever been characteristic of English statesmenship, and were always capable of application to actual conditions.
An article in the Daily Richmond Enquirer vividly described prison conditions in 1864:
Edmonds wrote that the worst of the weather was from 12 October − 10 November, yet vividly described the wet and muddy conditions in August and their morale-sapping effect on British troops.
These novels bear the marks of much detailed research into medieval conditions-many of the supporting characters have names taken from the documentation of the time, referenced at the end of each book-and bring vividly to life the all-pervading squalor of living conditions in England during the Middle Ages.
He reported vividly on the devastated conditions in eastern France.

vividly and are
In our disbelief we think that we can no longer even use the word and so are unable to even name the elemental power which is so vividly real in this play.
To the Corsican's amazement, the duel and death of his brother are vividly depicted in the vision, and finally, overcome by his feelings, he falls to the floor just as his mother enters the room.
Some supporters, for example, suggest that memories for shocking events such as the Kennedy Assassination or 9 / 11 are vividly imprinted in memory ( flashbulb memory ).
" He argues that working people's struggles are inherently dramatic: " They live life very vividly, and the stakes are very high if you don't have a lot of money to cushion your life.
" Kugel said " For many Dominicans in New York, these journeys home are the defining metaphor of their complex push-pull relationship with their homeland ; they embody, vividly and poignantly, the tug between their current lives and their former selves.
The rapidly changing, vividly colored skin patterns of cuttlefish, used for communication, also incorporate polarization patterns, and mantis shrimp are known to have polarization selective reflective tissue.
Scenic or " panoramic " hallucinations, which are not superimposed but vividly replace the entire visual field with hallucinatory content similarly to dreams ; such scenic hallucinations may occur in epilepsy ( in which they are usually stereotyped and experimental in character ), hallucinogen use, and more rarely in catatonic schizophrenia ( cf.
The years of their marriage — during which the couple lived in Bermuda and had two children, Shane and Oona — are described vividly in her 1958 memoir Part of a Long Story.
Both ranges are covered with lush forests vividly contrasting with the scenery below.
Krishna left his native place at the age of twelve for study at gurukul. The Mahabharata does not describe Krishna's earlier life in Vrindavan in much detail, and focuses more on the later battle of Kurukshetra but within the Bhagavata Purana the child-hood pastimes of Krishna are described very vividly.
" There are passages in his music which evoke the ' sweet especial rural scene ' as vividly as Elgar or Vaughan Williams ; passages ( such as the Pastorale from the Fantasia Concertante on a Theme of Corelli ) perhaps redolent of the Suffolk landscape with its gently undulating horizons, wide skies and soft lights.
" When objects, people, places or situations are encountered with the limerent object, they are vividly remembered, especially if the limerent object ' interacted ' with them in some way.
His contributions to history are marred by the occasional extravagance and obscurity of his style, and by his inadequate appreciation of the tests of historic credibility ; but his learning, his generous sympathies, his grasp of great principles, and his power of vividly presenting some aspects of character secure for his writings an enduring place in German literature.
* Alamut and Hassan-i-Sabbah are described vividly in William S. Burroughs ' The Western Lands.
In parasitic birds such as cuckoos, the young often are adapted to act as " super solicitors ", with loud, persistent voices and with large, vividly coloured gapes and behaviour that stimulate the feeding instincts of the foster parents to the utmost.
Nonetheless this age group adapts best to their situations, as they are often too young to remember their non-custodial parent vividly.
The torture of Hell are vividly depicted including poachers being roasted by the very rabbit they poached from the monastery.
The golden years of Asakusa are vividly portrayed in Yasunari Kawabata's novel The Scarlet Gang of Asakusa ( 1930 ; English translation, 2005 ).
The Times reported on August 22, 1916 that " Crowded audiences ... were interested and thrilled to have the realities of war brought so vividly before them, and if women had sometimes to shut their eyes to escape for a moment from the tragedy of the toll of battle which the film presents, opinion seems to be general that it was wise that the people at home should have this glimpse of what our soldiers are doing and daring and suffering in Picardy ".

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