Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Overture" ¶ 2
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Its and distinctive
Its chief distinguishing characteristics are its extremely long neck and legs, its horn-like ossicones and its distinctive coat patterns.
Its production is regulated by a quality consortium that recognizes qualifying products with distinctive mark.
Its distinctive aromatic, pleasantly sharp, very salty flavour means that in Italian cuisine, it is preferred for some pasta dishes with highly-flavoured sauces, especially those of Roman origin, such as bucatini all ' amatriciana or spaghetti alla carbonara.
Its distinctive sound is mainly because of its " drone strings " which provide a constant pitch similar in their sound to that of bagpipes.
Its distinctive black chines and " USA " painted on the starboard wing are visible.
Its most distinctive feature is its unusually large ears, which serve to dissipate heat.
Its drum line usually mimics most breakbeat music, lacking the distinctive kick drum of other forms of EDM.
Its most distinctive features are that it has a mind and will of its own, and that it feeds upon the souls of those it kills.
Its distinctive bell tower is essentially unchanged and the original bell sits in the courtroom.
Its distinctive shape made it a rally point for Allied bombers returning to England after raids on Germany.
Its distinctive onion dome s date to the 1680s.
Its distinctive song, which has repeated musical phrases, has frequently been referred to in poetry.
Its distinctive feature is to have only five notes in the octave, rather than the seven of the heptatonic scales ( e. g., major and minor ).
Its black-and-white plumage and long-necked upright posture with heavy bill makes it distinctive and unmistakable.
Its enduring purpose is to provide a distinctive environment in which its audiences — annually, more than 550, 000 people from New York City and beyond — may experience a broad array of aesthetic and cultural programs.
Its title 1, article 6 states that this is a distinctive emblem of the Sevilla FC:
Its origins are debated, but the phrase and the distinctive accompanying doodle — a bald-headed man ( possibly with a few hairs ) with a prominent nose peeking over a wall with the fingers of each hand clutching the wall — became associated with GIs in the 1940s.
Its distinctive shape and the characteristic puffing sound when the brake is released ( as the train pipe has to be recharged with air ) make steam locomotives fitted with the Westinghouse brake unmistakable.
Its most recognizable features are the distinctive chapel tower and yellow brickwork, similar to Cormier's earlier work at the Université de Montréal.
Its distinctive colour makes it popular among mineral collectors.
Its distinctive personality may have attracted buyers who would have avoided the matching Jaguar.
Its distinctive shape comprises a long ridge oriented nearly north – south, with a jagged western side resulting from ice age landslips.
Its bifurcated ears are brown on the outsides and yellow on the insides, and end in a distinctive curl at their bottom-most point.
Its four distinctive domes were designed as a decorative means of disguising the building's shape.

Its and rhythmic
Its arrangement, built upon complex rhythmic tracks, showcased state-of-the-art production.
Its song is weaker and more rhythmic than that of its relative.
Its postmodern form, whose complexity rises as it ascends, draws on traditional Chinese architecture such as the tiered pagoda, gently stepping back to create a rhythmic pattern as it rises.
Its motif is based on gemstones, ancient civilizations and rhythmic gymnastics.
Its style is similar to his first album, Now, consisting mostly of fast rhythmic electronic music and two textural pieces, " Light Sound " and " Canyon Sound ".
Its primary competitors are a variety of Atlanta stations because of its unique approach: AC WSB-FM, rhythmic WSBB-FM, top-40 WWWQ and WSTR, urbans WVEE and WHTA, and urban ACs WALR and WUMJ.
Its poetic form consists of a repeated rhythmic pattern of short-long-long-long, and it is so beloved that it is often sung at the conclusion of many synagogue services, after the ritual nightly saying of the Shema, and during the morning ritual of putting on tefillin.

Its and profile
Its high profile and popularity make it a merchandising environment, which results in great investments from sponsors and budgets in the hundreds of millions for the constructors.
Its latest destroyers use more local hardware of an improved quality, such as better fire-control systems, stealth technology in their hull designs to reduce their radar profile, and C4ISR systems.
Its success, coupled with the ongoing Blood Service campaign, has raised the IWW's profile significantly since early 2007.
Its colors are Dartmouth green and white, and its fight song is " Glory to Dartmouth ;" unlike the college, however, the school still uses the " Indians " nickname, with a stylized brave's head in profile as the logo.
Its obverse has featured the profile of President Abraham Lincoln since 1909, the centennial of his birth.
Its most famous lists rank companies by gross revenue and profile their businesses:
Its side effect profile is intermediate to those of atropine and scopolamine, and can also be used to combat the toxic effects of organophosphates.
Its marked anticonvulsant properties, and its pharmacokinetic profile, make intravenous lorazepam a reliable agent for terminating acute seizures, but it has relatively prolonged sedation after-effects.
Its characteristic profile appears on the Der Schlern-Zeitschrift für Südtiroler Landeskunde ( Magazine for South Tyrolean Regional Studies ) and the logo pressed into Loacker's wafer biscuits.
Its sloping profile distinguishes it from other ducks.
Its high public profile during its brief existence made it one of the more noteworthy failures of the dot-com bubble of the early 2000s.
Its strong characterization and unique art style has inspired the Young American Library Association to profile the book in their quarterly journal, and it has been nominated for the Spectrum Award for Best Science Fiction in the Other category in 2001.
Its most high profile operation was the Incheon amphibious assault, Operation Chromite.
Its boundaries were called the " great profile " due to the resemblance to the head of former president Ferdinand Marcos whom approved the formation of that province.
Its large presence in the UK ( largely as a result of the Racal acquisition ) has resulted in several high profile contracts.
Later ASTM Standards have addressed the use of CPT for various environmental site characterization and groundwater monitoring activities. For geotechnical soil investigations, CPT is more popular compared to SPT as a method of geotechnical soil investigation. Its increased accuracy, speed of deployment, more continuous soil profile and reduced cost over other soil testing methods.
Its voter profile is significantly younger than average, while its voters are well-educated, with the fewest high school drop-outs of any party.
Its most high profile operation during this time was the Suez Crisis, when it took part in the amphibious assault against Egyptian targets.
Its various slanted sides cause the building to have a completely different profile from all directions.
Its fatty acid profile generally consists of 70 % unsaturated fatty acids ( 18 % monounsaturated, and 52 % polyunsaturated ), 26 % saturated fatty acids and 4 % glycerol.
Its mechanical weaknesses could mainly be attributed to the new turret, which apart from giving the tank a high profile also added significant weight to the vehicle, stressing the suspension and the engine.
Its general profile is more or less liberal.
Its seclusion is due in part to its low profile and long approach walks.
Its engine was still a SOHC " 6G74 " but with a more aggressive cam profile, modified head and combustion chamber ( compression ratio up to 9. 4: 1 ), remapped ECU and a free-flowing extractors for a maximum 180 kW.

0.860 seconds.