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expressive and role
Bowie took the title role in the Broadway theatre production The Elephant Man, earning high praise for an expressive performance.
In her work Marriages & Families Nijole V. Benokraitis, Ph. D. in sociology and conducted research with marriage and family and gender roles, defines mothers as the expressive role players, who provide the emotional support and nurturing that sustain the family unit.
His concerns for color that had assumed a primary role both as a decorative and expressive device before 1908 had given way to the primacy of form.
Nureyev's artistic skills explored expressive areas of the dance, providing a new role to the male ballet dancer who once served only as support to the women.
Splendidly expressive, her understated role is something that cannot be easily matched by today's painted heroines.
In April 1949, he appeared in Rodgers and Hammerstein's South Pacific, originating the role of French Planter Emil de Becque, and his operatic-style, highly expressive performance of the hit song " Some Enchanted Evening " made him a matinée idol and a national celebrity.
Bell's studies on emotional expression, flawed though they were, played a catalytic role in the development of Darwin's considerations of the origins of human emotional life ; and Darwin very much agreed with Bell's emphasis on the expressive role of the muscles of respiration.
The attentive Crafters and the expressive Promoters are the two role variants.
The attentive Composers and the expressive Performers are the two role variants.
The attentive Inspectors and the expressive Supervisors are the two role variants.
The attentive Protectors and the expressive Providers are the two role variants.
The attentive Counselors and the expressive Teachers are the two role variants.
The attentive Healers and the expressive Champions are the two role variants.
The attentive Masterminds and the expressive Fieldmarshals are the two role variants.
The attentive Architects and the expressive Inventors are the two role variants.

expressive and are
These words are more expressive than labels like `` A '' and `` not-A ''.
It is also the set of practices through which those expressive genres are shared.
In this noble prayer are evinced profound religious feeling and exalted thought, as well as ability to use the Hebrew language in a natural, expressive, and classical manner ( Jerusalem Talmud Rosh Hashanah i. 57a ).
Chimps have expressive faces which are important in close-up communications.
Therefore, all Indian classical dances are to varying degrees rooted in the Natyashastra and therefore share common features: for example, the mudras, some body positions, and the inclusion of dramatic or expressive acting or abhinaya.
In addition to difficulty expressing oneself, sufferers of expressive aphasia are also noted to commonly have trouble with comprehension in certain linguistic areas.
It is also the set of practices through which those expressive genres are shared.
" Such resolutions are not binding under international law, though they usually are expressive of the Council's convictions.
However, more expressive languages are likely to require more complex logic and algorithms to construct equivalent inferences.
For example, UDC which uses a complicated notation including plus, colons are more difficult to use for the purpose of shelf arrangement but are more expressive compared to DDC in terms of showing relationships between subjects.
These variables are closely related to the expressive capacity of oil paint.
Romanticism followed a path that led to the expansion of formal structures for a composition set down or at least created in their general outlines in earlier periods, and the end result is that the pieces are " understood " to be more passionate and expressive, both by 19th century and today's audiences.
Data are operated upon by means of a relational calculus or relational algebra, these being equivalent in expressive power.
Similes are widely used in as for their expressive nature:
Kandinsky's paintings from this period are large, expressive coloured masses evaluated independently from forms and lines ; these serve no longer to delimit them, but overlap freely to form paintings of extraordinary force.
Domine praestolamur ( 1589 ) is a good example of this style, laid out in imitative paragraphs based on subjects which characteristically emphasize the expressive minor second and minor sixth, with continuations which subsequently break off and are heard separately ( another technique which Byrd had learnt from his study of Ferrabosco ).
The final words dona nobis pacem (' grant us peace '), which are set to chains of anguished suspensions in the Four-Part Mass and expressive block homophony in the five-part setting almost certainly reflect the aspirations of the troubled Catholic community of the 1590s.
The mallet dampening techniques " are to the vibist as garlic and fresh basil are to the Northern Italian chef " and contribute significantly to expressive four-mallet playing.
These include but are not limited to: pitch, beat or pulse, rhythm, melody, harmony, texture, allocation of voices, timbre or color, expressive qualities ( dynamics and articulation ), and form or structure.
Historically, the substantive and editorial differences among the first-edition and the third-edition versions is that the former, A Dictionary of Modern English Usage ( 1926 ), is a prescriptive style guide to clear and expressive writing, whilst the latter versions, The New Fowler ’ s Modern English Usage ( 1996 ) and Fowler ’ s Modern English Usage ( 2004 ), are descriptive usage guides to spoken and written English.
Australian Mists are medium-sized shorthaired cats, with a round head and large, expressive eyes.
Bringing the piano and string quartet together, Schumann's Piano Quintet took full advantage of the expressive possibilities of these forces in combination, alternating conversational passages between the five instruments with concertante passages in which the combined forces of the strings are massed against the piano.

expressive and ),
DDC's numbers formed the basis of the more expressive but complex Universal Decimal Classification ( UDC ), which combines the basic Dewey numbers with selected punctuation marks ( comma, colon, parentheses, etc .).
This may be due to an expressive aphasiac's awareness and greater insight of their impairment ( unlike in receptive aphasia ), which motivates him / her to progress in treatment.
1929 was a watershed year: William Wellman with Chinatown Nights and The Man I Love, Rouben Mamoulian with Applause, Alfred Hitchcock with Blackmail ( Britain's first sound feature ), were among the directors to bring greater fluidity to talkies and experiment with the expressive use of sound ( Eyman, 1997 ).
They distinguished cognitive from other varieties of meaningfulness ( e. g. emotive, expressive, figurative ), and most authors concede that the non-cognitive statements of the history of philosophy possess some other kind of meaningfulness.
Orizzonti section ( Horizons ), open to all “ custom-format ” works, with a wider view towards new trends in the expressive languages that converge in film.
Within the genus Canis, the gray wolf represents a more specialised and progressive form than its smaller cousins ( the coyote and golden jackal ), as demonstrated by its morphological adaptations to hunting large prey, its more gregarious nature and its highly advanced expressive behavior.
The National Museum of Contemporary Art ( MNAC ), situated in a wing of the Palace of the Parliament, was opened in 2004 and contains a widespread collection of Romanian and international contemporary art, in a number of expressive forms.
While those who have expressive aphasia tend to retain good spoken language comprehension, other types of aphasia can render patients completely unable to understand any language at all, unable to understand any spoken language ( Auditory verbal agnosia ), while still other types preserve language comprehension, but with deficits.
While individuals with expressive aphasia tend to have a good ability to self-monitor their language output ( they " hear what they say " and make corrections ), other types of aphasics can seem entirely unaware of their language deficits.
There is also a kumibo kata called shinjo ( 真常 ), offered in sho ( 小, correct, or formal ) & dai ( 大, big, or expressive ) forms.
1 ( the opening march ), 2, 15, 23 ( sometimes called a parody of a Cramer finger exercise ), 24 ( a lyrical fughetta ), 25, 26, 28, 29 ( the first of the series of three slow variations leading to the final fugue and minuet ), 31 ( the third, highly expressive slow variation leading directly into the final fugue and minuet ) and 33 ( the concluding minuet ).
In the second half of the 19th century, some fiddlers, especially those from Voss and Telemark, significantly Lars Fykerud ( who eventually moved to Stoughton, Wisconsin in the United States and then returned to Telemark late in life ), began introducing more expressive ways of playing, turning the traditional slått music to concert music for the urban classes.
His work was radical, but avoided the punctualism of composers such as Pierre Boulez ( in his works of 1951 – 53 ), instead employing more conventionally expressive gestures.
In perhaps his last figure painting, ‘’ Lady in Blue ’’ ( 1874 ), Corot achieves an effect reminiscent of Degas, soft yet expressive.
The Christian poet Prudentius, who saw it at the time of emperor Honorius ( 395 – 423 ), describes the splendours of the monument in a few expressive lines.
One study, sponsored by NIDA, randomly assigned cocaine abusers into four groups, individual drug counseling plus group drug counseling ( GDC ), cognitive therapy plus GDC, supportive expressive therapy plus GDC, or GDC alone.
This feature, combined with Sam's facility to easily edit its own commands and, fundamentally, its small, orthogonal command set ( containing only 33 commands ), represent the program's bias toward a low learning threshold over other more expressive power editors.
The basilica is home to a large and very fine pipe organ built by Aristide Cavaillé-Coll for a private home in Biarritz, composed of 109 ranks and 78 speaking stops spread across four 61-note manuals and the 32-note pedalboard ( unusual before the turn of the century ; the standard of the day was 56 and 30 ), spread across three expressive divisions ( also unusual for the time, even in large organs ); the organ was ahead of its time, containing multiple expressive divisions and giving the performer considerable advantages over other even larger instruments of the day.

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