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Page "Suspense (radio drama)" ¶ 26
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familiar and opening
Guinea pigs that become familiar with their owner will whistle on the owner's approach ; they will also learn to whistle in response to the rustling of plastic bags or the opening of refrigerator doors, where their food is most commonly stored.
In Season Two, after the opening sequence the words " The Electric Company " would disappear from the familiar logo, and the show number would appear in its place through the use of a Scanimate animation and an electronic whooshing sound.
A familiar type sometimes seen on small motorcycles is a slotted disk attached to the crankshaft which covers and uncovers an opening in the end of the crankcase, allowing charge to enter during one portion of the cycle.
Durante's radio show was bracketed with two trademarks: " Inka Dinka Doo " as his opening theme, and the invariable signoff that became another familiar national catchphrase: " Good night, Mrs. Calabash, wherever you are.
The opening familiar to most viewers, featuring the credits superimposed over a " heart on satin " image, was created specifically for the 1959 67 CBS daytime network rebroadcasts, and subsequent syndication.
An American Heritage columnist called it the " famous opening clarinet glissando ... that has become as familiar as the start of Beethoven ’ s Fifth.
The juxtaposition of castle and steam train at Corfe Castle is familiar to many television viewers throughout Southern England, as it features in the opening sequences of the BBC's South Today regional news programme along with the official train.
Ignoring an attack set and making benign moves will cause a loss of the game far earlier than in standard chess, if the opponent is familiar with the opening.
* Large corporate rating agencies have been criticized for having too familiar a relationship with company management, possibly opening themselves to undue influence or the vulnerability of being misled.
The familiar opening theme is accompanied by an Alberti bass, played in the left hand.
Therefore, the opening sequence included an entirely recreated logo, which most people are familiar with today.
The video introduction features a 3D animation, and the very first lines of text, of the famous opening scene of Zork 1, featuring the familiar White House and Mailbox.
He usually bounced his gags off announcer / straight man Graham McNamee ; Wynn's customary opening, " Tonight, Graham, the show's gonna be different ," became one of the most familiar tag-lines of its time ; a sample joke: " Graham, my uncle just bought a new second-handed car ... he calls it Baby!
" Sunday night with Fred Allen seemed incomplete on any night listeners didn't hear the DeMarco Sisters whose breezy, harmonious style became as familiar as their cheerfully sung " Mr. Al-len, Mr. Alll-llennnn " in the show's opening theme.
He also recorded a song, " Three Stars Will Shine Tonight ," with the music from the show's familiar opening theme.
Changes made before the final version were filmed include a thunderclap sound effect being deleted from the opening theme music ; Susan's dress being changed to make her look more like a schoolgirl than the original costume, which made her appear more alien and sensual ; the Doctor's costume being changed from a contemporary jacket and tie to his familiar Edwardian clothing ; a reference to the Doctor and Susan being from the 49th century was replaced with the line " another time, another world "; the TARDIS door being repaired so that it closed properly ; and a refinement of the TARDIS sound effect.
The name of the island of Flores has been made familiar to generations of English readers by the quotation: " At Flores in the Azores, where Sir Richard Grenville lay ...", which is the opening line of Alfred, Lord Tennyson's epic poem, " The Revenge, A Ballad of the Fleet ".
This stage is marked by responses to familiar images and sounds ( including mother's face ) and anticipatory responses to familiar events ( such as opening the mouth for a spoon ).
He identifies the opening lines as corresponding to such an oral tradition: " Was it not fitting, brothers, to begin with the olden words of the heroic tales about the campaign of Igor ..." The narrator begins by referring to oral epic tales that are already old and familiar.
In the familiar opening, " When Irish Eyes Are Smiling ," performed either solo on an old-sounding piano or by a larger orchestra, was interrupted by the ring of a telephone and Gardner's New Yorkese accent as he answered, " Hello, Duffy's Tavern, where the elite meet to eat.
Where opening credits are built into a separate sequence of their own, the correct term is title sequence ( such as the familiar James Bond and Pink Panther title sequences ).
The Spot theme song was licensed from King Rollo Films, so the familiar tune by Duncan Lamont was heard on the opening and closing.
The area of Nicollet Mall in front of the IDS Center is familiar to television viewers: The character of Mary Richards on Mary Tyler Moore was seen on Nicollet Mall in the opening montage of the series.

familiar and phrase
The phrase has itself been a source of surprise, as novice users may take it to mean that Ruby's behaviors try to closely match behaviors familiar from other languages.
The humor in the punch line may be due to the sudden, unexpected recognition of a familiar saying, since the story has nothing to do with the usual context in which the phrase is normally found, yet the listener is surprised to discover it makes sense in both situations.
Therefore, if the audience is not already familiar with the phrase used in the punch line, or is not aware of the multiple meanings of the words in the phrase, the surprise ending of the joke cannot be recovered by explaining the joke to the audience.
The Vulgate translates this phrase as in terram visionis (" in the land of vision ") which implies that Jerome was familiar with the reading " Moreh ", a Hebrew word whose consonants suggest " vision.
Sometimes a familiar phrase is used where dignified language would be expected ; sometimes the reverse.
The familiar phrase “ Man proposes: God disposes ” is an example of antithesis, as is John Dryden's description in The Hind and the Panther: “ Too black for heaven, and yet too white for hell .”
" which became a familiar catch phrase during the 1940s.
Edwards wrote, " In connection with these much discussed Variations, Mr Elgar tells us that the heading Enigma is justified by the fact that it is possible to add another phrase, which is quite familiar, above the original theme that he has written.
" The flying, fickle finger of fate " was already a familiar catchphrase on the show ( Dan Rowan would use the phrase when ushering " new talent " like Tiny Tim on stage ).
" At a meeting of the PLP I accused Ian Mikardo of being ' out of his tiny Chinese mind '— a phrase of the comedienne Hermione Gingold, with which I thought everyone was familiar.
The phrase industry term implies that a word or phrase is a typical one within a particular industry or business and people within the industry or business will be familiar with and use the term.
Her most familiar phrase, however, is " Good is better than evil becuz it's nicer!
In this example, the familiar phrase " The sky is falling " is retained, although two subjects would normally require a change to the plural verb " are.
When James Joyce uses the phrase " the snot-green sea " he is playing on Homer's familiar epithet " the wine-dark sea ".
In William Shakespeare's famous play Romeo and Juliet, epithets are used in the prologue, used in the familiar phrase of " star-cross'd lovers " and " death-mark'd love.
This was a familiar phrase to the July 2, 1997 Summerfest.
It led to a familiar phrase of the time, “ incineration without representation ".
The first waltz theme is familiar gently rising triad motif in cellos and horns in the tonic D major, accompanied by the harp ; the Viennese waltz beat is accentuated at the end of each 3-note phrase.
A familiar occurrence of the phrase is in the early English poem Widsith, who " had in the first instance gone with Ealhild, the beloved weaver of peace, from the east out of Anglen to the home of the king of the glorious Goths, Eormanric, the cruel troth-breaker ..."
Even in modern America the phrase " Contra Dance " is used alongside the more familiar term " square dance " or " barn dance ".
Folk etymology is change in a word or phrase over time resulting from the replacement of an unfamiliar form by a more familiar one.
The portico of the magnificent edifice quickly became a popular rendezvous and " Meet you at the Ref " became a familiar phrase on the lips of students, lovers and unemployed youths.

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