Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Washtub bass" ¶ 3
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

hallmarks and traditional
The EA Falcon, released under the codename EA26 ( E for the large size, A for Australia, 26 for the ( usually in sequence ) global project number ), would retain the traditional Falcon hallmarks of width and rear-wheel drive.
Eliot Cohen wrote in a prominent op-ed piece in The Washington Post that the academic working paper bears all the traditional hallmarks of anti-Semitism: " obsessive and irrationally hostile beliefs about Jews ", accusations toward Jews of " disloyalty, subversion or treachery, of having occult powers and of participating in secret combinations that manipulate institutions and governments ", as well as selection of " everything unfair, ugly or wrong about Jews as individuals or a group " and equally systematical suppression of " any exculpatory information ".
Other hallmarks include the use of music in their ritual and liturgy ( arguably unusual amongst traditional Wiccans ), the importance placed upon a ritual feast, the use of a septegram as a symbol rather than a pentagram, and initiatory tattooing.
The town center bears the hallmarks of a typical migration-accepting Turkish rural town, with traditional structures coexisting with a collection of concrete apartment blocks providing public housing, as well as amenities such as basic shopping and fast-food restaurants, and essential infrastructure but little in the way of culture except for cinemas and large rooms hired out for wedding parties.

hallmarks and design
A seminal influence in her work, Preston's adoption of cubist principals gave her an analytical, and problem solving approach to design, a sense of the underlying structure of forms, and the simplified pictorial space and elements which would become the hallmarks of her work.

hallmarks and are
The film is ultimately significant insofar as it displays the first enunciation of De Palma's style in all its major traits – voyeurism, guilt, and a hyper-consciousness of the medium are all on full display, not just as hallmarks, but built into this formal, material apparatus itself.
In this view, the Lamb of God references and other hallmarks of Revelation are linked to what is known of John the Baptist, though it must be confessed that little information about him is known.
The hallmarks of a fighter are its speed, maneuverability, and small size relative to other combat aircraft.
One of the hallmarks of Palestrina's music is that dissonances are typically relegated to the " weak " beats in a measure.
' Lower courts then set guidelines for identifying ' junk science ,' such as the 2005 opinion of United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit Judge Easterbrook, ' Positive reports about magnetic water treatment are not replicable ; this plus the lack of a physical explanation for any effects are hallmarks of junk science.
The artwork has rough pixelated edges, jagged lines, and few colors ( the hallmarks of Microsoft Paint drawings ), and characters are almost always copied and pasted after their first appearance.
Eclecticism and freedom of expression, in reaction to the rigidity and aesthetic limitations of modernism, are the hallmarks of the postmodern influence in musical composition.
Cul-de-sac s are hallmarks of suburban planning.
Clarity, balance, and transparency are the hallmarks of his work, but simplistic notions of its delicacy mask the exceptional power of his finest masterpieces, such as the Piano Concerto No. 24 in C minor, K. 491 ; the Symphony No. 40 in G minor, K. 550 ; and the opera Don Giovanni.
Richly saturated colors in glaring contrast, elaborately ornate lettering, strongly symmetrical composition, collage elements, rubber-like distortions, and bizarre iconography are all hallmarks of the San Francisco psychedelic poster art style.
Commentators praised his voice for its beauty, flexibility and smooth tonal emission, which are the hallmarks of a bel canto singer.
He argues that the book's hallmarks are its restraint, brevity and readability, which downplays the extravagant and mythical aspects of the disaster and instead puts in the foreground the stories of the people on the ship.
The Polysomnogram ( PSG ) picture of this disease is characterized by an inability to generate physiological sleep ( key features are the suppression of the hallmarks of stage 2 non-REM sleep: spindles and K complexes ) and by the emergence of REM sleep without atonia.
Social programs like Bolsa Família and Fome Zero are hallmarks of his time in office.
North Korea bears all the hallmarks of a country most likely to enable horizontal proliferation: they are small, isolated from the international community, not allied with a nuclear weapons state or superpower, and have little to lose in international standing.
These are the hallmarks of a failing collision detection and physical simulation system.
One of the hallmarks of McDowell's later work is his denial that there is any philosophical use for an idea that our experience contains representations that are not conceptually structured, so-called " non-conceptual content ".
The three hallmarks of the fee simple estate are that it is alienable, devisable and descendible.
Thickening and hyper-vascularization of the pulley are the hallmarks of trigger fingers on sonography
These are the hallmarks in their current version:
Today, the Flat-coat enjoys a modest popularity and is moving ahead as a breed through attentive breeding for the conformation, health, multi-purpose talent and exceptional temperament that are its hallmarks.
Whereas most European carousel figures are relatively static in posture, American figures are more representative of active beasts-tossed manes, expressive eyes and postures of movement are their hallmarks.

hallmarks and simplicity
The visual simplicity and conceptual clarity that were the hallmarks of Modernism as an artistic movement formed a powerful toolset for a new generation of graphic designers whose logos embodied Ludwig Mies van der Rohe ’ s dictum, " Less is more.

hallmarks and very
As Hisaishi strengthened his reputation as one of the budding anime industry's top musical contributors, his compositions ( including eight theatrical films and one OAV ) would proceed to become some of the very hallmarks of early anime in the 1980s and 1990s.
The swirling noise and wild improvisation, set against Matsuzaki's very singable and often cheerful melodies, created a musical tension that remains one of Deerhoof's hallmarks.
They show the hallmarks of Stanier ’ s distinctive standard LMS style, a practice he brought with him from his previous employers, the GWR of Churchward and Collett, with the purpose of using interchangeable parts on very different locos.
What's more, Packard hallmarks were very good ones: the chiseled frontispiece ; the grille recalling classic Greek architecture ; the ox-yoke radiator / bonnet shape that harked back to the noble Model L of 1904.

hallmarks and low
It has many of the hallmarks of noir: an urban setting, heavy shadows, diagonal lines, voice-over narration, a dream sequence, low camera angles shooting up multi-storey staircases, and an innocent protagonist falsely accused of a crime and desperate to clear himself.
Animals lack self-consciousness, self-reflection and consideration ; moreover, hallmarks of the disorder such as depressed mood, low self-esteem or suicidality are hardly accessible in non-humans.
Deuterium abundance in the galaxy, Astrophysical Raman Masers, OH emission from clouds and later on building of the low frequency telescopes at Gauribidanur and Mauritius were some of the hallmarks of his career.
Though not a true cloud forest, in that it is not tropical, it bears many of the hallmarks of true cloud forest, with abundant moss and fern cover under thick low canopy.

hallmarks and construction
This program began the large public housing projects that later became one of the hallmarks of urban renewal in the United States: it provided funding to local governments to build new public housing, but required that slum housing be demolished prior to any construction.
The house's German-American hallmarks include its heavy timber frame construction with vertical braces at the corners with tightly fitted horizontal log infillings.

hallmarks and leading
The hallmarks of the Greek Revival style can be seen immediately in the north and south façades, which use a large set of steps leading up to the main level platform, known as the stylobate.
Active caspase-8 is then released from the DISC into the cytosol, where it cleaves other effector caspases, eventually leading to DNA degradation, membrane blebbing, and other hallmarks of apoptosis.

hallmarks and its
And although there was plenty of vigor in the performance, the ensemble was at its best when the playing was soft and lyrical, yet full of the suppressed tension that is one of the hallmarks of Beethoven.
One of the hallmarks of leet is its unique approach to orthography, using substitutions of other characters, letters or otherwise, to represent a letter or letters in a word.
" ( Tyler, A History of Amherst College ) One of the hallmarks of the new college was its Charity Fund, an early form of financial aid that paid the tuition of poorer students.
The authors were sharply criticized by Bernard Carroll, a one-time chairman of the FDA Psychopharmacological Drugs Advisory Committee, for presenting these results as positive: " The study has all the hallmarks of an ' experimercial ,' a cost-is-no-object exercise driven by a corporate sponsor to create positive publicity for its product in a market niche.
Many critics of contemporary anti-prostitution activism argue that much of the current concern about human trafficking and its more general conflation with prostitution and other forms of sex work have all the hallmarks of a moral panic.
Since Power Rangers derives most of its footage from the Super Sentai Series, it features many hallmarks that distinguish it from other superhero series.
In an interview in November 2009, Conservative George Osborne, subsequently Chancellor of the Exchequer in the coalition, sought to distance his party from the excesses of PFI by blaming Labour for its misuse, despite it still bearing all the hallmarks of the policy devised by his own party.
The identity of PGA is mainly enshrined in its five hallmarks.
" One of the hallmarks of the period's anti-war movement was its stated support for the troops in the field and the affiliation of many returning veterans with it.
During this time the festival slowly developed its hallmarks, such as high quality visuals, an excellent range of food stalls, highly unusual line-ups and a Body & Soul field with many healers, masseurs and alternative therapists.
One of the programme's hallmarks was its willingness to embrace popular culture, at a time when its competitors preferred a more highbrow approach.
Norwood Park is known especially for its abundance of green: lawns, parks, churchyards, and trees are its visual hallmarks.
Their claim was that nothing else would be able to compete with its ease-of-use, power, and lack of maintenance overhead – all hallmarks of " the Apple way ".
One of the distinctive hallmarks of Geylang architecture is the preservation of its shophouses used by the clan ( kinship ) associations, set up as a ( first ) point of contact for newcomers in the migrant wave between 1840 and 1940 for the purpose of integrating the newcomers into the ways and customs of locals.
The reaction to modernism, then, assumed the form of a mix between its most salient trait, the use of more formal literary language ( as was the case of the so-called " generation of 1945 ", whose twin hallmarks were, firstly, the highly physical poetry of João Cabral de Melo Neto, who opposed Carlos Drummond de Andrade's poetic modernism, and secondly the sonnets-on both the Italian and English model-of the early Vinicius de Moraes ), followed by varying doses, according to the author considered, of subjectivism, political conservatism and militant Catholicism.
Some aspects are conserved, however ; the hallmarks of a β-defensin are its small size, high density of cationic charge, and six-cysteine-residue motif.

0.214 seconds.