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whose and echoes
There are clear echoes of the Wandering Jew in Wagner's The Flying Dutchman, whose plot line is adapted from a story by Heinrich Heine in which the Dutchman is referred to as ' the Wandering Jew of the ocean ', and his final opera Parsifal features a woman called Kundry who is in some ways a female version of the Wandering Jew.
Similarly there has been extensive debate over the role of Orford Castle whose expensive, three-cornered design most closely echoes imperial Byzantine palaces and may have been intended by Henry II to be more symbolic than military in nature.
When Richard enters to bargain with Queen Elizabeth for her daughter's hand – a scene whose form echoes the same rhythmically quick dialogue as the Lady Anne scene in Act I – he has lost his vivacity and playfulness for communication ; it is obvious he is not the same man.
Courbet's influence can also be seen in the work of Edward Hopper, whose Bridge in Paris ( 1906 ) and Approaching a City ( 1946 ) have been described as Freudian echoes of Courbet's The Source of the Loue and The Origin of the World.
Adding to the inner complexities of the picture and creating further visual interactions is the male dwarf in the foreground, whose raised hand echoes the gesture of the figure in the background, while his playful demeanour, and distraction from the central action, are in complete contrast with it.
Donny Hathaway Live, which featured noted R & B musicians Willie Weeks ( bass ), Fred White ( drums ), Mike Howard ( guitar ), Phil Upchurch ( lead guitar side 1 ), Cornell Dupree ( lead guitar side 2 ) and Earl DeRouen ( percussion ) has been cited as an influence by numerous artists including Alicia Keys, Chris Brown, Amy Winehouse, Beyoncé, George Benson, India. Arie, Jon Gibson, Stevie Wonder, Brian McKnight, Anthony Hamilton, Usher, Justin Timberlake, and Frank McComb are among the contemporary artists whose work echoes Hathaway's.
The striking late modernist building, whose sculptural roofline echoes the contours of the Sterling Mountain Range – its backdrop to the south, is the work of architect Robert Burley.
Jamaat-e-Islami offered important services in Soviet War in Afghanistan whose echoes can still listened.
Stock characters besides Tabarin, with his famous felt hat that could be rolled into a variety of shapes to aid his characterizations ( see " Chapeaugraphy "), were two old men Lucas and Piphagne whose echoes still resound in the Barber of Seville, and the witty and self-reliant ladies Francisquine and Isabella.
These poems are characteristic of the transition through which the German lyric was passing between 1840 and 1848 ; the old Romantic strain is still dominant, especially in his ballads, which are unquestionably his finest productions ; but, side by side with it, there is to be seen the influence of Platen, to whose warmest admirers Strachwitz belonged, as well as echoes of the restless political spirit of those eventful years.
" Eldar, whose last name is Djangirov, combines Art Tatum's superhuman velocity with echoes of Oscar Peterson's grandeur "
In 2004 " Kazuhito Yamashita + bambini " was founded by Kazuhito, his two daughters and elder son, for the risorgimento of a quintessential and older musical tradition ( This recalls a bygone era of both the East and the West when such music was known and valued and whose echoes can still be heard in the classic 11th century novel " The Tale of Genji ") by performing original pieces written for them by Keiko Fujiie, based on her Oriental view of the world.
The Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs uses a red oval-shaped escutcheon, whose colour is that of the Turkish flag and whose shape echoes the oval shield at the center of the late 19th-century Ottoman coat of arms.

whose and Hiawatha
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's The Song of Hiawatha, whose meter was taken from Elias Lönnrot's Kalevala, is written almost entirely in trochees, barring the occasional substitution ( iamb, spondee, pyrrhic, etc.
One of the first to tackle the poem was Emile Karst, whose cantata Hiawatha ( 1858 ) freely adapted and arranged texts of the poem.
The most famous of these was the 1937 Silly Symphony Little Hiawatha, whose hero is a small boy whose pants keep falling down.
It excludes long-distance trains such as the Empire Builder and North Coast Hiawatha whose local stopping patterns were restricted.
The Milwaukee's observations, including the Skytops, lacked a drumhead, whose place was taken by a large oscillating rear light ; instead, each tapered side carried the generic Milwaukee script name " Hiawatha " embossed on stainless steel trim flanking this light.

whose and assert
Consequently, we can assert that a complex function f, whose real and imaginary parts u and v are real-differentiable functions, is holomorphic if and only if, equations ( 1a ) and ( 1b ) are satisfied throughout the domain we are dealing with.
Artists whose primary object is to assert control over property — and not primarily to create of an expressive work of art, political or otherwise — resist switching to impermanent paints.
For the authors of Holy Blood, Holy Grail, who assert that their research ultimately reveals that Jesus may not have died on the cross, but lived to wed Mary Magdalene and father children whose Merovingian lineage continues today, the Grail is a mere sideshow: they say it is a reference to Mary Magdalene as the receptacle of Jesus ' bloodline.
The lord in question, whose identity was veiled by Messrs Lea and Perrins ( who used to assert on the bottle's paper wrapping that the sauce came " from the recipe of a nobleman in the county ") was Arthur Moyses William Sandys, 2nd Baron Sandys ( 1792 – 1860 ) of Ombersley Court, Worcestershire, Lieutenant-General and politician, a member of the House of Commons at the time of the legend.
While in Manchester, General Benjamin Lincoln, whose promotion in preference to Stark had been the cause for Stark's resignation from the Continental Army, attempted to assert Army authority over Stark and his men.
At the hearing, District Attorney Thomas Mara ( Jerome Cowan ), whose wife accused him of " persecuting " ( rather than prosecuting ) Santa Claus, gets Kris to assert that he is in fact Santa Claus and rests his case, believing he has prima facie proven his point.
As Protestantism spread among the laity of the Teutonic Monastic State of Prussia, dissent began to develop against the Roman Catholic rule of the Teutonic Knights, whose Grand Master, Albert of Brandenburg-Ansbach, a member of a cadet branch of the House of Hohenzollern, lacked the military resources to assert the order's authority.
Jealousy can occur, but proponents of swinging assert that jealousy is mainly couples whose relationships were already unstable.
Muslims also assert that evidence of Jesus ' pronouncement is present in the New Testament, citing the mention of the Paraclete whose coming is foretold in the Gospel of John.
It is always difficult for Englishmen to admit that Nelson ever had an equal in his profession, but if any man is entitled to be so regarded, it should be this great naval commander of Asiatic race who never knew defeat and died in the presence of the enemy ; of whose movements a track-chart might be compiled from the wrecks of hundreds of Japanese ships lying with their valiant crews at the bottom of the sea, off the coasts of the Korean peninsula ... and it seems, in truth, no exaggeration to assert that from first to last he never made a mistake, for his work was so complete under each variety of circumstances as to defy criticism ... His whole career might be summarized by saying that, although he had no lessons from past history to serve as a guide, he waged war on the sea as it should be waged if it is to produce definite results, and ended by making the supreme sacrifice of a defender of his country.
After the pope refused the rebels ' pleas for the status of free communes, the islanders sent for Pedro III of Aragon whose wife Constance was Manfred's daughter, Henry VI's great-granddaughter ; and the sole surviving heir of Frederick II who was not in captivity and was in a position to assert her rights.
Sir Anthony Shirley ( or Sherley ) ( 1565 – 1635 ) was an English traveller, whose imprisonment in 1603 by King James I caused the British House of Commons to assert one of its privileges — freedom of its members from arrest — in a document known as The Form of Apology and Satisfaction.
" The inscription goes on to assert that the " thirty Bretons whose names are given as follows, fought to defend the poor, labourers and craftsmen and they vanquished foreigners attracted on the soil of the Country by fateful dissents.
Those theory-saturated critics who engage with texts that, by their nature, are compact of social and political judgements ( and much more ), assert covertly a privileged innocence, an innocence denied to the text under scrutiny, whose rhetorical biases, and epistemological fault-lines are relentlessly subjected to ostensible ' exposure '.
Through the character of Anna, Voyage in the Dark presents the tension between wanting to be integrated into English society and simultaneously feeling alienated from it, a trait it shares with other works of modernist literature written by Anglophone authors such as the Maori writer Witi Ihimaera, whose characters express a desire to engage with and absorb the best of the colonial legacy, yet simultaneously seek to assert their own identity and to avoid becoming absorbed by the culture of the colonial power.
His campaign aimed at the fertile countryside around Murcia and the Vega Baja del Segura whose local Muslim rulers were bound by pacts with Castile and governing by proxy on behalf of this kingdom ; Castilian troops often raided the area to assert a sovereignty which, in any case, was not stable but was characterized by the typical skirmishes and ever changing alliances of a frontier territory.

whose and primitive
Russia, whose technology is not quite primitive, is still in the dark ages when it comes to improving the outboard motor, for instance.
This Doric limestone building, from which many relics survive, is referred to as the hekatompedon ( Greek for " hundred – footed "), Ur-Parthenon ( German for " primitive Parthenon "), H – Architecture or Bluebeard temple, after the pedimental three-bodied man-serpent sculpture, whose beards were painted dark blue.
) Most of the Savage Land races have their origin from a group of primitive ape men who seems to have escaped the Celestial experiments whose influence is present in all modern Homo sapiens.
New Caledonia ’ s natural heritage significantly comprises species whose ancestors were ancient and primitive flora and fauna present on New Caledonia when it broke away from Gondwana millions of years ago, not only species but entire genera and even families are unique to the island, and survive nowhere else.
Hence the ordered pair can be taken as a primitive notion, whose associated axiom is the characteristic property.
At the same time we adopt the principle: not to employ any of the other expression of the discipline under consideration, unless its meaning has first been determined with the help of primitive terms and of such expressions of the discipline whose meanings have been explained previously.
The powers of animal nature fostered a belief in nymphs whose existence was bound to the trees and the waters, and in gods with human forms and the heads or tails of animals who stood for primitive bodily insticts.
He investigated the early seat belts whose primitive designs were implicated in these injuries and deaths.
He starred in many made-for-TV movies, including Gramps ( 1995 ), co-starring with Andy Griffith, Rob Hedden's The Colony ( 1995 ) with Hal Linden, Stephen King's It, Danielle Steel's Heartbeat with Polly Draper, and It Came From the Sky in 1999 with Yasmine Bleeth, and made guest appearances on TV shows, such as " Felicity ", Ally McBeal, Scrubs, Buffy the Vampire Slayer as well as an episode of Law & Order: SVU where the case involves the beating of a seven-months-pregnant woman, whose unborn child has been torn from her body via a primitive cesarean section.
As the 19th century progressed, a division gradually developed between those whose primary commitment was to unity, and those whose primary commitment was to the restoration of the primitive church.
" At the same time, those whose primary focus was restoration of the primitive church increasingly used the term " Churches of Christ " rather than " Disciples of Christ.
Abner is thrown off a cliff and into the valley below by a primitive " large gal " ( as he addresses her ), whose job is to guard the valley.
Thanks to that primitive and mysterious power, whose mode of action will forever be hidden from us, a theme, a melody flashes on the composer ’ s mind.
The Neanderthals are shown sympathetically as a highly articulate people whose tribal society and culture is complex and sophisticated, a far cry from the " primitive brutes " which the future scientists consider them to have been-having only the fragmentary information derived from a little Neanderthal child.
The B, C, K, W system is a variant of combinatory logic that takes as primitive the combinators B, C, K, and W. This system was discovered by Haskell Curry in his doctoral thesis Grundlagen der kombinatorischen Logik, whose results are set out in Curry ( 1930 ).
In 1870 Ueland died, and the loose leadership of the alliance of peasants went over to Søren Jaabæk, an economically extremely conservative politician, whose views hardly exceeded the most primitive cutting of every part of the budget, even if the money in question would be used to the furthering of democracy and education, two of his most important topics.
According to Pausanias, the deity most worshipped at Thespiae was Eros, whose primitive image was an unwrought stone.
She took the name " the Simbul " from a deity of the primitive human tribes that inhabited the Yuirwood before the elves there, and whose runes can still be found deep within the wood ( the goddess known as the Simbul was absorbed as an aspect of Labelas Enoreth ).
In her novels, Manning described Bucharest as being on the margins of European civilisation, " a strange, half-Oriental capital " that was " primitive, bug-ridden and brutal ", whose citizens were peasants, whatever their wealth or status.
Something strange is happening, as the primitive buckeyes are showing signs of a purpose whose goal is unclear and probably dangerous to the balance of the Hive.
From here Caveira evolved, becoming a primitive community dependent on the much larger administrative and religious village of Santa Cruz ( whose parish included Caveira ).
They also discover a group of primitive humanoids living nearby whose customs and appearances closely resemble North American Natives ; more specifically as Spock describes, is a mixture of Mohegan, Navajo, and Delaware tribes.
As evidenced by his writings, he was also by nature a ferocious and humorless snob, a political primitive, a chauvinist in every possible area whose ideas about sexuality apparently were implanted by fevered readings of Lady Chatterley's Lover.

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