There's plenty to evoke in Beethoven's grand and craggy Grosse Fuge, Op. 133.
She mentioned this with the slight scorn that such houses evoke in her.
This is what the Muslim must evoke in situations which might warrant taking someone to court, even if he knows it is necessary.
Cosgrave and her colleagues dug deep into the 007 archive in order to find pieces that evoke design in Bond films.
He went on to praise Stoner's ability to evoke happiness in the viewer while also expressing dark undertones.
For some reason farmers evoke sympathy in ways that techies do not.
"I am amazed at how San Francisco continues even now to evoke dreams in the hearts and minds of people all over the world, " McKenzie wrote in 2002.
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Today, the U.K.'s leaders Conservatives who came of age in the Thatcher era evoke her legacy in their insistence that Britain's current stagnation can't be solved by more government spending.
You first create, then signal, and then evoke, passion in that group of people passion that leads to sustained action.
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The deaths will not evoke much sympathy in Indonesia, where most people supported the sentence and believed the executions should have been carried out much sooner, our correspondent says.
The 2012 Olympic Games in London may evoke memories of many previous Olympiads, but in today's terrorist-aware political climate, thoughts of the 1972 Munich games are sadly inescapable.
It was not until the late 1700s that the trombone was employed in the opera orchestra with any regularity, and then its primary function was to evoke feelings of awe in scenes involving the spiritual or the supernatural.
Immerse yourself in surroundings that evoke a more genteel era and watch treasures from the archives in the glass orangerie (modelled on Crystal Palace), silent films accompanied by live orchestration in the neo-classical drawing room or take part in a foley workshop (recording sound effects) in the crumbling stable block.
It may be 25 years since the strike started, initially in Yorkshire, but it can still evoke the most passionate of opinions in this small community of around 4, 000 people.
Few items in the home evoke more emotional experiences than television.
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Its arresting first images of sea and sky evoke a vast historical arc in which her modern-day subjects mainly, a seemingly timeless horde of salt miners on their rugged and monotonous rounds gradually emerge from teeming anonymity.
So Obama has reason to worry about Wright's ability to re-evoke a period of race hatred in American life.
Its mai tais and pu-pu platters almost single-handedly evoke the excitement of growing up in New York in the '60s.
The defeat at the hands of the United States over Cuba in 1898 and the ignominious scramble from Spanish Sahara after Morocco invaded it in 1975 can still evoke feelings of embarrassment.
Marco Iacoboni, a lab director at the UCLA Brain Mapping Center, says when people see a smile, so-called mirror neurons fire in their brain and evoke a similar neural response as if they were smiling themselves.
Unlike the separatist movements in mainly Christian East Timor and Irian Jaya, which evoke little sympathy among Indonesia's Muslim majority, the repression in Aceh is considered by Islamic groups to be one of their core grievances against the Suharto-era army.
Iacobani explained that when one tells a purposeful story in the room, face to face, they evoke the mirror neuron system of their listener to feel what they are feeling in their tell and thus mirror the same intentions.
Reverse the analogy and you see that living in a foreign country can evoke many of the emotions of childhood: novelty, surprise, anxiety, relief, powerlessness, frustration, irresponsibility.
As for Tyutchev's verses, familiar to him since he studied Russian culture and literature at Yale and Oxford, they evoke a mysticism which has no place in diplomacy.
She spent time in front of a mirror, retraining the shape of her mouth, forcing her lips into a long oval "O" to evoke Ms. Garland's face in midbelt but pulling back when the look turned clownish.
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Use words and images in your presentation and communication that evoke sights, sounds, tastes, smells, and tactile feelings.
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Ukiyo-e, a genre of Japanese woodblock prints, translates as an "image of the floating world, " and the scent does seem to evoke an image for me of irises floating in a secluded lake.
Stylistically, Casio has created an attractive calculator designed with a solid body and slightly oval shape that fits comfortably in the hand, and finished it in several shades of blue to evoke an intellectual look.
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The elder actors conjure stifled furies with their pensive stillness and chisel-sharp diction, and Oliveira aided by the lambent evocation of gaslight by his cinematographer, Renato Berta presents them in frames of dramatic precision that evoke the enduring agonies of a vanished century.
Compelling narratives that evoke emotion and inspiration will always have a place in building awareness and support for social change.
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