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In the past, such beetle-browed heavyweights as Broderick Crawford, Ernest Borgnine, and Bob Hoskins have played Hoover.
NEWYORKER: The Man in Charge
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Howler monkeys, marmosets and red-browed Amazon parrots are among the more commonly-spotted species.
BBC: Brazil��s threatened slice of paradise
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It was a sedan, j'accuse, and it was kind of brutal to look at: lantern-jawed, heavy-browed, beetle-backed, and just plain big.
WSJ: 2013 Porsche Panamera GTS Review: The Car for Today's Jay Gatsbys? | Rumble Seat by Dan Neil
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Forty thousand years ago, their long-lost Homo sapiens cousins from Africa began to show their high-browed, dark-skinned faces in Neanderthals' haunts.
WSJ: Neanderthals: Why Us and Not Them?
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Yet even women like Sister Juana, who kept a library in her cell and whose heavy-browed stare still challenges the world to explain itself, were subject to male spiritual advisers.
ECONOMIST: The secret life of nuns
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Rivera appears as a pudgy child holding hands with Mexico's famous skeleton, La Calavera Catrina, and it's hard to miss the mono-browed Kahlo, dressed distinctively in the indigenous clothing she favoured, standing close behind.
BBC: Three days with Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera in Mexico City
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The white-haired bushy browed geologist, who immigrated to South Africa more than 50 years ago, packs a pickax, a few other tools, and some tea when he heads out to rocky bush country.
WSJ: In Geology, Old-Timers Can Be Worth Their Weight in Gold
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But Howard Hughes, strange, shy, intense and beetle-browed, fell in love with them, and decided that much of the money he was dispensing through Hollywood in the 1940s should go towards advancing them.
ECONOMIST: Jane Russell
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Two years ago another Harvard researcher, Tanya Smith, found that by the time we first faced our beetle-browed cousins, their childhoods were not only briefer than ours, they were shrinking possibly an evolutionary "effort" to continue the species by getting to childbearing age sooner.
WSJ: Neanderthals: Why Us and Not Them?
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The first of them, that of the immensely dangerous Kevin Pietersen, came off his first ball of the tournament, and prompted a howling, furrowed-browed, stiff-armed gallop of such intensity that it was as if the clock had been turned back and India's greatest captain was in charge of the national side again.
WSJ: The Indian Premier League's Old Guard