Tune into gamma rays, and see titanic explosions scattered throughout the universe at a rate of about one per day. |
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Tune back to the early days of talkies, and remember an era before television. |
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The music is devoid of melody, at least in the traditional sense, but it can grab the listener as tightly as any Big Tune, if given the chance. |
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Playing Cranium feels like playing charades, Pictionary, Trivial Pursuit, Name That Tune and hangman all at once. |
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Tune in to our Northern Alliance show from 12 to 3 today, Central time. |
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Tune in at 4 am tomorrow, when I may feverishly elaborate on the details. |
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Tune in next week for the rest of our in-depth interview with Mockingjay director Francis Lawrence. |
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The Viking Ship Museum features three Viking ships found at Oseberg, Gokstad and Tune and several other unique items from the Viking age. |
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Tune in to the Discovery Channel on Friday, April 1 and see the Good Ol' Boy Trailer. |
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Tune in as The Balancing Act hosts help jump start the day with lively conversations, and trusted information to empower a woman's life. |
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Tommy Tune joined Russell the next evening for The Boy Friend and followed the screening with a live stage dance number from the film. |
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Dyna Tune will offer custom and generic engine remaps to family, commercial and high performance vehicles to deliver better driving performance using a Hub Dynamometer. |
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Tune in as The Balancing Act hosts help jump start the day with lively conversations, recipe ideas and trusted information to empower a woman's life. |
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The three musicians began their instruments, playing a cheerful and happy tune that sent the pirates toe tapping and hand clapping. |
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But the front page splash was all about how he had changed his tune on a few key issues such as a pulp mill in Tasmania and American bases. |
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Students of all ages were encouraged to tune into Cantonese radio and television daily, Leung added. |
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Look around a synagogue when a cantor offers a new tune for prayer, and both sides of the debate will become apparent. |
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As her foot tried to join in with the tune, the rhythm that followed sounded offbeat and dying. |
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It can be silly things, like we'll use a capo and drop D, tune the string down to make a chord, rather than just play the chord normally. |
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As long as you are fit and are able to mentally tune in to the game and go with the flow, and adapt, it is fine. |
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Though she loved the Divine Office and appreciated the Chant, she could not sing two notes in tune. |
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A few stand watching a brave soul with a karaoke machine belt out an off-key tune. |
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But we sang along anyway, and there were no off-key notes or minor chords, not even from Mama, who quite simply could not carry a tune. |
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She bade me goodnight and walked away, swaying only slightly, and humming an off-key tune under her breath. |
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It was the only tune with vocals in the entire program and everyone in the house sang along. |
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The meanings of the hexagrams were divined many years ago by Chinese philosopher-priests in tune with the Tao. |
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Good tune, lovely high vocal from Mann and nice harmonization between her and Lee. |
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He rounded the corner and a trio of violins began to harmonize a classical tune. |
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The tune to which the words are set is rather more interesting, being the Old Prussian March. |
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There's a talent in distinguishing which old-school tune has the bass and catchy guitar riff to place firmly in a rapper's rhyming game. |
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This is essential listening for guitarists, but fans of left-of-centre music would be well advised to also tune in. |
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He seemed to have something to prove, and this occasionally meant his guitar would drown out the vocals or prolong a tune. |
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He showed no sign of being effected by my harsh look, as he remained his annoying self, humming some tune I was vaguely familiar with. |
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The muted, playful tone feels off, contrasting harshly with the mysterious slamming doors and the solemn tune Marianne plucks on the piano. |
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All he has to do if he wants to fly toward the omnirange is to tune to its frequency and then watch a needle on his instrument board. |
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You tune into a certain station with your dial, which locks your radio onto a carrier wave at a set frequency. |
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On this he is out of tune with the majority of Liberal Democrat voters, who wholly oppose war. |
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Suddenly the voices of Sir Bob Geldof and his fellow protesters seem rather out of tune with the vox populi. |
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They changed their tune seconds later, however, as they watched their heroes manufacture a third score in stoppage time. |
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The song, the first tune to be played on Radio 1 when it was launched in 1967, catapulted the group to stardom. |
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Besides, it was a catchy tune, and the people didn't have to know what it meant in order to enjoy it. |
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It is a very catchy tune and is getting a lot of airplay on the local radio stations. |
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A song with a catchy tune and outstanding lyrics might do a lot to fill the cinema theatres. |
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They know how to sit down, put their words to a tune, and craft it into a catchy song. |
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Then The Smiths came on Top of the Pops with an odd, catchy tune called This Charming Man. |
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I'm doing BFBS next Friday at 1.30 pm, so if you know any squaddies, get them to tune in. |
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If he is out of tune why is he favourite, and if Leona sings with a strengthless whistle why is she second favourite. |
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In place of a tune it has some sophisticated harmonies that complement intelligent lyrics. |
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Almost every church in the area was represented, and there were half a dozen bands striking up a tune for the event. |
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Just when the stars were beginning to appear, the band struck up a slow, romantic tune. |
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The only disquiet in the camp emerges from the striking similarity of each tune. |
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This acts as a wonderful foil to the modal hymn tune with plucked strings in the bass attempting to calm matters down. |
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Eric strummed a random tune in his guitar and continued speaking as he closed his eyes and bent his head. |
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Hans began to strum a lively tune and then Fritz added in and Edvard began to dance. |
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Damon's dark outline is by a large stereo, which he promptly flips on to an upbeat cha-cha tune and turns. |
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He sat the guitar in his lap and strummed softly, checking if it was still in tune. |
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With choice to select a melodious tune, they have captions with the style of the English language being flowery. |
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Its clean break is accompanied by evil synth stabs, while its catchy bongo slaps keep the tune running at full pace. |
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Their performances include frequent encores, presumably lasting until the stagers tire and the birds move on to the next tune. |
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I'm sure he changes his tune once he's stuck behind a desk encouraging his clients to sign on the dotted line. |
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I surprise myself in saying this, but what is so wrong with a woman changing her tune according to the man in her life? |
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Given the growing popularity of your mix CD, have record companies since changed their tune? |
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But when they saw him play, they changed their tune and were impressed with his rapid development in Scotland. |
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While down on the shot, fine tune your aim by taking a few glances from the cue ball to the object ball and back again. |
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Within a couple of hours, however, they had changed their tune in the wake of negative feedback and agreed to discuss the situation further. |
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But Max soon changes his tune and ingratiates himself with the university high-ups. |
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Then the charged atmosphere of the club, the familiar bounce and beat of the techno tune, filled him and he leaned forward to finish his drink. |
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In the Communist world, there was always another bureaucrat to pay the piper, so long as he played the right propaganda tune for the time. |
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The canonic working of the tune in the accompaniment is most ingenious. |
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The taxpayer pays the piper, but the sponsor calls the tune. |
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I am tempted to ask, if the government is tied hand in glove to corporate America, whistling to the tune of almighty trade, who is running the corporate world? |
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Apologising for having to re-start Tomorrow, I'll Be Home Today because of an out of tune guitar, he began again as the crowd accompanied him with a sea of handclaps. |
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He wandered under the sign into the line behind a pair of female Boos who were arguing about which magical ocarina tune began with a minor seventh. |
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We don't see that playing out of tune or singing off-key is revolutionary. |
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It was the sort of tune that was difficult not to take to, and it strolled through my imagination, its harmonious music leaving footprints as it ambled along. |
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With its straightforward narrative, show tune chestnuts and quaint, old-world coziness, the show is a guaranteed crowd pleaser for the Sunday matinee crowd. |
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The onomatopoeic tune that resulted was hilarious, but the implication that in a digital universe all correspondences are known in advance was rather disturbing. |
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If he continually bemoaned such circumstances he would find himself out of tune with his own support, who have no stomach for even genuine excuses. |
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How I envy my Other Half, who can not only boast a fine whistling technique, but who can summon up a veritable oompah band whenever he's got a tune on the brain. |
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I had the tune right there, playing in my head, but to sing in front of one of the hottest young generation Heldentenors is something only few would dare. |
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The band struck up a favourite tune of mine from the latter album. |
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The jockeys will charge the tape and bolt to the first fence anyway, and in far flung outposts of the old Empire and beyond, they'll tune in as well. |
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Our ancestors had known that nature was not subduable and, therefore, had made it an obligation for man to surrender to nature and live in tune with it. |
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He also accuses environmentalists, who were happy last year when the task force report came out, of changing their tune and saying the city needs a new garbage strategy. |
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My parents always seemed to be understanding people but recently they have changed their tune and want to know what I am doing and where I am going all the time. |
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Guitar overdubs compete to stay in time and in tune with each other. |
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A straight-faced clown in severe white makeup begins picking out a tune on an accordion as more people trickle in to watch. |
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When we reach the piano, Ormus sits down and starts to play a slow, haunting gospelly tune. |
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Once you tune into any sense of injustice, you can project a much feistier countenance. |
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Years ago, owner Charlie Schmidt recorded footage of Fatso apparently playing a groovy jazz tune on an electric keyboard. |
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Fran's scholarship exemplified imaginativeness and expansiveness that is so in tune with the nature of human experience and well-being. |
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Session's Can You Relate before their own tune Ghost Song is given some tough elative whoops by Joris Voorn. |
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Land of Hope and Glory, already popular, became still more so, and Elgar wished in vain to have new, less nationalistic, words sung to the tune. |
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On the day she arrives at his hut, she attempts to make an excuse that she cannot play the piano because it is out of tune. |
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She is stunned to find that Baines has had the piano put into perfect tune. |
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Unable to play normally, Iommi had to tune his guitar down for easier fretting and rely on power chords with their relatively simple fingering. |
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Olivier had a great success in John Osborne's The Entertainer in 1957, but Gielgud was not in tune with the new wave of writers. |
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As each generation becomes more in tune with the Internet, their desire to retrieve information as quickly and easily as possible has increased. |
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The film's theme tune was performed during the Opening Ceremony by the London Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Simon Rattle. |
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A new orchestration of the film's theme tune was played during each medal presentation of the Games. |
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They wanted to produce something which was more in tune with modern sports fans and had a bit of comedy linked to it. |
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From early 2008, the Wigan fans have often chanted to the tune of The Entertainer. |
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The author of the tune is unknown and it may originate in plainchant, but a 1619 attribution to John Bull is sometimes made. |
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The first published version of what is almost the present tune appeared in 1744 in Thesaurus Musicus. |
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Holst in 1926 harmonised the tune to make it usable as a hymn, which was included in the hymnal Songs of Praise. |
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In folk music, a tune is a short instrumental piece, a melody, often with repeating sections, and usually played a number of times. |
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Much of the local character of a style comes from the type of decoration that is added to a tune. |
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To listen to digital radio on a TV, for example, it would be necessary to attach the TV to an aerial and tune the TV to different channels. |
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When I look at what I call the gift of life, I feel a gratitude which is in tune with some religious ideas of God. |
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Oben am jungen Rhein, national anthem of Liechtenstein is set to the tune of God Save the Queen. |
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Highland Cathedral is Patten's favourite pipe tune, as said by himself on a BBC Asia Today programme. |
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Artists who engaged with history and myth were not considered to be in tune with the times, either in poetry or art. |
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The problem can perhaps be seen if we consider the note produced by an oboeist to which other members of an orchestra tune. |
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He octaviates some fragments of the tune without even the excuse of avoiding difficult stopping. |
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In 2011, the theme tune charted at number 228 of radio station Classic FM's Hall of Fame, a survey of classical music tastes. |
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The show's theme tune plays over this monologue and the additional intertitle. |
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A common form is have a harp melody written down or a well known tune, while the vocalist improvises their own harmony while singing a poem. |
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Stereophonics also performed the original opening theme tune for the TV series Long Way Round. |
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The idea was in tune with the times and had already been discussed after Balboa's discovery of the Pacific. |
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Yet again a commercial firm had prostituted a traditional song by setting an advertising jingle to its tune. |
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The term does not necessarily owe its origins to this tune of unknown origin. |
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An upright semigrand piano near the door, flanked by two palms in pots, executed suddenly all by itself a valse tune with aggressive virtuosity. |
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I don't like this tune, and I'm rather tired, so I think I'll just sit out. |
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Arthur Wills played solo on his trumpet, and the tune was the posthorn galop. |
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The easy thing about building for your domestic market is that you are in tune with your own hillbillies. |
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It was military bandsmen, their uniform coats unbuttoned, who supplied the merry tune, from a clarinet, a tuba, a fife. |
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The roses were in bloom, two nightingales soliloquized in the boskage, a cuckoo was just going out of tune among the lime trees. |
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He may pitch on some tuft of lilacs over a burn, and smoke innumerable pipes to the tune of the water on the stones. |
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You can choose to override these laws, you can change the game, you can dance to a different tune. |
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I can make neutrons dance to a new tune, but I shrink from telling a human tick to fasten onto someone else. |
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As a result, the Japanese found themselves having to dance to a new tune and it was one they were scarcely familiar with. |
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We are on earth to dance to our own tune! We have to know who I the individual is. |
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What was the name of the instrumental version of the song used as the series theme tune? |
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John Goss, who wrote the hymn tune for Praise, My Soul, the King of Heaven, came from Fareham. |
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There's many a good tune played on an old fiddle. I hate his nasty insinuendos. |
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Dappy's new tune is jokes, in a good way. Thoroughly entertaining and insightful which is more than I can say for most things on the radio. |
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The Cranbrook tune to On Ilkla Moor Baht 'at was written by Thomas Clark, a Kent shoemaker. |
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The rural values of monasticism held little appeal to urban people who began to form sects more in tune with urban culture. |
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For dances which have set tunes, there is often a short song set to the tune. |
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His Body of the Dead Christ in the Tomb of 1522 expresses a humanist view of Christ in tune with the reformist climate in Basel at the time. |
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The Lionel Bart version in the 1964 musical uses the traditional tune, but changes the lyrics somewhat. |
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Robert Shaw, the actor who sang the tune in Jaws, also sang it years earlier in a 1956 episode of the television show The Buccaneers. |
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The tune is often used by English football supporters as the basis for chants. |
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All entries will be mashed into one exciting version of the Emirates 'Hello Tomorrow' tune and shared across Emirates' Facebook and YouTube channels. |
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The Mannion team will tune the burner, clean the furnace fan, and clean the combustion chamber and heat exchanger cavities, the chimney base and the flue pipe. |
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Most modern detectors can also tune in any commercial radio stations, which is particularly useful due to their high power and location near major cities. |
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In 1889, Brazil became a republic, and it was agreed that a new state capital of Minas Gerais, in tune with a modern and prosperous Minas Gerais, had to be set. |
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The damage that he did to his car was to the tune of two grand. |
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In the 1802 edition, the original words and tune were restored. |
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He played a lazy tune that sinuated from C sharp down to G natural and back again. Astonishing that he could flute so lazy a cantilena while chasing nymphs. |
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I think they'll change their tune as soon as they try it the other way. |
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The suspect changed his tune when he learned the police had the evidence. |
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This chording technique works well for learning any tune, but this is the only tune of the set that I will write out completely as a chorded version. |
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The extant manuscript shows multiple revisions, demonstrating Luther's concern to clarify and strengthen the text and to provide an appropriately prayerful tune. |
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In one way the book is a straightforward defence of eccentricity, a plea for the importance of valuing individuals who choose to dance to a different tune. |
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Gwlad Newydd y Cymry is played to the same tune as Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau. |
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When the last tune of music floated from the fleet, he unstabled his quarter horse and headed for the coastal road leading west and north on his circuit. |
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Consequently, it is easier to tune the picture without losing the sound. |
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I blow it up until it's tight as a tick. Just below the skirt through which the lanyard passes, a tiny mouth whistles a single-note tune until the balloon's lungs are emptied. |
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Then you remember we greased him to the tune of five hundred. |
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The cause was very evident, for there was Larry in the midst of a group of seamen, dancing an Irish jig to the tune of one of his most rollicksome songs. |
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The second fiddle on that tune is almost as hard as the first fiddle. |
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I need to fiddle with the strings on my violin. It doesn't sound in tune. |
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It was recorded as being sung in London theatres in 1745, with, for example, Thomas Arne writing a setting of the tune for the Drury Lane Theatre. |
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It became the anthem of the Austrian Empire after the end of the Holy Roman Empire with revised lyrics, its tune ultimately being used for the German national anthem. |
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The poem circulated privately for a few years, until it was set to music by Holst, to a tune he adapted from his Jupiter to fit the words of the poem. |
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The piano was not simply out of tune, but had become downright tinny. |
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Over a period of time, the style was modified in tune with their urban requirements, and civil engineering and building construction technology became developed and refined. |
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So you know when you're off your box and you're dancing to this tune and the tune is one of your favourites, yeah? But because you're off your box, it's better than banging. |
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However, due to its simple and catchy melody, it became a popular tune and was soon afterwards interpreted frequently at English fairs, taverns and events. |
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A Scot called Macmillan, a man holding a master's square-rig ticket, gave me a portion of a shanty related in tune to the foregoing, and also to the British Rolling Home. |
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Also in 1979, he recorded a version of the signature tune of the British children's television programme Blue Peter, which was used by the show for 10 years. |
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He's always telling Beth about the enormity of his next gig and the extraordinary phatness of his latest beats, and to be fair he can drop a good tune. |
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The extended, characteristic trumpet tune that precedes and accompanies the voice is the only significant instrumental solo in the entire oratorio. |
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