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sharp definitionの例文

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  • The constant wash of the bay has dulled her once sharp definition.
  • His efforts were evident throughout a performance of sharp definition and shattering power.
  • The sharp definitions fade into watercolors.
  • This is a roughly circular crater with an eroded outer rim that has lost much of its original sharp definition.
  • Ms . Herrera and Ms . Jaffe, paired for the first time in the ballet, danced with sharp definition.
  • His vocabulary loses a sharp definition as the piece progresses and its repetition makes for a certain sameness in the ensembles.
  • At higher temperatures however, these particles can escape the well and the sharp definition between liquid and gas is lost.
  • Moreover, he said, " you never get a sharp definition of what these vaguely orded guidelines mean ."
  • A short sharp definition at the start, rather than a long rambling discourse is, to me, to be preferred.
  • Astronomers have yet to agree on a sharp definition of superclusters and are only beginning to develop a clear mental picture of them.
  • He wanted to move the ground of the discussion from sharp definition of issues, onto the territory of procedure, and the coexistence of orthodoxy with other beliefs.
  • What element does the nation need to give sharp definition to the picture of unrelieved optimism _ to remind good pilgrims that the Man with the Muckrake, his gaze eternally cast downward, fails to see the glorious celestial crown offered to him?
  • They talked of looking " cut, " with sharp definition to their muscles, and of developing " six-packs, " crisp divisions of the abdominals, but of all the muscles that get a workout in rooms like these, the most important may be the ones that move the eyes in restless sweeping arcs of comparison and appraisal.
  • "I believe that we are in a grotesque period of which I can give you a very short, sharp definition, the word ` pretext .'Pre-text, it's a brilliant pun, saying even the greatest of literature is a pretext for theoretic or deconstructive or postmodern criticism, to which I answer very respectfully, the hell it is!
  • In 1919 Paul Brissenden wrote that while the departure of Sherman and the Western Federation of Miners in 1906, and the DeLeon faction in 1908, meant the loss of its " most reputable, best financed, and most respectable elements, their loss tended to give sharp definition and emphatic impulse toward a more revolutionary policy . " As a result, the IWW became the champion of unskilled and migratory workers, including workers facing frequent unemployment, during the decade that followed.