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None of the three Balanchine excerpts made a full impression.
Beyond that it's hard to give a full impression from the passenger seat, but watch this space to find out more in April and see if the hype really is to be believed.
The glacially cool choreography of this, the second section, doesn't offer a full impression of the schizophrenic genius of the ballet as a whole, which sweeps along with all the cacophony of a Fellini film.
A full impression of the curved dies could not easily be obtained by one blow; hence there evolved a method of striking one half of the coin with a slightly inclined upper die, which was then rocked over to the other side for a second blow.
"You couldn't just," – he mumbles something under his breath – "because he'd say: 'Speak up! Address the situation properly!'" He launches into a full impression of his dad, his voice booming: "'In the morning you say: 'Good morning!' In the afternoon you say: 'Good afternoon!' That's not very modern for a boy living in Stockwell, a modern place, modern thinking.
I'll need to spend a bit more time with the screen to get a full impression on this front, but assuredly this feels like far less of a toy than the Gear VR does.
Similar(49)
Tim Jeal, a biographer of Livingstone who was not involved in the project, said the publication of the diary "gives a fuller impression of the sheer horror that Livingstone was up against".
The detailed journal that he kept during his years in America is a prime source for the early history of Massachusetts, and his copious file of correspondence and memoranda gives an exceptionally full impression of his activities and personality.
These memos were analyzed using the same coding framework as the transcripts of team meetings to develop a fuller picture of the impressions of team members.
Similar to a jigsaw puzzle that usually will provide a good impression of the full picture long before all pieces are in place, the iterative model building procedure will reach a stage where sufficient pieces of evidence are available to make a sound decision about the quality and relevance of a model.
The full impression of such profusion can now best be judged from the Chapel of Henry VII (c. 1503 c. 1515; Westminster Abbey), which is unique in England for the amount of sculpture that has been preserved.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com