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attuning
verb
Present participle of attune
Exact(14)
Klein conceived of the idea for the symphony around 1947-48, the same years that John Cage, in New York, was formulating "4'33"," a landmark work that involves a pianist not playing the piano but instead attuning an audience to the complexities of silence.
Fein stresses Telcomix's consensus is about attuning the tools the organisation develops to the needs of people who are deprived of telecommunications, and information on the ground is the ultimate goal.
There are of course many scientific explorers who are intuitively attuned to nature's ways, yet traditional scientific thought has encouraged people to prioritise the separation of nature at the expense of attuning with it.
The process of attuning herself to Nyman's score helped to inspire profound stylistic changes in her choreography, and gave her the confidence to work with an increasingly wide range of composers and designers.
We deal with symptoms (carbon emissions, waste to landfill, ocean dead zones, social inequality, factory farming) while neglecting the underlying cause (attuning our self-other-nature relationship).
Attuning to the show's aim to loosen the mood of sabbath television, the chancellor had turned up tieless, although had stopped short of changing his name to Votey McVoteface.
Similar(45)
Women seem particularly attuned to seeking out not partners but rehabilitation projects, though there are plenty of men who reprise the pillar of strength routine when they could do with support themselves.
Memories are still fresh of the all-out war that erupted in Sinaloa in 2008 following a violent split between Chapo and his one-time allies in the Beltrán Leyva family, leaving many in the area particularly attuned to signs of internal tension in the cartel.
"As you get older, you become far more attuned to just how much gender inequality is around.
You can see how well Alexander's political instincts were attuned to the times: he was beaten in his own constituency by a 20-year-old student, on a 27% swing.
The plunge in prices that would result from a pricking of this bubble, he declared on "60 Minutes", an American television programme, could lead to popular protests on the scale of the recent Arab uprisings.China's new leaders are keenly attuned to such concerns and are trying hard to head off the danger.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com