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Tours by the Royal Ballet (before 1956, the Sadler's Wells Ballet) were at least biennial and began invariably with triumphant seasons (usually monthlong) at the Metropolitan Opera House.
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The rise and rise of self-employment – at 15% of the UK workforce it is now at its highest level since records began – is invariably a good sign if you're a Conservative.
It began on an invariably empty dirt road and led to a monkey path through the jungle that ended up at an invariably empty beach.
Speakers who took the stage invariably began by narrating a "story of self" about their lives.
But such stories, Behe notes, invariably began with cells, whose own evolutionary origins were essentially left unexplained.
In the past, sales of the company's bathroom and kitchen fixtures invariably began to fall six months before the economy did, giving him plenty of warning.
He said that isolated communities struck by viruses were governed by a "three-day rule": children invariably began dying on the third day.
Though quite how he managed to recall with such precision Bacon's table talk, in the aftershock of lunches that invariably began with several bottles of champagne and ended in the derelict small hours, is one of those miracles of journalistic transcription that readers are invited to accept as an act of faith.
Sketches invariably began with him waving wooden spoons, clattering bowls and reciting mock-Swedish, semi-yodelled, singsong recipes ("Aweenda shmure da froog's legs" or "Yur puurt thuur chiir-ken airn der bewl") before descending into a slapstick finale, often involving shotguns, cleavers and his live animal ingredients getting the better of him.
He went on, disregarding a murmur, to explain that, in spite of this, he always distrusted people who, like one of the speakers on the program, invariably began by explaining that their opinions were quite objective and did not represent special pleading.
The obituaries that followed Mr. Widmark's death almost invariably began by evoking his first and still most famous film appearance, as the psychotic killer Tommy Udo in Henry Hathaway's 1947 film noir, "Kiss of Death" — a role that required Mr. Widmark to giggle and grin as he bound an old woman (Mildred Dunnock) to her wheelchair and shoved her down a flight of stairs.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com