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He expresses regret at the child's subsequent death, though dwells on it less than he does on the death of a favourite horse.
As with any good caper movie, Soderbergh dwells lovingly on the assembly of the crew and the ingenious mechanics of the robbery itself.
In his pamphlet, De Luca dwells only briefly on his motives for taking up the cause of the Susa valley's "No TAV" (No High Speed Train) movement.
A drop-in centre, the community hall and one of those dramatic yellow- and blue-fronted civic buildings where the local housing association dwells is at the heart of a group of streets which daily rejoins the war against unemployment, drug and alcohol misuse, child poverty and violent crime.
They have seized on a language derived from the worst kind of therapy; a language that dwells on being true to your emotions, to yourself, but doesn't demand much more.
Official rhetoric in China often dwells on the "humiliation" suffered at the hands of foreign powers from the mid-19th century until the communist takeover in 1949.
Across much of Russia most people get their national news only from television, and Russian television's political coverage dwells largely on the president and his ministers and is almost entirely uncritical.
Righting them will require wholesale reform both of financial regulation and of the entire global monetary system.As befits a man who won the Nobel prize for his work on asymmetric information, Mr Stiglitz dwells on the market imperfections and misaligned incentives that distorted decisions made by everyone from mortgage originators to credit-rating agencies.
In the east it dwells on more atavistic grievances: ethnic minorities, old territorial disputes, homosexuals, international financiers and, naturally, Jews.
The tremors at the Rajasthan testing ground must have set Toynbee spinning.Much Indian writing about India dwells today on the gulf between the vision of its founders and what their country has become not that Gandhi and Nehru had the same vision: Gandhi had no use for industrialisation or the state, both of which the westernised Nehru thought indispensable.
"The Great Inflation and its Aftermath" dwells little on the economics of inflation; the main text does not mention the Federal Reserve until page 31.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com