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The word "sweet" appears eight hundred and forty times in your complete Shakespeare.
By Brad Leithauser September 11, 2013 The word "sweet" appears eight hundred and forty times in your complete Shakespeare.
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The Kingdom of Sweets appears through Petipa's sea of lemonade like a candied afterlife.
Suddenly, many sweets appear, lined up in rows and columns.
The empty table disappeared quietly a couple of hours later -- and a small Easterish basket of plush toys and sweets appeared in its place.
The plant orthologues, termed SWEETs, appear to be 7 TM proteins, with extracellular N-termini, and the capacity for bidirectional flux of D-glucose 456.
Within minutes, apple tea or thick, sweet coffee appears on a small silver tray, usually carried by a young boy.
Just when the sweet science appears to lie like a painted ship upon a painted ocean, a new Hero, as Pierce Egan would term him, comes along like a Moran tug to pull it out of the doldrums.
A decrease in the palatability of these dilute sweet solutions appears to underlie this action of endogenous estradiol.
Similarly, Vicki Lutas of BBC Music wrote that even though "Sweet Dreams" appears to lack something, it is undeniably a good song overall.
"Sweet Dreams" appears on the Sasha Fierce disc of I Am... Sasha Fierce as it allows Knowles to portray her alter ego Sasha Fierce, whom Knowles described as "[her] fun, more sensual, more aggressive, more outspoken side and more glamorous side".
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