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Dictionary
the capturing of
verb
To take control of; to seize by force or stratagem.
Exact(58)
But this may be offset in part by the capturing of very low rates.
If the Harvey Nichols ad was a crisp enactment of a brilliant insight, then the Volvo Trucks was the capturing of a certain feeling.
The Grovers collect photography exclusively, the sort that has a purpose or message, sometimes a provocative one, beyond the capturing of an image.
The capturing of this juxtaposition of the poster and the living author demonstrates exactly how poetry can and should invite us just to see things.
With a fierce battle for the capturing of attention in a sporting context a notable component of this era, golf would suffer from further removal from the mainstream.
The only Republican inroad appeared to be the capturing of a Democratic City Council seat in Long Beach, by a narrow margin.
Ford's is the long view, seriously considered, full of nuance and detail and heritage; Smith's the capturing of a moment, smart and zippy and fresh.
The capturing of an image was so labour-intensive that Shore was forced to make most of his creative decisions in advance.
We can appraise the study without the burden of all this religiosity, admire it for itself alone, as the capturing of a mood and a moment.
These days, the capturing of the moment, the street photograph and the image have spread and spread, and become almost meaningless in their variety.
Around 50,000 Yazidis fled to the mountains outside Sinjar during the capturing of the Iraqi city near the Syrian border in 2014.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com