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Ms. Martin, who is an actress, grew up, variously, in each of the buildings, as well as a pink stucco double town house around the corner on Waverly Place, where she lives today.
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What becomes clear here is Gursky's fascination with display, seen variously in terms of human beings arrayed in large numbers (as in "Engadine," in which hundreds of cross-country skiers snake across the snow-covered landscape), products (the entire line of Nike sneakers arranged on evenly lighted shelves) or architecture (especially hotel interiors and office-building exteriors).
The core of the complaint with Apple's maps has already been explained variously in dozens of other articles variously serious, quasi-serious, over-serious, hilarious, and specious.
This ki is described variously in terms of its clarity or turbidity, but invariably things that exist have it as their substantial being.
In particular, and relative to architecture's possible status as artform, architecture as a domain may be defined variously in terms of its objects being art objects (or not), being distinctive sorts of art objects, or belonging exhaustively to a special class of built structures (rather than including all such structures).
The first trailer finds Hemsworth and Thompson traveling the world under the command of Neeson and (Emma) Thompson, variously in and out of those familiar black suits.
So Vespucci, a Florentine adventurer variously in the employ of the Portuguese and Spanish crowns, met the expectations of the reading public of his day when he let his imagination rip in describing his voyages along the eastern coast of South America.
Brass can blow hot and cold, wafting variously in and out of vogue.
He puts himself, variously, in the shoes of his manager, André Villas-Boas, the chairman, Daniel Levy, and the rank-and-file Tottenham supporter.
In this case the Devil (the dancer Rebekah Morin) is a she, variously in the guise of an airport security guard, a psychiatrist, a life coach and a game-show host.
Research by the campaigning group Women in Journalism found boys were referred to variously (in descending order of frequency) as yobs, thugs, sick, feral, hoodies, louts, heartless, evil, frightening, scum, monsters, inhuman and threatening.
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