How To Use Heyday In A Sentence
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This was also the heyday of the "capriccio," or architectural and landscape fantasy, established by Marco Ricci and developed by Canaletto and Tiepolo.
NYT > Home Page
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In his heyday, he was a great tennis player.
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In its heyday, its clientele included celebrities and royalty.
Times, Sunday Times
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Of course, it's not all about the image and the looks (except that, in the case of this particular preening bunch of fops in their heyday, it was almost entirely about the image and the looks).
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By the heyday of the binder's craft, the early to mid eighteenth century, two types of leather were recognized as the best: skiver, or lambskin, which was strong but so thin that it scarcely required any paring, and Moroccan goatskin, which was highly valued for its skiver-like characteristics combined with its delightful reddish color.
Books: Modernity's Abuse of an Art
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Once upon a time, in the heyday of unitards and medicine balls, intercollegiate games were private affairs, held in basement gyms or on remote lawns, and if anyone bothered to go and watch, it was an athlete's dad or girlfriend or roommate.
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During her heyday from the 1920s to the 1930s, unconventional artist Carmen Mondragón was demonized in much the same way as the fire-breathing creature of legends past.
The Fiery Spirit Of Carmen Mondragon
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Perhaps in their heyday around 2006-2007, they were overwhelmed with the explosive rowth, however it was reported that prior to the recent management shuffling, they had a 1000 employees?
Why MySpace Is Really GeoCities 2.0
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Few would disagree that sitcoms have declined since their heyday in the 1970s.
Times, Sunday Times
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I understand the feelings of loss among those who have fond memories of the Odeon in its heyday of the Thirties and Forties.
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This is a very sad collection of songs put together, but what was a second rate band in their heyday is a total disaster today.
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Especially during the heyday of Bloomfieldian structuralism, linguists were scathing of conceptual definitions of word classes.
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Not to jar anyone's misty, watercoloured memories, but not every one of her films was well-regarded, even during her heyday.
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James Dillon in his heyday was about the only orator of modern times to match such eloquence.
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Steam railways had their heyday in the 19 th century.
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Such a dismissal will no doubt be received the way a brisk slap in the face would for the nucleus that goes back to the 2004 NBA title heyday, but the Pistons have earned the skepticism that follows them into the playoffs this year.
NBA.com: Fantasy News
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During the commune heydays of the early 1970s, the ranch collected a typically renegade group of cultural misfits.
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In its heyday, it was one of the best motor dealers in all of county Sligo.
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Platform boots, flares and wide lapels, satin suits and big hair dos, as well as lashings of glitter, will all be on the fashion menu as revellers relive the years of Abba's heyday.
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In his heyday, he certainly rubbed shoulders with all the top players, and had a ringside seat at some of Hollywood's wilder revels.
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Looking back to the 1970s and the heyday of income equality, the world was very different.
Times, Sunday Times
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In his heyday, there were reports of young women twirling chaines tours down cornrows instead of helping with harvest.
Bulletproof Girl
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The ancient Maya Indians - who had their heyday in Mexico and Central America from about A.D.250 to 900-had more than a passing familiarity with the tempests that regularly howled off the Atlantic.
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In his heyday he was also an excellent marksman and didn't need much help from the dogs when it came to finding birds.
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It was typical of him in his heyday, so mentally strong, and not a sign of nerves.
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In its 1970s heyday it drew an audience of 300 million.
Times, Sunday Times
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The cruise ships reached their heyday during the roaring '20s, and then slowly began declining.
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But, since the heyday of the missionaries, the collective consciousness has nevertheless undergone a sea-change.
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As rules for entertaining grew ever more elaborate, the fancy table setting enjoyed its heyday.
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The company enjoyed a glorious heyday in the 1980s when the company sold more than 120,000 instruments.
Times, Sunday Times
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In their heyday in the Victorian era, these powerhouses of energy could plough 20 times faster than a horse-drawn ploughman and his team and were transported from farm to farm.
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Entering Nunnington Hall is like stepping back to the heyday of the British Empire when English gentlemen proved their manhood by shooting game and fighting in wars.
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During its heyday, Hollywood churned out hundreds of such harmonious hokum, trading on everything from ice skating to swimming ability as a reason for breaking into a popular tune.
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By November, Friston had seen its heyday and was finally derequisitioned in April 1946.
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I refer to the heyday of Pan-Arabism, personified by Egypt's dictator at the time, Gamal Abd Al-Nasser, who came to power in July 1952 as the leader of the "free officers".
Dr. Josef Olmert: Political Eruptions in the Arab World -- Lessons From Nasser's Day
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Docklands in its heyday was a major centre of industrial and commercial activity.
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Both these machines had their heyday, but now they seem to be on their way out, in a very unceremonious manner.
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The rails will be a permanent reminder of the heyday of the station as a thriving terminus.
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The city has been given a face lift, freshly painted in mustard, peach and salmon, and now looks more like a colonial city than in its heyday.
Richard Bangs: Nic' of Time
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In its heyday, the Falcon GT was reckoned to be the fastest four-door sedan in the world.
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It was an idea far ahead of its time, born of a desire not merely to "civilize" a seemingly moribund Muslim world, but to unite East and West, the Baghdad Railway could have fostered not just greater economic integration for European benefit, but an inter-cultural renaissance across Eurasia as well evoking heyday of the great Muslim Empires -- Ottoman, Safavid and Mughal -- that last united these lands into one broad cultural ecumene.
Mark Levine: Sonic Peacemakers Go Where the Rest of Us Fear to Tread
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The great exponents of hard SF in its heyday of the 1950s were Isaac Asimov and Arthur C. Clarke.
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The brave new integrationist impulse flourished for a time, in the post-war utopian heyday.
The Times Literary Supplement
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But despite yesterday's good news, the heyday of mining in Yorkshire has well and truly passed.
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It was ‘attractive and pleasing, both within and without’, and in its heyday could seat 1,000 worshippers.
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The flap is rooted in Virginia City's late 1800s heyday, when the town was at the epicenter of the huge Comstock Lode gold and silver mining rush.
Residents of Old Mining Town Want Gold to Stay in Them Thar Hills
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The interior of the property bears little resemblance to its wilder heyday.
Times, Sunday Times
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In its heyday, the studio's boast was that it had more stars than there are in heaven.
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In Fangio's heyday in the early years of the championship, survival was as notable as performance.
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He was a man no longer young, but in what we call the heyday of life, when our own people are so absorbed in making provision for the future that they may be said not to live in the present at all.
A Traveler from Altruria: Romance
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But the hair styling students at the college who are also taking part in the extravaganza have been given a 1950's theme and their work is truly evocative, with shades of the heyday of Hollywood glamour.
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While cruise ships have food aplenty today, the liners in their heyday outmatched today's ships by far.
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After some lean years, the spirit of indie US cinema is alive and kicking again and this may be the most anarchic romantic comedy since the heyday of screwball.
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In their heyday, the Penny Dreadfuls sometimes called "bloods" or "shilling shockers" were produced en-masse.
Penny Dreadfuls
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In its Victorian and Edwardian heyday the ghost story almost always meant a short story.
Times, Sunday Times
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But, since the heyday of the missionaries, the collective consciousness has nevertheless undergone a sea-change.
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He plunges with avidity into the delights of inner-city Glebe and the University of Sydney in its heyday.
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The heyday of panthose were the 1970s and 1980s but apparently sales have declined since the 1990s "casualization" of the workplace.
Boing Boing
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The hero, Rajesh Khanna, became a terrible ham, but he was very beautiful in his heyday, as was his co-star, Sharmila Tagore.
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Whereas in the heyday of the proletariat there was a bunching of semi-skilled workers in the centre, marginalizing skilled artisans and unskilled casual workers, now a line divided the working class through the middle.
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She agrees that the resort is unlikely to get back to the position it boasted in its heyday.
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In my heyday I would birdie some holes and chip and putt for a par on the others.
Times, Sunday Times
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The interior of the property bears little resemblance to its wilder heyday.
Times, Sunday Times
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Banquets, balls, dinner dances, bazaars and fetes, exhibitions and civic receptions were held there in its proud heyday.
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Heyday! but here is an odd evincement of gratitude!" de Montors retorted; "and though I am not particularly squeamish, let me tell you, my fine fellow, I do not ordinarily fight with lackeys.
Domnei A Comedy of Woman-Worship
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It acquired and developed the original photocopier technology and in its heyday it had a virtual monopoly and made huge profits.
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In its heyday, MTV would sometimes air the same episode as many as ten times per week.
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During its heyday, from about 1880 to the Second World War, the Clyde puffer was the lifeline to remote communities along the West Coast.
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The industry was in its heyday - stacks of fish back to back the length of the quay, off a long line of trawlers newly returned from the far North.
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In its heyday, the garment industry became the leading employer of homeworkers.
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In its heyday, it was the place to be in summer, but it is now engulfed by sand.
Times, Sunday Times
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He's taking that flair from the Outback to the economic heyday of the 1920's with his next project -- an adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald's classic novel, "The Great Gatsby.
With ‘Australia’ Behind Him, Baz Luhrmann Looks To ‘The Great Gatsby’ » MTV Movies Blog
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In its heyday, Swindon works employed more than 16,000 people, overhauling locomotives and carriages for the Great Western Railway and later for British Rail.
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It employed 30,000 during its 1960s heyday.
The Sun
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Again, let us remember that the point isnt that Otaku arent subcultural, but that their subalternity isnt causal vis-a-vis traits in exhibit - these same traits were in exhibit during the heyday of Ukiyo-e without Ukiyo-e being as or neccesarily subaltern.
Néojaponisme » Blog Archive » Otaku and Zen Buddhism?
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The bikers who swarm into its car park are a little older now than the clientele in its 1950s heyday, but not much else has changed.
Times, Sunday Times
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It was a royal city from 893 to 972 and the reign of Tsar Simeon the Great was the heyday of its glory.
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After decades of decline, the old imperial capital is having another heyday.
Times, Sunday Times
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These trains are lightweight compared to the thundering monsters the bridge was used to carrying in its heyday.
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While it still love Jet Li, i think his heyday is past and it wouldn't hurt Hollywood to have a look at some of the OTHER HK, Korean, Japanese action stars.
Sylvester Stallone, Jason Statham and Jet Li to Team Up For The Expendables | /Film
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A local hero in his heyday, he ended his life alone, shutting himself away after being diagnosed with cancer.
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Water mills have been in existence in Britain for more than 1,000 years. They had their heyday during the Industrial Revolution, when the textile industries in the Midlands relied on this form of power.
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Tony Blair and Gordon Brown accused Michael Howard of leading an unreformed party that remained as divided now as it was in Margaret Thatcher's heyday.
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During the heyday of spiritualism, many writers speculated about spiritualistic phenomena, offering concepts of bodily forces as explanations.
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Double world motorcycling champion Barry Sheene attracted a whole new audience to the sport during his 1970s heyday.
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But she's got this behind-the-scenes bawdiness that reminds me of Carol Burnett in her heyday, which is just lovely for a bunch of guys.
On the Set Farewell to Chuck Part 4: The Nerd Legacy
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Kidnapping, now seen as a dying business in the criminal underworld, had its heyday in the 1980s when some of the country's richest businessmen were the subject of ransom demands.
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Rob Schneider, whose Saturday Night Live heyday seems a pitifully distant memory right about now, stars as the title schlub, a fussy nerd who somehow landed a gorgeous Mexican-American bride the innocuous Claudia Bassols after a six-week courtship.
Thursday TV in Review: Rotten Rob, Finder, Person of Interest and More
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Numbers have certainly dwindled since their heyday in the 1980s.
Times, Sunday Times
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However, in its heyday, a trainload of tourists could be on the boat within five minutes.
Times, Sunday Times
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In its heyday, its clientele included celebrities and royalty.
Times, Sunday Times
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It is probably a little more comfortable now than in its heyday - especially as the former dairy out been converted into a galley kitchen and bathroom.
The Sun
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When I've managed to get to a con, I'll end up going to some of the panels and the movies, but I also spend a great deal of time at something which, in my heyday, was called the huckster's room but is now more commonly known as the dealer's room, window shopping.
Why Con?
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During the heyday of modern American liberalism, the 1930s, when Big Brother supposedly wore his friendliest phiz, Day and the Catholic Workers said No.
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In its heyday 150 years ago, Tomki Station (10 km east of Casino) was a leading producer of tallow, which was used to make candles and soap.
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A soft, heavy metal that has been used since antiquity (the word "plumbing" comes from the Latin word for lead, plumbum), lead had its heyday in the USA from the 1920s to the 1970s.
For many kids, lead threat is right in their own homes
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A freestanding refrigerator and walk-in pantry give the kitchen the currently popular unfitted look, a style that had its first heyday before the advent of built-ins.
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Tales that send a shiver down the spine were in their heyday in the Victorian age.
Times, Sunday Times
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Each track sounds like it comes from Motown Records in its '70s heyday.
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They're coveted by a generation too young to remember the designer's heyday, when she was one of the brightest stars in the fashion firmament, turning out exuberant, fantastical creations.
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Qing dry, Kerry times, it was the heyday of Lotus Pond.
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The question is simply this: should great passenger ships, when they come to the end of their working life, be saved and turned into a museum piece or consigned to the breaker's yard to be fondly remembered as they were in their heydays?
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If Polanski did anything wrong, and some, I think, would even say he did not, he should be forgiven for a single folly, committed way back in the 'lude' and hot-tub heyday of 1970s Hollywood debauchery.
Nina Burleigh: Genius and Young Flesh
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But the merely decorative celebrity cameos — bluff, bearded Walt Whitman, with an "epicene" male friend, and Charles Darwin, who loudly and repeatedly breaks wind — make clear that "Heyday" is infotainment for readers Andersen must consider clueless.
He'll Take Manhattan
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In his heyday, Nader could arrive at any college campus in the US and fill the largest auditorium with an audience of adoring students.
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Besides the original look and feel, each of the games also features the original bleeps and bloops from its heyday.
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In the heyday of the Hapsburgs, Viennese noblemen, for want of other diversion, amused themselves by firing cannonballs into the annual armadas of migrating beluga sturgeon that swam up the Danube to spawn.
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It must have been one of your guiding principles in your heyday: know your enemy.
MOONDROP TO MURDER
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Together, they comprise a movement, what's been dubbed "AM pop" -- more as a term relating to recording quality than the actual music made during AM music radio's heyday, save for an immense pool of Beach Boys love -- bedroom pop, or just pop music recorded in a deep well.
Baltimore City Paper
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The picture quality ranges from sharp and clear interview footage shot recently to soft and grainy footage from the band's heyday.
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Whereas in the heyday of the proletariat there was a bunching of semi-skilled workers in the centre, marginalizing skilled artisans and unskilled casual workers, now a line divided the working class through the middle.
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Docklands in its heyday was a major centre of industrial and commercial activity.
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Yet while Fassbinder remains a signal figure for those who recall his '70s heyday, to a new generation he's something of an obscure shadow from the past.
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During the heyday of the counterculture in the '60s and '70s, a few brave souls crept out of formula filmmaking and found surprisingly wide audiences.
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During the heyday of the counterculture in the '60s and '70s, a few brave souls crept out of formula filmmaking and found surprisingly wide audiences.
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This was the heyday of apple breeding by head gardeners, nurserymen and dabblers.
Times, Sunday Times
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In appearance he was a cross between a youthful James Stewart and Peter O'Toole in his Lawrence of Arabia heyday.
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During my show 's heyday there was a sense of anticipation and awe about stars who were appearing.
The Sun
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Death Wish and Straw Dogs – misogynistic hits from that heyday of anti-feminist backlash, the early-70s – they endlessly gnaw and worry at issues of masculinity and impotence, with added penis-substitute artillery, and the purgative satisfactions deriving from orgasmic explosions of violence.
Colmbiana proves that Luc Besson has a type … women with big guns
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In his heyday he was beloved as a comic genius, first from his radio days on The Goon Show, and then in his highly successful years on film, playing a long line of memorable characters headed by the heroically buffoonish Inspector Clouseau.
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For the average American, it was a period when a new kind of middle-class life became possible. It was the heyday of what John Kenneth Galbraith called the "new industrial state.
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In their heyday in the Victorian era, these powerhouses of energy could plough 20 times faster than a horse-drawn ploughman and his team and were transported from farm to farm.
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The mine—perched 4,800 miles above sea level—had its heyday three decades ago, sometimes producing metals such as europium, which provided the red color for color television sets at the time.
Molycorp Pays Off for Buyout Believers
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In its heyday, the Cathay was renowned for its luxury and magnificence.
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In its heyday, the Review enjoyed a reputation as an obtuse and nearly unreadable but authoritative publication put together by a sometimes raffish staff.
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As to what breeds contributed to the development of the Spinone … again, depending upon whom you ask, the breed descended from the now-extinct Spanish pointer, the ancient Russian setter, or another coarse-coated setter brought to Italy by Greek traders during the heyday of the Roman Empire.
Undefined
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The Frenchman, still wearing the No 7 from his Manchester United heyday, has charisma but also an edge of menace.
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In the late nineteenth century, feminism, suffrage, political action, self-culture and self-help devolved in the women’s club movement, which enjoyed a heyday from the 1890s through the 1920s.
Lifting As We Climb: the Women’s Club Movement | Edwardian Promenade
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It is said of Tony O'Reilly that, in his heyday as Ireland's greatest unofficial toastmaster, one of his flunkies would prepare a line or two of biography on each of the people at the functions he was due to attend.
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In its heyday, the urban sketch was a byproduct of the concurrent rise of newspapers and population growth in metropolises.
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In its heyday in the 1960s, Tempered Spring employed more than 1,000 people making springs for cars, the agricultural industry, the railways and office equipment.
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In their heyday, Beirut, Smyrna and Alexandria—with countless antagonisms bubbling near the surface—could come across as fragile museum pieces as much as centers of vibrancy.
On the Eastern Shore
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And now, to coincide with the band's first tour in over ten years, The Pixies release a Best Of album that beckons elfishly to be listened to by reminiscers of indie-rock's inspired heyday.
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Point and Cuban were the two main heel types in the heyday of fully fashioned nylons.
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They lack the moral grit that sent so much of the flower of Oxbridge out to the colonies during the heyday of the British Empire.
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In its triumphant heyday, the Thatcher coalition was held together both by ideology and by interest.
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The old pool had outlived its heyday and to fill it in and create something new has to be the best way forward for this important part of Scarborough's seafront.
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Disc 2 features some early demos and a previously unreleased live run-through of virtually the entire album, recorded during the band's heyday in 1982.
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Meanwhile, a picture of Cayton Bay, taken at about the same time, shows line after line of caravans as the seaside holiday enjoyed its heyday.
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It was a salutary lesson for the woman who, in her heyday, had spent 209 weeks as the world No.1.
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The news anchors themselves, in the heyday of network television, acquired a kind of oracular glow, a comforting sense that, whatever else was going on, some kind of reliable narrative, some kind of verifiable truth could be found within.
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I liked watching the meticulously-curated history of Singapore, especially the old photographs of rickshaw drivers and their imperious "memsahib" passengers during Singapore's heyday as a British colony, at the Singapore Historical Museum.
Dana Kennedy: Strict Singapore May Be the Most Surprising Place on Earth
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The debut album's lead single is a guitar-driven sing along that recalls the flamboyant heyday of Elton John as it charts a champagne fueled evening out on the town with the materfamilias.
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A massive oceanarium at Parque das Nacoes pays homage to the oceans crossed and charted by the Portuguese during the heyday of their empire.
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In their heyday in the 19th century exhibitions like the Salon and the Summer Show were events of great social and artistic importance.
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In an industry filled with as much hype and hoopla as the dotcom world in its heyday, Biogen is a company with products, revenues, profits, and prospects.
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Fewer people remember that, for a very brief period of time in the white-label heyday of the early 1980s, someone attempted to market generic genre books.
"No Frills" generic books
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But, since the heyday of the missionaries, the collective consciousness has nevertheless undergone a sea-change.
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But how greatly is that understanding enhanced by the knowledge that, written and first filmed in the heyday of the Cold War, '' Body Snatchers is as much as anything about the great Communist takeover?
Genre Fiction
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I mused that in its heyday it must have been even more extraordinary - there are more than a quarter-of-a-million square feet filled with vast reception rooms, temples, baths and a barracks large enough to billet an entire army.
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Golden's tale is steeped in the ambiance of classic 1950's _Galaxy_ magazine, an editorial venue which, for good or ill, created such a strong template for a certain kind of SF storytelling that even now, fifty years after that magazine's heyday, we are still seeing new iterations of _Galaxy_'s trademark blend of social satire, irreverent anti-establishmentarianism, and pseudo-hardboiled narration.
Asimov's Science Fiction
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The co-op could not justify the costs of handling fertilizers, crop protectants and other products for its 250 members, a number down sharply from the 1,000 members the co-op counted in its heyday.
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To this callosity of nature it was due that William Castle, a foreign denizen of Bristol who had the hardihood to incur the marital tie there, was called upon, as related elsewhere, to serve at sea in the very heyday of his honeymoon.
The Press-Gang Afloat and Ashore
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The audience is first shown the titular ocean liner and its passengers and crew during its heyday.
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Beautifully installed along a winding corridor, as though but recently resurrected from their packing crates, these eye-popping exemplars of stitchery and design are at one level a sheer aesthetic pleasure for the eye, on the other a social and economic history of Europe in its heyday.
Peter Clothier: Big Day at LACMA
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In their heyday in the Victorian era, these powerhouses of energy could plough 20 times faster than a horse-drawn ploughman and his team and were transported from farm to farm.
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The scene, she explains is a decrescendo, the denouement of everything that has happened before it; the build up and heyday of Rome; these women becoming trophy brides, the beautiful houses, clothes and hairdos - and it all falls apart.
Spread ArtCulture: Interview: Eve Sussman - on the making of her film, Rape of the Sabine Women
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In his heyday, he was beautiful, combining balance, judgment and libero qualities par excellence.
Times, Sunday Times
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Chen revealed that the two paintings were created in the heyday of the two masters, fully displaying their talent and skill.
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The Celtic tiger may not be roaring as loudly as it was in its heyday but after five years of falling demand for labour, all the indications are that the market is bouncing back.
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In their heyday, before the Second World War, there were more than 80,000 geisha in Japan.
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20 years after his heyday, his signature croon is as smooth as ever.
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A rare survivor from the Victorian age, the gardens have been returned to their heyday and are full of spectacular spring bulbs.
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But she's got this behind-the-scenes bawdiness that reminds me of Carol Burnett in her heyday, which is just lovely for a bunch of guys.
On the Set Farewell to Chuck Part 4: The Nerd Legacy
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In its heyday the Barnbow factory in Leeds was crucial to the Allied war effort during the First World War.
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To me, it's a good reminder what Blackburn was, with heavy industry that employed tens of thousands in its heyday.
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In its heyday it was selling 700,000 cases a year, but that figure has now halved amid declining sales.
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The 73-year-old veteran actor was famed in his heyday for his lush blond locks, left.
The Sun
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In the Nineties heyday of raves police were slammed for their heavy-handed approach.
The Sun
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Docklands in its heyday was a major centre of industrial and commercial activity.
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In its heyday, boxing was known as prizefighting, a sporting event that is rich in history and culture.
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During the commune heydays of the early 1970s, the ranch collected a typically renegade group of cultural misfits.
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The nonconformist chapels, moral beacons to many in the Victorian heyday, were now suffering from falling membership, declining funds, and diminished authority.
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Over the intervening years it again reverted to a market selling a miscellany of goods as it had done in its heyday.
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The first, intentionally dry, title of my talk, is in parody of the sober, positivistic titles one got in the heyday of British structural functionalism.
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In its heyday, only 30 years ago, just under 1,000 trawlers operated from the port.
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The longest, hottest night of the year brought out a crowd probably not unfamiliar with the Sixties heyday of musical protest, and they worshipped at the altar of the godmother of the art, Joan Baez.
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Docklands in its heyday was a major centre of industrial and commercial activity.
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But while it may have felt classy in its 1970s heyday, those times are long gone.
Times, Sunday Times
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In that case, Kenny Shopsin's "Eat Me," a hilariously crankish collection of artery-clogging recipes from the diner that fed the elite of New York bohemia in its heyday, will hit the spot.
A Recipe for Escapism
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For example, in the old days, which is to say before the DSM-III, doctors talked about manic-depressive illness, in which patients alternated between those two poles; involutional psychotic reaction, a condition of delusional guilt and self-loathing that came on in middle age; and depressive neurosis, the garden-variety unhappiness that psychoanalysts treated in the Freudian heyday.
MANUFACTURING DEPRESSION
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As dated as it all now sounds, Rare & Remixed nonetheless offers up some classic memories of the progressive movement's heyday.
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In the heyday of sailing ships, all war ships and many freighters carried iron cannons.
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And at first little about his appearance links him to his previous gender-fluid identity during his 1980s heyday.
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In its heyday, it was the place to be in summer, but it is now engulfed by sand.
Times, Sunday Times
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Oh, believe me, I see it very clearly — myself in the heyday and cocksureness of youth, flinging at you, with much energy and little skill, my immature generalisations from science; and you with an elderly beneficence and tolerance, smiling shrewdly and affectionatety upon me, secure in the knowledge that sooner or later I am sure to get through with it all and join you in your broad and placid philosophy.
The Kempton-Wace Letters
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Johnson's initial heyday was in the early 1970s when Pink Floyd and David Bowie grabbed the headlines with prog and glitter.
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The original edition of The Tangled Wing, published more than two decades ago, was one of the first - and surely one of the most exhaustive - books on human behavior to hit the shelves during the heyday of sociobiology.
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Regardless of its origins, the tarbush in its heyday once was favored by king and countryman alike.
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On stage they sport the looks from their heyday, including door-knocker earrings and custom varsity jackets.
...And You Don't Stop
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It was a revelation in its heyday, but Viz is now starting to look rather tired.
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You have to go back 10 years, to the heyday of Radio 1, to find a station with a bigger audience.
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In my heyday I would birdie some holes and chip and putt for a par on the others.
Times, Sunday Times
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Over three million people walked through its door every year in its heyday before the war.
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And in place of the Jugendstil architecture of the Ku'damm's Wilhelminian heyday were austere beige and pale grey modern buildings.
THE IMAGE OF LAURA
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In my heyday I would birdie some holes and chip and putt for a par on the others.
Times, Sunday Times
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Old photographs displayed depict the Wye Valley line in its heyday.
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The heyday of the unscrupulous mercenary type dawned when the colonial powers pulled out of Africa leaving chaos behind.
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She was a great singer in her heyday.
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The 73-year-old veteran actor was famed in his heyday for his lush blond locks, left.
The Sun