How To Use Ironical In A Sentence
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The scene near the Chennai Kaliappa Hospital, on Tuesday was supremely ironical, and drew sharp reactions from tree lovers who were passing by.
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Stealing away, (whence, I suppose, the ironical phrase of trusty Trojan to this day,) like a thief — pretendedly indeed at the command of the gods; but could that be, when the errand he went upon was to rob other princes, not only of their dominions, but of their lives? —
Clarissa Harlowe
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Ironically this was in a whinge about grammar schools.
Times, Sunday Times
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You, young man,” she proceeded, addressing Roland Graeme, and at once softening the ironical sharpness of her manner into good-humoured raillery, “you, who are all our male attendance, from our Lord High Chamberlain down to our least galopin, follow us to prepare our court.”
The Abbot
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Ironically, the fire was the indirect result of a new environmental consciousness.
The American Nation: A History of the United States to 1877
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LIZZIE: ( ironically ) With five thousand a year, would not matter if he warts and a leer.
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Ironically, this doesn't involve her first lover but instead, her best friend, the girl with whom she chose to make the all-important journey into adulthood with.
Kate Monro: The Devastatingly Short Virginity Loss Story
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Ironically, despite a global reversal in the world's financial fortunes, the ultrarich continue to grow (grotesquely) richer.
Times, Sunday Times
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The last time I'd been in Hoch, ironically enough, we had dropped acid and gone to a showing of Fantasia.
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Ironically enough, debate continues over the division of labor and the artist responsible for the design of the central panel.
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Classmates at West Point had ironically dubbed him Beauty.
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It may, ironically, be the biggest flaw in his argument.
Times, Sunday Times
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Since the 1970s, the world had been dominated by two problems which, ironically, tended to cancel each other out.
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Ironically, as Howie points out, "Gaynor" is now considered a Jewish last name in Framingham.
Running a hospital
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Ironically a period of severe economic depression may be advantageous, in one sense at least.
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Ironically, it's Heston, in a small cameo role as an aging ape, who has the film's best moment.
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I am bored by Monkey Wood's blantant over-use of charientism and cacophemism for my darkie brethren - it is an abomination to the Lord - who is ironically my next door neighbour ".
TheSpoof.com : Spoof News : Front Page
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I was afraid of sewing from a pattern when I was a novice seamster, ironically, but now that I sew well, I enjoy using patterns to create more complicated clothing with attractive detailing and sophisticated elements.
Oliver + S Releases Free Downloadable Pattern
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Ironically, one way out of this problem is to employ paid workers to fulfil some roles in a club.
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Ironically, a nation of know-nothings is secretly guided by adherents of an esoteric political tradition rooted in a grand conversation among philosophers ranging from ancient Greece to Weimar Germany.
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Ironically I do not make a very good sailor.
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Yet, ironically, pink - a very light tint of red - is one of the most calming colors, and is a fine choice for a baby's room, she says.
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Perhaps, ironically, all those cheap jibes helped him here.
Times, Sunday Times
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Ironically enough, Sunstein himself has recently been the object of a right - wing disinformation campaign.
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And the threat then recognized would require too much effort, and what's more, ironically, require those "Christians" of Arie Oostlander's same ilk to "change" their assumptions about all kinds of things, and especially about the supposed benefits of every kind of unexamined "diversity" and "multiculturalism.
Israelated - English Israel blogs
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Ironically, at the very end of this millennium, demotions, warnings, and anathemas have again come into vogue in several regions of our nation.
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Ironically, her initial portrayal in the show, as more of a man than the men in her Cabinet, may have added to her myth.
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Ironically, Mr Egan's resting place is overlooked by the field where he met his untimely death in an electrocution.
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IRobot CTO steps down -- ironically, looks to "rehumanize" US manufacturing with robots
Megite Technology News: What's Happening Right Now
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It was too superficial an examination of the subject, which ironically reminded me that there is quite a bit that I don't know about history in general.
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He died on Christmas Day, 1946 — ironically appropriate for a disbeliever who once confessed to be studying the Bible “for loopholes.”
Five People Born on January 29 | myFiveBest
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The constant nagging from officials to downsize and be more fuel efficient seems to have (ironically) encouraged motorists to go extra large.
The Sun
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Ironically, when the teeth of the plot sink in, the introduction of the supernatural nemesis, Ghost Machine begins to lag.
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Ironically, rather than wiping out board games, computers have provided the connections for once-isolated games in the UK and US to swap ideas online and meet up over the gaming table.
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Ironically, Wade starts off by cleaning the windshield and then uses a blow dryer to apply an even coat of dust to his canvas.
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The carrying off of the spear and the cruse was a couch of almost humour, and it, with the ironical taunt flung across the valley to
Expositions of Holy Scripture Deuteronomy, Joshua, Judges, Ruth, and First Book of Samuel, Second Samuel, First Kings, and Second Kings chapters I to VII
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Ironically, her trial also gave us the lip-smacking insights into the spending habits of the rich.
Times, Sunday Times
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It's ironical that the weakest student in mathematics was elected class treasurer.
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Euripides' Electra ironically questions belief in a metaphysical system that encourages crime only to punish it.
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Ironically, the name may carry more meaning than originally intended.
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The sole saving grace of the film is Jemaine Clement (of Flight of the Conchords fame) as Ronald Chevalier, a pompous author of bad sci-fi novels who is ironically the only character to not reach unbearable levels of annoyingness.
This Week in DVD & Blu-ray: 2012, Where the Wild Things Are, Ponyo, and More | /Film
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There is no doubt that Hammarskj6ld's northern sense of propriety was deeply shaken by the roughness of the outburst, and ironically, since the Russian code of what is socially permissible comes largely across the Baltic from Sweden, it was precisely this rowdy behavior of Khrushchev's, dubbed Ne-Kulturny (uncultured), which eventually proved his undoing at home.
An Autobiography
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Ironically, the action is over a short story concerning a previous libel action.
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Owen Wilson has a smarmy-cool, utterly natural screen persona of smiles, cheeky ad-libs and ironically understated wisecracks.
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Ironically, the district attorney could have kept charges in magistrate court pending while they went to grand jury.
Cult leader Wayne Bent remains free on bond
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Do not dredge the pasta in flour to prevent sticking, as the flour turns to glue when cooked and, ironically, causes the pasta to stick together (using semolina flour from Italian delis instead will help).
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Ironically, Pluto is so itteh bitteh that it doesn't really affect Uranus or Neptune at all: Lowell was wrong on that count, which makes it even more amazing that Tombaugh found the darn thing.
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And then on Halloween, the day after Palin's disgust for various members of the Alaska media bubbled over and caused her, the mother of a daughter who bore a son out of wedlock, to ironically describe these reporters as "corrupt bastards," Palin fumed on Fox News that reporters citing anonymous Republican sources criticizing her in a recent Politico article should "man up" and "cite themselves" so she could publicly debate them.
Mary Shannon Little: Man Up Sarah! This Is Your Sister Souljah Moment
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Tyler Bray is the new Casey Clausen, in that he wears flat bills, goes to the club every night with his hood up, says "holla" unironically, and spends all his time facebooking girls he doesn't know for action.
Every Day Should Be Saturday
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Organisers are promising a magical weekend of ice sculptures and outdoor entertainment, ironically with a sprinkling of snow guaranteed.
The Sun
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Ironically, Galileo Galilei spotted Neptune more than 200 years earlier but wrongly assumed the planet was just a star.
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The shift of power, ironically, is a throwback to the traditional House power structure.
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As soon as he went down to Washington, ironically, the very first school I'm aware of that the Secretary or the President were involved in founding is a school called Ariel Academy in Chicago.
Mike Green: NFTE: Injecting Entrepreneurship into Inner City Education (VIDEO)
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Although ironically he has never raced at Mondello, this determined former motocross champion is looking forward to the challenge of racing in front of his home crowd.
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Ironically, his cold got better on the last day of his holiday.
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He looked at Sohlberg smoothly , ironically, while the latter flared up.
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Real estate prices too have zoomed, ironically pushed up in the first place by the IT companies themselves.
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Ironically, September 19th, 2003, is etched in the memory of most local people for a completely different reason.
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Ironically, the monks, who are excluded from politics by both legal laws and religious canons, are probably among the most crucial actors in local elections.
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Ironically, Mike Griffin possesses the knowledge required, but with an arrogance and lack political savvy that has left us equally bankrupt from a leadership point of view.
Major General Jonathan Scott Gration Emerges as Possible Obama Choice for NASA Administrator - NASA Watch
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Ironically, despite their misadventures, the franchisees look as if they will survive in one form or another without the crutch of public funding.
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A girl-on-girl catfight, ironically enough, is the film's only moment of gender transcendence, effectively desexualizing a trope that has become little more than a choreographed excuse for women to rip each other's clothes off.
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Ironically, while it is, arguably, the 'artsiest' of Bergman's creations, it's also one of the greatest horror films ever made ....
GreenCine Daily
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Ironically, he is applying the steely determination of a former marine to the job of going all new age.
Times, Sunday Times
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He ended up as a senior employment officer, ironically, helping people to retrain when they had lost their jobs.
Times, Sunday Times
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Ironically, the history of hair removal in Western cultures has closely paralleled a rise in concern over hair loss.
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Ironically it was a stable "slosh" of Yuans that bought so much of US T-bills to help slowdown the US financial burnout and hold its financial credit ratings.
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Ironically, it is only possible to write a cultural biography of this horse, insofar as it is possible, because of his multiply commodified status.
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Ironically when the peace conference was held in September 1951 it met in San Francisco, not Tokyo.
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Ironically, despite the inappropriateness of his symbol in medicine, Hermes did play a small role in the origin of the true symbol of the physician.
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Perchance he/she (I really felt it was a smarmy male.) didn't know 'ironical' was a real word in much the same way folks confuse the "irregardlessness" of it all?
No, i have time
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Ironically, he is applying the steely determination of a former marine to the job of going all new age.
Times, Sunday Times
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He was even, ironically in light of the Simpson verdicts bearing down on him, placing his highest priority on education.
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I noted in an update that "ballast" also means roughage -- a particularly apt definition for my initial, ironical use because roughage is a great ingredient for bullshit.
Is That Legal?: "Blow All Ballast Tanks . . . Dive, Dive"
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I'll be bitterly merry, and ironically gay , and I'll laught in derision!
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Ironically, police were put on the trail of the bombers when a relative of one of them reported him missing.
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Ironically, in an era where global trade is trying to achieve unrestricted expansion, these recommendations will toughen border regulations.
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Ironically, it is the public health discourse that has given the debate a new twist, confluent with the new discourse of economic efficiency and quality management.
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Ironically he was killed on his first visit back to the UK in ten years when his car was hit by an articulated lorry outside London.
CODE BREAKER
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Ironically, libertarian and liberal originalists have been among the most dismissive of Justice Scalia's faint-heartedness.
Howe on Slavery as Punishment and the Original Public Meaning of the 13th Amendment
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Ironically, the papacy must bear some responsibility for these developments.
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Ironically, he was axed less than three weeks before Boro's first Wembley appearance.
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Ironically, it might have been this shadow hanging over him which was responsible for his change in fortunes on the course.
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Ironically among the largest grants made was for archaeology, museum conservation and the teaching of ancient Mesopotamian languages.
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Ironically, some eugenics leaders were uneasy about their alliance because they felt it could compromise their then-respectable public image.
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Ironically, it is the newly-paved and sprawling five-lane thoroughfares clogged with sightseeing families and truckers laded down with ever more consumer items to choke our landfills, that has over the decades made Cadillac Ranch the Texan Stonehenge for sight-seers and graffiti enthusiasts eager to leave their mark of existence.
G. Roger Denson: You Say You Want a Revolution. Well You Know, Art Can Cure You of That
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Ironically, therefore, institutional religion is a product of secularization.
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Bell's response "If it ain't, it'll do until the mess gets here" was, in the novel, exactly the kind of ironical humor that one would most easily associate with the Coens, and this is the kind of moment that would seem to gel most easily with their own aesthetic.
11/17: No Country For Old Men
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The moment his feet stepped across the threshold the memories came flooding back like a floodgate had been opened, ironically causing simultaneous feelings of joy and sadness to nearly overwhelm him.
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His name, perhaps ironically, was Yorkie.
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Ironically, Lauda was involved in an accident on lap two of the 1976 race that nearly killed him.
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Ironically, he says he has no desire to impress the art establishment.
Times, Sunday Times
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Yet he overcame it, and ironically he and many others came to believe that he owed his survival to the help of St Thomas Becket.
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With both laughter and irritation Phoebe had returned to consciousness ironically amused at how nature could behave with such excessive romanticism.
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Ironically the couple had been discussing putting smoke detectors in all the rooms just the day before the fire happened.
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If this was Richard's first experience of war it bore an ironical similarity to his last.
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Ironically, the conductor who truly understands Bruckner pacing, Bernard Haitink, didn't take part in the Bruckner festival.
Lucerne's Parade of Orchestras Dazzles and Delights
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‘Ironically,’ notes Miller, ‘the sort of feminist reading which stressed Charlotte's victimhood unintentionally reproduced the martyrology of the Victorians.’
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The land here is degraded, monocultural olive groves, ecologically wrecked by big farmers and largely devastated by the fires of 2007 which ironically helped developers.
Grand ambitions: ecoluxury in Greece
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Ironically, the weekly singles chart is undergoing a renaissance.
Times, Sunday Times
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A sampling -- including my most favorite, on that "duelist" religion founded by (ironically enough!)
Archive 2007-06-01
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Other epodes take up motifs from other contemporary genres (elegy in 11 and 15, pastoral in 2) but with significant alterations of tone: Horace ironically breaks the high emotional level of the models with a detached and distant closure.
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Ironically, in view of the grass-roots democratic populism of its rhetoric, the party itself was highly autocratic and centralized.
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It's ironical that the weakest student in mathematics was elected class treasurer.
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“Ironically, then, it would seem that the authors of the ‘Copycats’ report, which delineates a wired-up Britain permeated by the ‘copycat’ tendency in the realm of digital artefacts, are themselves unconscious copycats, albeit of a different, more rarefied kind, in the realm of ideas.”
Entertainment industry bullshit
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Thus, another historic Chapter in Chavez '"participative" democracy was closed yesterday and all we have left to find out is if the new Vice-President for the Capital District will ironically be the same person that was defeated by Ledezma at the polls last November.
Undefined
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But the IG report shows that Gonzales did more than "mishandle" his notes, which included operational details on what he himself, somewhat ironically, called -- after it had leaked -- "one of the most highly protected [programs] in the United States ... a very, very secretive, protected program," and correspondence between congressional Intelligence Committee leaders and CIA chief Gen. Michael Hayden.
TPMMuckraker
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Ironically, though, our discussion of this ultraprecise theory needs to start with the Heisenberg uncertainty principle.
How to Teach Physics to Your Dog
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In Detroit, ironically for me, the celebration took place in the ballroom of the Renaissance Center.
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Ironically, a formal process of strategic planning often does more to inhibit than to enhance innovative conceptual thinking ....
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Ironically, Beaumont is the amateur on this professional tour.
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Ironically the media had reported the successful deposition of the leader before the coup had even taken place.
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Ironically, even those strategies leading to success can also lead to failure.
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Ironically, the one transformational issue that has caused him the most grief is the banning of fox hunting, something that has been on the wish list of the hardiest Labourites in Britain for decades.
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(Ironically, Qabala is actually more grammatically accurate, since the Hebrew letter qoof is "equivalent" to Q, whereas kaf is equivalent to K.)
Jay Michaelson: An Introduction To Kabbalah Part 5: Choosing A Teacher
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The altered Eve-Mary typology, ironically, may not have been utilized by the symposium, if the previous relational Orthodox Trinitarian model were reflected upon more seriously.
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To make it more intelligible, ironically, photojournalism is often deconstructed as art.
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Also, and kind of ironically, you have to regard the theoretical McCain model of a politician as a straight shooting, straight talker, as a bad politician to support, since straight talking at the cost of political expediency is a bad thing.
Matthew Yglesias » Bygones
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“Chechen,” most experts agreed, was a term chosen by Russian colonists after the name of a local village that, ironically, bore the name of thirteenth century Mongol conqueror.
The Return
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Ironically, despite the travails of all concerned in Ecuador, this project, even though still formative is more likely to be able to gain momentum than many other projects in many other countries, including those more advanced on the studies’ front.
Maul Scale | SciFi, Fantasy & Horror Collectibles
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For the first time the black market has been upstaged-and, ironically, brought into the official fold.
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And so, ironically in a land whose enormous wealth depended upon its control of seaborne trade, this entire vast sweep of coast was almost empty.
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Ironically, the most fully-rounded woman in this picture is young Natalie Portman, playing a worldly-wise 13-year-old, who has a crush on Willie.
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Ironically, varying thoughts and contemplations within the imposed borders are presented as freedom of thought and speech.
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Ironically it is during the hongi that I begin to feel the deep differences between them.
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Ironically it was Shier's own new hand-picked team of executives, imported at great expense, who voted him out!
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Organisers are promising a magical weekend of ice sculptures and outdoor entertainment, ironically with a sprinkling of snow guaranteed.
The Sun
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Ironically, Wade starts off by cleaning the windshield and then uses a blow dryer to apply an even coat of dust to his canvas.
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Ironically Gourlay now spends much of the year plying his professional trade in Australia and is expected to base himself Down Under in the not-too-distant future.
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Well, there's ironically post-modern and then there's almost unintelligible.
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Ironically, the fire was the indirect result of a new environmental consciousness.
The American Nation: A History of the United States to 1877
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Ironically this also marked the demise of the 'cante jondo' in favor of more festive fare.
Jay Weston: Flamenco Comes to Los Angeles
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Ironically, some of these problems have been caused by the successful policy of reducing bed-blocking in hospitals.
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She stays up all night reading André Gide ( "Gide and I have attained such perfect intellectual communion," she writes, "that I experience the appropriate labor pains for every thought he gives birth to!"), uses the word aye unironically, and nearly wears the needle off her turntable playing Mozart records.
ReadySteadyBlog
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This was swiftly followed by the reign of terror in which almost 17,000 so-called opponents of the revolution were guillotined - ironically, most of them peasants.
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Ironically, a primary father may offer a special benefit to his children.
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Ironically, women who seek these treatments to improve the appearance of their skin could have avoided their fate by avoiding excessive sun exposure in the first place.
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He looks at Candice and she puckers her lips, perhaps ironically.
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Ironically, a formal process of strategic planning often does more to inhibit than to enhance innovative conceptual thinking ....
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Ironically, it is Debra Winger herself who points out the true purpose of the film - it's a make-work project for Arquette.
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Ironically this process was endorsed and socially legitimised by the Varna system.
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Ironically, this is the exact kind of antiestablishment attitude that's turned the provocateur into one of China's most powerful personal brands.
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Ironically, his father was a member of St Helens' 1956 Cup winning team at Wembley.
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Unfortunately, and ironically, this renders the renditions superfluous as, especially with Bachman singing, they're almost note-perfect versions of the originals.
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New public art outside of the gallery is something of an oxymoron since ironically most art collections are public.
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But it is with sincere amiability that the imperial writer, who was indeed little used to be ironical, adds that the lively respect and affection of the junior had often "gladdened" him.
Marius the Epicurean — Volume 1
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The women who are trying to achieve the ultimate in feminine physical perfection, ironically, look surprisingly like men.
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Ironically, Reliable Excavation Demolition is always the defending team in some control point and Payload maps, although its name would suggest that they are the attackers, rather than BLU.
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Unless you're eating this ironically in a West London gastropub then the chances are your prawns are frozen shrimps bloated with sugar and salt water, then smothered in ketchup and mayonnaise.
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Ironically it looked more like a scene from after the nuclear holocaust instead of a plea to prevent one.
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However, matters of clarity are, ironically, often contestable.
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SUSAN CASEY-LEFKOWITZ: "Ironically it would actually cross the Yellowstone River where the spill just happened.
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But ironically when the police did turn out during the London riots they were accused of standing by and letting people wreak havoc.
Times, Sunday Times
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Ironically, the weekly singles chart is undergoing a renaissance.
Times, Sunday Times
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Giles Terera's Caliban is no threat: merely disobliging: his "Ban Ban Caliban" riff is diminished by being ironically chanted by two of the clowns as if they were the Andrews Sisters; his rift with Prospero too chummily resolved.
Decade; The Tempest; The Kitchen; Parade – review
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Ironically this mine of medical misinformation about sexuality was intended to exalt the state of matrimony.
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Sensitive to atmosphere, Jolyon soon felt the latent antagonism between the boys, and was puzzled by Holly; so he became unconsciously ironical, which is fatal to the expansiveness of youth.
In Chancery
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Beggars can't be choosers, but ironically this is the situation in which the second-richest club, in what is now the most lucrative league in the world, find themselves.
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And ironically, that image did more than anything to galvanise the nascent ecology movement.
Times, Sunday Times
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She ended up doing commercials, which ironically revived her acting career.
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Ironically, some eugenics leaders were uneasy about their alliance because they felt it could compromise their then-respectable public image.
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The "SMB" part was just dirty enough to be offensive but not so dirty as to be criminal, and while it was obviously phallocentric this did not preclude women from using it ironically.
Bottoms Up: Sloganeering and Engineering
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Of all parties, it was, ironically, the Jesuits who complained most in Maryland.
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Ironically, a road-paving team spotted the golden-crowned manakin in the heart of the rain forest of Brazil.
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Ironically their misfortune may lead to a cure for others.
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Ironically the same Jim Carty was Devenish manager when they captured their sixth senior championship in 1985.
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Ironically, those in the throes Of assimilating are likely to feel worse about them-selves than those on Union Street.
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Ironically, plastics have become increasingly useful for plastic surgeons because of their extreme moldability and biocompatibility.
Michael Yaremchuk, M.D.: The Plastic in Plastic Surgery: New Methods of Facial Reconstruction
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Ironically, the resulting tiredness made me feel perpetually hungover.
Times, Sunday Times
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Ironically, a formal process of strategic planning often does more to inhibit than to enhance innovative conceptual thinking ....
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The etymology of the word proclivity is ironically appropriate for this flavor of usage.
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As they pushed Stewartry, gaining a succession of penalties, the ball spun wide to be knocked on, ironically, by Smith with the line in sight.
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Ironically, the blood is now being sucked out the other way: India's hill stations will soon be sucked dry by a new variety of bloodsuckers.
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Ironically, the room is so small that one can hardly envision any kind of live band in it, even a small jazz combo like the one that Jones used.
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Given the strong sexual dimorphism and barred, brown female plumage of the Courol, its semi-zygodactyl feet, strong, reinforced jaws, and habit of eating caterpillars, this proposed link - which, ironically, puts the Coural back where it started in 1783 - is intriguing (cuckoos have really interesting jaws, as do the possibly related turacos and hoatzins) [sexual dimorphism in the cuckoo
ScienceBlogs Channel : Life Science
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accreted" is what tipped me off to what i was doing. ironically, i came by the word "accreted" honestly, laboring through many synonyms until i found the perfect geological/metaphorical term. but it was so mievillian that maybe it drug the rest of the paragraph into that territory behind it. who knows.
China Miévilling
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Ironically, Cadillac also started building the same engines soon after Leland started Lincoln.
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Ironically, the book she felt was her worst sold more copies than any of her others.
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Some ironically offered to get into the boats and row them to camp through the mud....
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Ironically, given the backdrop of the American Revolution, the charlotte is a dessert with roots in England.
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And so Françoise, convinced that we had spent the night in what she used to call orgies, ironically warned the other servants not to ‘wake the Princess.’
The Captive
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Ironically it looked more like a scene from after the nuclear holocaust instead of a plea to prevent one.
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Ironically, some of the most powerful and stirring works of the Theelin were the masterpiece epitaphs that accompanied the extinction of their people.
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'The Bachelor' week 6 recap: Courtney goes topless, but Ben ironically overwhelmed by overeager Blakely, Jamie While the model was busy bringing her A-game, the other women were moving at a much-slower, 'prude'-like pace ABC
NYDN Rss
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An 'you tuck the right way to do that," they replied ironically; and they added, "Bartle Flanagan, you may thank the oaths we tuck, or be the crass, a single man of us wouldn't assist you in this consarn, afther your cowardly behaver to this poor girl.
Fardorougha, The Miser The Works of William Carleton, Volume One
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Then came the victory with Celestial Gold, who ironically was seen as a reserve for Johnson and Pipe's original first choice, Our Vic, the ante-post favourite for the race until he had to be withdrawn early last week with a muscle injury.
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Ironically, the resulting tiredness made me feel perpetually hungover.
Times, Sunday Times
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For the first time the black market has been upstaged-and, ironically, brought into the official fold.
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Ironically the younger generation's zeal is a byproduct of the censorship and propaganda they have been suckled on.
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Ironically, the only person outside our inner circle to mention it to me was a young progressive lawyer from Pine Bluff who was a big supporter of mine.
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Ironically, many Congressional Democrats see the return of this money — already “expensed” under US budget accounting — as being “free” money that can and should be pissed away as additional stimulus.
Coyote Blog » Blog Archive » Fannie & Freddie Officially Declared Bottomless Pits. GMAC Not Far Behind
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Ironically, those who applied by the post were worst affected.
The Sun
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Dracula - Frank Langella (altho I saw Raul Julia on Broadway, ironically understudying Langella that night).
Davy Crockett, the Green Hornet, the Phantom and other heroes of my youth who werent really heroes of my youth
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Ironically the only covers which seem to fall flat here are the film tie-in editions which look stodgy next to the originally designed covers.
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The women who are trying to achieve the ultimate in feminine physical perfection, ironically, look surprisingly like men.
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Ironically, the groups were founded to promote religious study and piety.
The Sun
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Ironically, during the time of a recession, absenteeism will decrease but presentism, that is being at work but not performing at optimum capacity, will increase and this not only affects the mental health of staff but also the profitability of the company," Prof Cooper said.
Belfasttelegraph.co.uk - Frontpage RSS Feed
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Since the 1970s, the world had been dominated by two problems which, ironically, tended to cancel each other out.
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Ironically, the advent of de-centralised processing has made the work of the corporate data processing department harder.
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Organisers are promising a magical weekend of ice sculptures and outdoor entertainment, ironically with a sprinkling of snow guaranteed.
The Sun