How To Use Tyne In A Sentence

  • Unless Celtic are given special dispensation to register the midfielder for the New Year's Day game against Hearts at Tynecastle, Keane will not be eligible until the Scottish Cup tie away to Clyde the following weekend.
  • Scientist Kristin Tessmar-Raible from Arendt's lab directly compared two types of hormone-secreting nerve cells of zebrafish, a vertebrate, and the annelid worm Platynereis dumerilii, and found some stunning similarities. 2007 June - Telic Thoughts
  • But the names of others who have done good work in their day also, men such as Ballantyne, Buchanan, Carey, Crawfurd, India: What can it teach us? A Course of Lectures Delivered before the University Of Cambridge
  • Even Fortyne, who left a step behind him, had an iciness in his bearing that was almost palpable. THE SCAR
  • The Tyneside study indicates that patients want to be offered a chaperone, so general practitioners may be responding to societal demand. 4 Merely offering a chaperone does not protect either the patient or the doctor.
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  • You might want to warm-up and stretch before a run, but if you are lifting weights wait until after the workout to stretch your muscles, " Tyne suggests.
  • Diving the Tynemouth region of Newcastle upon Tyne is unreservedly superb and an absolute revelation to any visitor.
  • Her little all was indeed little, - a few chickens, some "spun-truck," a sheep that she had nursed from an orphaned lamb, a "cag" of apple-vinegar, and a bag of dried fruit, - but it had its value to the mountain lawyer; and when he realized that this was indeed "all" he drew the petition in consideration thereof, and appended the affidavits of Jubal Tynes and Dr. Patton. In the Tennessee mountains,
  • Gouffran is also delighted with how things are going on Tyneside. The Sun
  • If not an error on the same scale as Ballantyne's famous unhusked coconuts, the translucent Pacific water is clearly a high-order inaccuracy.
  • The advertisement, featuring gargoyles superimposed on top of York Minster, was due to be shown on Yorkshire and Tyne Tees tonight and will be aired throughout the week.
  • Tony Ballantyne is the author of the Recursion trilogy, as well many acclaimed short stories published in magazines and anthologies around the world. MIND MELD: Why is Genre Fiction Bleak and What Can Be Done About It?
  • Following on from her excellent first two novels, FALLING OFF AIR and OUT OF MIND, Catherine Sampson provides a change of theme for TV journalist Robin Ballantyne. Book review
  • I'm off to Tynemouth tonight to sit and listen to the sea and read my book, while Patsy 123 either slaves over a hot stove or, more likely, goes to the chippy.
  • The show's theme song is elegantly reworked, and Stokin ’, chorded by Jarrett and Tyner, builds into a driving solo.
  • McCarroll & Ballantyne suggested that the ice reached an elevation of only between 750 and 850 m a.s.l. in Snowdonia, NW Wales, and that the higher summits remained above the ice surface as nunataks.
  • But Ballantyne is quick to qualify Hardin's confessional songwriting, especially his many paeans to the love of his life, his wife Susan (for whom he wrote Suite for Susan Moore), as a false indicator of a fragile soul.
  • The council's plans to potentially use the existing Tynecastle High premises as a "decant" facility for pupils at James Gillespie's during the rebuilding of the existing school were revealed by education leader Marilyne MacLaren. Undefined
  • Despite its physical separation from the continuously built up conurbation, Cramlington is now socially a part of Tyneside.
  • Croft became a script editor for Rediffusion, and was then a light entertainment producer for Tyne Tees, writing many jingles. The Guardian World News
  • The address Geraldine Hope had given him turned out to be a nondescript street of Victorian brick semis in a rundown area of Tynemouth. LOST SUMMER
  • You also wrote: "Every workplace or institution is full of politics and petty jealousies, that is human nature, but the sheer viciousness and bloodthirstyness of academia is astounding. The Dangers (?) Of Academic Blogs
  • The happy-go-lucky girl, from Washington, Tyne and Wear, has grown up to be a typical teenager who is a huge fan of pop star Gareth Gates, her mother Carol said.
  • In the Chirton area of Tynemouth, scene of violent riots in 1991 during the prior Conservative government, 77-year-old former shipworker Thomas Grounsell said he would give the Labour government a five-out-of-10 rating for its record since 1997, the kind of disillusion that some political observers believe will persuade traditional Labour voters to stay home Thursday. Swing Seats Hold Key to U.K. Election
  • This confident 31-year-old financial advisor was a leading Young Conservative and stood as a candidate for Tynebridge in the 1987 election.
  • The drama depicts their small-town life on Tyneside as it is transformed by the conflict. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Tynes, perched in their multitudes on the hand-carved cart that had lain cherished and unused in their garage.
  • A sudden clearing of the fog of confusion on the Tyne is English devolution's last hope.
  • The minimalistic nature of the clothing, produced in cahoots with legendary cashmere makers Ballantyne, is one part of the equation. Philippe Starck Will Never Be Idiotic Enough to Do Fashion | Inhabitat
  • This was so bleak a spot that monks in trouble for naughty behaviour at the mother house of St Albans used to be packed off to Tynemouth to mend their ways.
  • Dennis Wyness and Lee Mair fight for possession in a bruising draw at Tynecastle as the home side, after early slumbers, awoke to claim a share of the points.
  • The lighting engineer boosts his £15,000 basic pay with bonuses for being on call at Newcastle upon Tyne all through the night.
  • Again, in 'Apud Corstopitum' Penchrysa is held to haunt the Roman Wall beside the limestone crags; Tynemouth Priory is thought to be revisited by Prior Olaf whenever the wind stays long in the eastern airt, and the Border Ghost Stories
  • The babblings and squigglings may be pretty or ugly, may carry certain associative meanings, (I think “e” is sort of … endearingly cute as a visual figurae, in its smiley muppetyness,) but these figurae are mostly just jabber and daubings until they’re built-up into morphemes, the smallest units that can have meaning. Archive 2009-07-01
  • More than 100 TA soldiers from Leeds, Hull, Doncaster and Tynemouth are being sent to the centre for fitness tests, briefings and medicals before possible deployment.
  • The vessel is about five times as high as his home in the row of back-to-back terraced houses stretching down to the northern bank of the Tyne. The Sun
  • The position with regard to merchant seamen on Tyneside is rather complex.
  • What is at stake is whether conurbations like Merseyside and Tyne side face a future as grim as the present Belfast.
  • The address Geraldine Hope had given him turned out to be a nondescript street of Victorian brick semis in a rundown area of Tynemouth. LOST SUMMER
  • Susan's cousin, Craig O'Mahoney, was born with heart problems and had to be rushed to a hospital on Tyneside.
  • Every workplace or institution is full of politics and petty jealousies, that is human nature, but the sheer viciousness and bloodthirstyness of academia is astounding. The Dangers (?) Of Academic Blogs
  • Tyner's limpid chording is economical, percussive and sleekly propulsive; on the album's only ballad, Mal Waldron's ‘Soul Eyes’ he takes a short but delicate solo sandwiched between the leader's passionate statements.
  • The recent report by Dame Margaret Bazley led to the resignation of four members of the agency's board and the new chairman Sir John Hansen said he regretted to announce that the position of chief executive had been "disestablished" and Mr Bannatyne would be replaced by a transition manager from the Justice Ministry. Stuff.co.nz - Stuff
  • The future depicted by Ballantyne is somewhat of a mystery, and he uses the book as a way to explore that mystery and ultimately explain its evolution. REVIEW: Recursion by Tony Ballantyne
  • The men's team defend the title they won on Tyneside, while the women look to improve on sixth position.
  • Strategic planning guidance exists in all the metropolitan districts, including Tyne and Wear.
  • This would leave Scafell Pikes and other peaks protruding as nunataks, consistent with the observations of Lamb & Ballantyne.
  • Development 134: 2549-2560. de Jong DM, Hislop NR, Hayward DC, Reece-Hoyes JS, Pontynen PC, et al. (2006) Components of both major axial patterning systems of the Bilateria are differentially expressed along the primary axis of a 'radiate' animal, the anthozoan cnidarian Acropora millepora. PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles
  • To apply their copper-free click chemistry to living mice, Bertozzi and her group delivered azides to the surfaces of target cells within the mice via a metabolic precursor, then labeled select glycans (those that bore corresponding azido sialic acids) by covalent reaction in vivo with a panel of cyclooctyne-FLAG peptide conjugates. Medlogs - Recent stories
  • Party insiders admit the party will struggle to hold on to its heartlands in areas like Birmingham and Tyneside.
  • Thames watermen and Tyne keelmen in particular acquired an astounding proficiency in the choice and application of abusive epithets, but of the two the keelman carried off the palm. The Press-Gang Afloat and Ashore
  • Ballantyne's boys simply stare while one of Golding's boys is not appreciative and very destructive towards the tree.
  • The hands _tyned, tened_, closed, or shut in, signified _ten_; for there numeration _closed_. English Grammar in Familiar Lectures
  • It put him, as investor in these two as well as Ballantynes the printers who were also insolvent, in deep trouble.
  • St. Thomas's, near the water-gate, founded in 1541 by Abbot Crichton of Holyrood for seven almsmen in red gowns; and Ballantyne's The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 5: Diocese-Fathers of Mercy
  • But this had just the contrary effect; for the whilom Hostess of the Stag o 'Tyne, enraged at the Indignity offered to her, did so bemaul and bewray M.dam M.cphilader with her tongue, shaking her fist at her meanwhile, that the Gaoleress in a fury clawed at least two handfuls of M. Drum's hair from her head, not without getting some smart clapperclawing in the face; whereupon she cries out "M.rther" and The Strange Adventures of Captain Dangerous, Vol. 1 of 3 Who was a sailor, a soldier, a merchant, a spy, a slave among the moors...
  • His father took him to Tynecastle when he was five, to see a Hearts and Hibs game.
  • The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym," Tyner said, "was a Poe novella. IN A STRANGE CITY
  • I'm like imagining myself just amazing everyone with my mental powers and allaround niftyness this weekend. Ana-ng Diary Entry
  • The inner ring is economically dependent on core Tyneside for the bulk of its employment opportunities.
  • On that hot day, a porbeagle shark was caught off Tynemouth, while in London, Selfridges sold twice as much ice cream as on a normal October day.
  • The address Geraldine Hope had given him turned out to be a nondescript street of Victorian brick semis in a rundown area of Tynemouth. LOST SUMMER
  • Fortyne pushed his spectacles up the bridge of his nose with a tiny smile. THE SCAR
  • David Ashworth was being brought back to Merseyside for interview after inquiries led murder squad detectives to Newcastle-on-Tyne.
  • Part of the Guiana region, it is separated from Brazil on the south by the Tumuc-Humac Mts., from Guyana on the west by the Corantijn (Courantyne) River, and from French Guiana on the east by the Maroni River. Suriname
  • Tyneside architects Angus Leybourne has appointed Edward Hill as senior consultant to the practice.
  • Tyne watermen are called, manage with great dexterity; the vessel being guided by the aid of the “swape,” or great oar, which is used as a kind of rudder at the stern of the vessel. Lives of the Engineers The Locomotive. George and Robert Stephenson
  • It was at Ballantynes that my mother bought my school uniforms including navy serge gym frocks, felt and panama hats, monogrammed hat bands and blazers, and of course, summer and winter gloves!
  • Scottish Text Society (Edinburgh) are of great value; and many episcopal registers and cartularies of the Scottish abbeys have been printed by the Bannatyne, Maitland, Spottiswoode, and other societies. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 13: Revelation-Stock
  • Traditionalists and historians will argue over whether the stottie cake is a Northumbrian or Tyneside invention, but one thing's for sure - it has graced many a Northumbrian packed lunch.
  • In what was a reverse of events of Tynecastle, the Glasgow giants rolled over their inter-city adversaries with a breathtaking simplicity to surge ahead in the title race.
  • He is favourite to become the BBC's Sports Personality of the Year and has also been made a freeman of Newcastle-upon-Tyne by the city council.
  • In the busiest ports, such as London or Newcastle upon Tyne, where larger vessels were unable to tie up at the quay, smaller lighters were used as intermediaries to carry goods from ship to shore.
  • You will see, by this day's Edinburgh papers, that the copartnery of John Ballantyne & Co. is formally dissolved. A Publisher and His Friends
  • Faced with a deepening slump, Tyneside shipbuilders Swan Hunter announced 1,400 job losses, and Jaguar cars 700 losses.
  • The pigeon act Hamilton Conrad, the mind-reader The Amazing Fogel, the lady whistler Eva Kane, the foot juggler Levanda, the yodelling accordionist Billy Moore, the human spider Valantyne Napier, the novelty xylophonist Reggie Redcliffe ... Voices of change
  • Yeff, ai see a teeny-tynee orinj kitteh inna tawp leff kornur. Your words of endearment have - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger?
  • A PROUD ambulanceman from South Tyneside had an aisle seat when the woman he brought into the world was married. Undefined
  • NEWCASTLE on Tyne is, without corrival, the richest town in England, which before the Conquest was usually known by the name of Monk - Good Thoughts in Bad Times and Other Papers.
  • Back in the crepuscular gloom of my Tyneside flat, the result seemed satisfactory.
  • What happened in Newcastle upon Tyne, where all the seats were up for re-election, is particularly worth attention.
  • A third depicts the Tyne Bridge on a moonlit night. Times, Sunday Times
  • Thousands of workers in the shipyards along the River Tyne took part in unofficial strike action in support of sacked workmates.
  • Paul Honeyman was a news presenter with Tyne Tees Television in Newcastle.
  • That a long ship has been overturned on the moor is as much as we may surmise of a beehive cell thrown up along the Tyne. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Tynemouth went further ahead after the interval when Jonathan Thomson found himself with a scoring opportunity after a rare mistake by Lee.
  • Should've just made anither sequel, there's no way it's going to come close to the original with the low budget, grittyness and a actually scary movie. Watch This: Behind-the-Scenes of A Nightmare on Elm Street « FirstShowing.net
  • Despite its physical separation from the continuously built up conurbation, Cramlington is now socially a part of Tyneside.
  • The scene I have set for myself whilst reading your post, has you hiding behind your paper listening to the Silver Toothed scally-wag rail-bully, hoping that this nastyness would all go away without inconveniencing youself. A Picture for Lily
  • In 1976 he was appointed as the second incumbent to the high sheriffdom of Tyne and Wear.
  • He will check on the Hearts pair in today's match against Livingston at Tynecastle.
  • Kendra Ballantyne is a person with many talents as she holds down two jobs and enjoys both of them. Double Dog Dare-Linda O. Johnston « The Merry Genre Go Round Reviews
  • Saynt Austyne amonessheth w_i_t_h_ besy cure, howe me_n_ att table shulde the_m_ assure Caxton's Book of Curtesye
  • The Italian composer was born, improbably enough, at Newcastle upon Tyne.
  • Had he not been so badly jet-lagged, had Fortyne offered a more efficient cover, he would have fielded it all with ease. THE SCAR
  • Ballantyne's boys are about twenty five years old and the oldest boy in Golding's book is only just twelve.
  • [Illustration: TROPHIES FROM MR. BALLANTYNE'S TRAVELS.] "No, no, not '_laugh_,'" said I, remonstratively. The Idler Magazine, Volume III, June 1893 An Illustrated Monthly
  • Despite strong regional cultural traditions, Tyne side was affected by these developments.
  • Admiral Yoshikawa pointed out that the first Kashima in the Japanese navy was a battleship built by Armstrong on the Tyne in 1906.
  • But filo pastry is available in the North, because this week's winning recipe comes from Newcastle upon Tyne.
  • It was at Ballantynes that my mother bought my school uniforms including navy serge gym frocks, felt and panama hats, monogrammed hat bands and blazers, and of course, summer and winter gloves!
  • Whilst writing the foregoing I was not aware that any attempt had been made to domesticate these so-called untameable oxen; but on reading an account of these cattle by Mr. Hindmarsh, of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Delineations of the Ox Tribe The Natural History of Bulls, Bisons, and Buffaloes. Exhibiting all the Known Species and the More Remarkable Varieties of the Genus Bos.
  • The some what older suburbs of North Tyneside have houses which look indiscernible from each other.
  • He was to the last plain and blunt; at this time I can easily believe him to have been so to a degree which Scott might look upon as "ungracious" -- I take the epithet from one of his letters to James Ballantyne. Memoirs of the Life of Sir Walter Scott, Volume V (of 10)
  • This time Hearts wanted him, too, but for a man searching for stability, the Tynecastle club's current state of flux must have been disconcerting.
  • Thus the sphere of influence of Tyneside spreads far out into the surrounding countryside and along the coast.
  • Sinking Receivers at Swan Hunter, a Tyneside shipbuilder, sacked 420 workers.
  • The major bugbear for anyone involved with Hearts is the continuing problems with Tynecastle Stadium.
  • Born in Sunderland, she studied illustration and textile design at the Newcastle upon Tyne College of Art and Industrial Design.
  • Or are we to bide wi 'them, an warsle aboot holy words till we tyne a' stamach for holy things? Malcolm
  • The Tynes, perched in their multitudes on the hand-carved cart that had lain cherished and unused in their garage.
  • They would only be a minute, Ballantyne said, tooting the horn and parking.
  • The firm is now known as Ballantyne, Hanson and Co., and admirably sustains its old traditions. A Short History of English Printing, 1476-1898
  • This has a big effect on reducing underwater visibility, as the mainland feeds the River Tyne with water-borne sediment and delivers it in suspension into the North Sea.
  • There is resentment in Tynedale that people have to pay to park in Hexham, while parking is free in bigger communities such as Blyth and Cramlington. HX News and Sport
  • Despite strong regional cultural traditions, Tyne side was affected by these developments.
  • Satyne expected him to just go into it but he actually waited for her permission.
  • And Geordie legend Shearer, who knows Owen better than most, insists that the former Real Madrid ace is loving life on Tyneside with his wife and children settled in the area.
  • The lighting engineer boosts his £15,000 basic pay with bonuses for being on call at Newcastle upon Tyne all through the night.
  • The pointy toed shoe of the 14th century reached such extremes of pointyness (up to two feet) that the point had to be gartered to the calf. A Brief History of the Shoe « Colleen Anderson
  • That a long ship has been overturned on the moor is as much as we may surmise of a beehive cell thrown up along the Tyne. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Centre Pure cashmere sweater by Ballantyne; wool mix socks from Debenhams.
  • Set within a spectacular incised valley, Holywell Dene is the only area of ancient semi-natural woodland remaining within North Tyneside.
  • Are ye deif, man?" said Cupples; "or are ye feared to tyne a chance by giein 'a fair answer to a fair queston? Alec Forbes of Howglen
  • Jim Stynes, who represented Melbourne in the 1980s and '90s, won a Brownlow Medal and is now chairman of the club, has labelled Kennelly's desire to return to Ireland "an admirable quality" - knowing how difficult it would be to walk away from a professional career. AFL Latest News and Broadband
  • Tomorrow is Christmas, then before we know it is is Spring, then Summer, the Halloween, and then here we are again pleading to you to overlook our naughtyness. Collector’s Edge – Dear Santa Pt 4 « Giant Killer Squid - Film, Comics, News, Reviews and more
  • It is very true of the societies I am about to describe, that he was "among them, not of them;" and it is also most true that this fact was apparent in all the demeanor of his bibliopolical and typographical allies towards him whenever he visited them under their roofs -- not a bit less so than when they were received at his own board; but still, considering how closely his most important worldly affairs were connected with the personal character of the Ballantynes, I think it a part, though neither a proud nor a very pleasing part, of my duty as his biographer, to record my reminiscences of them and their doings in some detail. Memoirs of the Life of Sir Walter Scott, Volume V (of 10)
  • I am not claiming to have considered the whole of the metropolitan county of Tyne and Wear and its satellites.
  • Tyne was low, crossed it on stilts; but, if high-flowing, hollaed across to inquire their health, and returned. The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 14, No. 389, September 12, 1829
  • Trained on Tyneside by Pauline Robson, an accomplished amateur rider, King Barry was a dual winner in point-to-points before succumbing to a leg problem.
  • They live in a world that seems to have rolled off the television screen, dispensing to everyone bouncy pageboys, chiffon scarves and madras shorts, roller skates, Dentyne, and big fridges.
  • Fragments of a life-size statue, along with two ornate altars, all now in the Museum of Antiquities, Newcastle upon Tyne, show it was dedicated to Antenociticus, a youthful god with a neck torque.
  • But this had just the contrary effect; for the whilom Hostess of the Stag o 'Tyne, enraged at the Indignity offered to her, did so bemaul and bewray M.dam M.cphilader with her tongue, shaking her fist at her meanwhile, that the Gaoleress in a fury clawed at least two handfuls of M. Drum's hair from her head, not without getting some smart clapperclawing in the face; whereupon she cries out "M.rther" and The Strange Adventures of Captain Dangerous, Vol. 1 of 3 Who was a sailor, a soldier, a merchant, a spy, a slave among the moors...
  • Kicker Lawrence Tynes, who injured his knee in training camp last season and lost the job to John Carney, is the starter this season with no competition. Coughlin, Giants laying claim as 'America's military team'
  • Pre-match and at half-time the air was filled with radio re-runs of derby commentaries, where last gasp winners and never-say-die fightbacks seem to have become part and parcel of the Tynecastle package.
  • Some were little more than 50 hectares, although the Tyneside zone was over 450 hectares.
  • Did u ebber nodised dat da kittehs gits berry angerly if u lukks at dere tynee teefs inna middle ub dere fangs? SLEEP - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger?
  • _transfixio iridis_ of Fuchs; Antonelli's peripheral iritomy; Holth's formation of a cystoid cicatrix; Hern's operation; Terson's sclero-iridectomy; Abadie's ciliarotomy; Ballantyne's incarceration of iris method; Masselon's small equatorial sclerotomy; Simi's equatorial sclerotomy; Galezowski's sclero-choriotomy; excision of the cervical ganglion; removal of the ciliary ganglion; Querenghi's operation of sclero-choriotomy; Bettremieux's simple anterior sclerectomy; Heine's cyclodialysis; Herbert's wedge-isolation operation; Verhoeff's operation with a special sclerotome; Holth's sclerectomy with a punch-forceps; Glaucoma A Symposium Presented at a Meeting of the Chicago Ophthalmological Society, November 17, 1913
  • Tyne keelman exempt from impress by levy -- the men supplied being obtained by them by bounties, The Press-Gang Afloat and Ashore
  • This abandonment of a Tyneside base by ship owning interests would not necessarily reduce recruitment of merchant seamen from the Tyne.
  • Si, who hails from Newcastle-upon-Tyne, is a first assistant director and locations manager for film and television whose credits include the Harry Potter movies.
  • That followed two fatal stabbings on Tyneside in three weeks. The Sun
  • I have deliberately confined most of the detailed consideration in this study to the north bank of the Tyne.
  • Maybe the fact that officers from forces hundreds of miles away are now helping on Tyneside will prove particularly persuasive. Times, Sunday Times
  • South Tyneside Council says it went to court in California in an attempt to discover the identity of a blogger behind allegedly libellous statements.
  • „ Ad calcem, ante ofufculi tabulam: Viri dodtiifimi Platyne opu - dd X n scul* Specimen historico criticum editionum italicarum saeculi XV
  • The expert acted for Tyne and Wear Museums during The Journal campaign to bring The Blaydon Races painting by Tyneside artist William Irving back to the region after it was sent to London for auction by a hotel group. Christopher Wood RIP
  • _transfixio iridis_ of Fuchs; Antonelli's peripheral iritomy; Holth's formation of a cystoid cicatrix; Hern's operation; Terson's sclero-iridectomy; Abadie's ciliarotomy; Ballantyne's incarceration of iris method; Masselon's small equatorial sclerotomy; Simi's equatorial sclerotomy; Galezowski's sclero-choriotomy; excision of the cervical ganglion; removal of the ciliary ganglion; Querenghi's operation of sclero-choriotomy; Bettremieux's simple anterior sclerectomy; Heine's cyclodialysis; Herbert's wedge-isolation operation; Verhoeff's operation with a special sclerotome; Holth's sclerectomy with a punch-forceps; Glaucoma A Symposium Presented at a Meeting of the Chicago Ophthalmological Society, November 17, 1913
  • Fortyne pushed them higher up the bridge of his nose with a delicate and manicured finger. THE SCAR
  • Strategic planning guidance exists in all the metropolitan districts, including Tyne and Wear.
  • Bruce Williams played a Coltrane-esque solo on alto, even as pianist Sullivan Fortner seemed to be going out of his way to replicate the angular, spiky dissonances of McCoy Tyner. A Young Lion, All Grown Up
  • Yet at Tynecastle he knows his first job will involve the hand of friendship, not the iron fist.
  • Finally after two weeks of snottyness, the cold appears to have admitted defeat and naffed off back into the ether.

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