Time has also broadened perspectives on the life story of Strehlow, who once audaciously described himself as the last of the Arrernte. |
|
Tucking in behind his rival on the rainswept circuit, he audaciously out-braked him on the inside of the final bend to steal ahead and win. |
|
His poetry is neither traditional, nor audaciously experimental, but lyrical and contemporary in themes. |
|
It was the most unusual thing I've tasted in a long while, pretty typical I'd say, of his cooking which is audaciously different. |
|
She audaciously leaves home to take up a job as an assistant on a literary magazine in New Delhi. |
|
Casting aside the codes of social class, she laughs at convention, audaciously affirming her personality. |
|
This is one of the most audaciously original and exciting operas to have come along in years. |
|
Founded in 1032, Cerisy is one of the oldest and most audaciously beautiful abbeys. |
|
Flynn audaciously attempted a piledriver on goal but his shot rebounded off the defender to Miller whose second shot was brilliantly saved by Cummins and cleared. |
|
This absurd selection of tracks appears to highlight some elements of this journey, with elements of punk, alternative rock or film music audaciously thrown in together. |
|
With an audaciously ambitious form, Garden of Love shows the fatal confrontation between past and present, reason and madness, a mercilessly Macchiavellian one-man show. |
|
More audaciously, he had demanded investigations into several of an alleged 400 cases where people have disappeared, mostly from his native Baluchistan, where an insurgency is flickering. |
|
All institutions are overthrown with violence, all manner of sacrifices are audaciously ordered, all duties are breached with impunity, each day brings to light new excesses, new prohibitions, new acts of vengeance. |
|
The ultimate thrust of a strange, beautiful, moving spectacle where the flamenco is audaciously taken out of context and magnificently interpreted, and whose relative brevity, like that of life itself is what we most regret. |
|
After an eighth place finish, Bucky Covington released a few hit singles to radio, and his hit I'll Walk remains one of the most audaciously absurd story songs released to radio in recent memory. |
|
Here was music by a young composer audaciously combining postserial techniques with the buzz-saw din of rock. |
|
When discords, and quarrels, and factions, are carried openly and audaciously, it is a sign the reverence of government is lost. |
|
More audaciously, he had demanded an investigation into the disappearance of some 400 people, mostly from his native Balochistan, where an insurgency is flickering. |
|
It is convenient to audaciously scapegoat an entire religion or an entire race and make the enemy visible and attackable. |
|
On Rémy's situation Mourinho appeared audaciously unconcerned. |
|
|
This is not the least of paradoxes of this man who constructed a new body for himself and audaciously defends fragility and abandonment, all the while putting himself into danger. |
|
The World Council of Churches supports a peace-building program in Colombia with local partners, but it is perhaps the Mennonites who have most audaciously moved into the peace-building arena. |
|
Hallmarks like Numb and Glory Box are superb in their new settings, and the DVD also includes all the band's videos and an audaciously acoustic Wandering Star. |
|