All-the-more Sentence Examples

all-the-more
  • And loving him all the more with the increased knowledge.

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  • If he took down the Council, too, he would be all the more content.

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  • In fact, I think my big mouth made him all the more determined.

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  • It might make me a few minutes late meeting with Jackson but all the more time for Brennan to speak with him first.

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  • He considered switching a digit and feigning a mistake but he knew these guys would figure he was hiding something and be all the more aggressive when they questioned Cynthia.

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  • And now he'll be all the more pissed off at her, seeing as he knows she tried to kill him.

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  • Her hair was shorter and the smile on her face made her all the more attractive.

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  • I know you do, and I love you all the more for the sacrifice you're willing to make.

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  • Though he rejected the demand of the pope, who wished him to consent to the abolition of the compacts, he endeavoured to curry favour with the Roman see by punishing severely all the more advanced opponents of papacy in Bohemia.

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  • The prime cause in most cases was the unsatisfactory economic condition of the working classes, which they realized all the more vividly for the very improvements that had been made in it, while education and better communications enabled them to organize themselves.

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  • The chief interest, however, attaching to the Brahmanas is doubtless their detailed description of the sacrificial system as practised in the later Vedic ages; and the information afforded by them in this respect should be all the more welcome to us, as the history of religious institutions knows of no other sacrificial ceremonial with the details of which we are acquainted to anything like the same extent.

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  • In search of materials for this purpose, Pertz made a prolonged tour through Germany and Italy, and on his return in 1823 he received at the instance of Stein the principal charge of the publication of Monumenta germaniae historica, texts of all the more important historical writers on German affairs down to the year 1500, as well as of laws, imperial and regal archives, and other valuable documents, such as letters, falling within this period.

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  • Hence, though this procedure made the Jews intensely obnoxious to the peoples, they became all the more necessary to the rulers.

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  • Various privileges already acquired by the Christian population were confirmed; a general council, or representative body, was brought into existence, composed of deputies from every district in the island; mixed tribunals were introduced, together with a highly elaborate administrative system, under which all the more important functionaries, Christian and Mussulman, were provided with an assessor of the opposite creed.

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  • Louis, who had hoped that Aquitaine would descend to his daughters, was mortified and alarmed by the Angevin marriage; all the more so when Henry of Anjou succeeded to the English crown in 1154.

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  • These qualities are required all the more because, in order to make any further progress with such an inquiry as we have suggested, we have deliberately to make use of abstraction as an instrument of investigation.

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  • As the building of steam railways lessened, the building of suburban and interurban electric railways was begun, and systems of these railways have been rapidly extended until all the more populous districts are connected by them.

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  • By the side of these greater things it may seem little, and yet, just because it is little, it is all the more significant that the Crusades should have familiarized Europe with new plants, new fruits, new manufactures, new colours, and new fashions in dress.

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  • These instincts and impulses would be at work already among the soldiers during the Crusade, producing a saga all the more readily, as there were poets in the camp; for we know that a certain Richard, who joined the First Crusade, sang its exploits in verse, while still more famous is the princely troubadour, William of Aquitaine, who joined the Crusade of Iloo.

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  • This was all the more noteworthy as it was the custom never to call the same preacher more than three times to court.

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  • Meletius was a holy man, whose ascetic life was all the more remarkable in view of his great private wealth.

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  • This opinion, added to the desire which he had of himself presiding over the council, induced him to recall the fathers from Germany, whither his health, impaired of late, probably owing to a cerebral congestion, rendered it all the more difficult for him to go.

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  • The towns, in most cases creations of the rulers of Bohemia who had called in German immigrants, were, with the exception of the "new town" of Prague, mainly German; and in consequence of the regulations of the university, Germans also held almost all the more important ecclesiastical offices - a condition of things greatly resented by the natives of Bohemia, which at this period had reached a high degree of intellectual development.

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  • It is all the more remarkable that the scorpion proves to be the oldest animal form of high elaboration which has persisted to the present day.

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  • This was opposed by Trumbie and all the more progressive elements in the new State, who realized that the claim to Skutari knocked the bottom out of the whole Yugoslav case against Italy and Austria.

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  • The problem as to the meaning of the name Assur is rendered all the more confusing by the fact that the city and land are also called Assur (as well as A-usar),both by the Khammurabi records' and generally in the later Assyrian literature.

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  • This became all the more apparent as his own health failed during 1907; for, though he was obliged to leave much of the leadership in the Commons to Mr Asquith, his possible resignation of the premiership was strongly deprecated; and even after November, when it became clear that his health was not equal to active work, four or five months elapsed before the necessary change became a fait accompli.

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  • The poet willingly obeyed, all the more because he had previously received a divine command to undertake the task.

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  • And this later contrast is all the more striking that Villehardouin agrees with, and not impossibly borrows from, these very writers in many points of style and phraseology.

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  • At all the more interesting sites he took up his abode for a time; he examined, he inquired, he made measurements, he accumulated materials.

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  • This is all the more unfortunate as eels were the only large edible creatures found in the fresh-water lakes and rivers.

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  • For all the more desirable game a close season has been established by the state.

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  • However this may be, Montaigne had difficulty enough during this turbulent period, all the more so from his neighbourhood to the chief haunts and possessions of Henry of Navarre, who actually visited him at Montaigne in 1584.

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  • The Italian bourgeoisie of the towns, thanks to the force of attraction exercised by Italy, was all the more conspicuously irredentist, since the country population maintained an attitude of comparative opposition to this movement.

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  • This was all the more probable owing to the fact that since the Constitution of 1867 there had been a certain analogy between the franchise for the Reichsrat, the Territorial Diets, and the elected commercial bodies.

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  • The Italians could hardly claim a university of their own on grounds of population (in 19to they numbered 783,000), but they claimed it all the more on grounds of their ancient culture.

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  • At all the more important schools the number of applications is many times greater than the vacancies.

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  • Thus the sulphate constitutes the minerals anhydrite, alabaster, gypsum, and selenite; the carbonate occurs dissolved in most natural waters and as the minerals chalk, marble, calcite, aragonite; also in the double carbonates such as dolomite, bromlite, barytocalcite; the fluoride as fluorspar; the fluophosphate constitutes the mineral apatite; while all the more important mineral silicates contain a proportion of this element.

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  • At this period a civilization, largely of Hindu origin, had flourished and decayed in Java, where, as in all the more important islands, Mahommedanism had afterwards become the dominant creed.

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  • There is a vast difference in national character between these young peoples and the successors of the Hellenes; and it is therefore all the more significant to find that both the Church and religious sentiment should in their case have fully preserved the Byzantine character.

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  • The political power of the Empire, indeed, had been shattered; but this left all the more room for the vigorous development of national states, notably of France and England.

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  • This was all the more significant because Western Christendom in the 15th century was by no means irreligious.

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  • The outbreak on this occasion occurred, as all the more serious outbreaks have done, in Honan, a few miles west of the city of Kaifengfu.

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  • They resemble the latter in the elongation of the body, the large number of vertebrae (240 in Gymnotus), and the absence of pelvic fins; but they differ in all the more important characters of internal structure.

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  • The coeval origin of consonants and vowels had indeed been questioned or denied by the earliest reformers (Luther, Zwingli, Calvin), but later, in the period of Protestant scholasticism and under the influence of one school of Jewish Rabbis, Protestant scholars in particular, and especially those .of the Swiss school, notably the Buxtorfs, had committed themselves to the view that the vowels formed an integral and original part of the text of the Old Testament; and this they maintained with all the more fervency.

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  • But if we search Plotinus for evidence of any actual influence of Jewish and Christian philosophy, we search in vain; and the existence of any such influence is all the more unlikely because it is only the later Neoplatonism that offers striking and deep-rooted parallels to Philo and the Gnostics.

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  • Hutton's suggestions are all the more to be regretted as they occur as a history which is the result of a good deal of investigation and which for years was referred to as an authority by many writers.

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  • These manifestations are all the more characteristic since in them we meet with a Gnosticism which remained essentially more untouched by Christian influences than the Gnostic systems of the 2nd century A.D.

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  • The changes in the Greek text of the Authorized Version when compared with the textus receptus are numerous, but the contrast between the English versions of 1611 and 1881 are all the more striking because of the difference in the method of translation which was adopted.

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  • What makes his vindication of conscious personality all the more interesting is that he has so much in common with the Hegelians; agreeing as he does with Hegel that self-consciousness is the highest fact, the ultimate category of thought through which alone the universe is intelligible, and an adequate account of the great fact of existence.

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  • In this it resembled the middle ages rather than the Roman empire or the present day, and it resembled them all the more in that its love of beauty, like theirs, was mixed with a feeling for the fantastic and the grotesque.

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  • He thus at least avoided an open rupture with the new emperor - a rupture which would have been all the more perilous on account of the religious revolution now imminent in Germany.

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  • The case was characteristic of the whole Catholic monarchical party, which, owing to the pope's interference in French politics, became disintegrated and dissolved, a fate that was all the more painful seeing that the Ralliement failed to influence the course of events.

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  • Disregarding the wishes of the Great Council, and excluding all the more important of the barons and bishops from office, he acted as his own chief minister and never condescended to justify his policy except when he stood in need of subsidies.

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  • French pensions were easily granted, all the more so as they were never paid.

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  • The fauna comprises nearly all the more remarkable of African animals.

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  • This relation of the arctic to the alpine flora is all the more remarkable in view of the very important differences between the arctic and alpine climates.

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  • This earlier league was doubtless broken up by the fall of Alba; it was probably the increasing power of the Volsci and Aequi that led to the formation of the later league, including all the more powerful cities of Latium, as well as to the alliance concluded by them with the Romans in the consulship of Spurius Cassius (493 B.C.).

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  • Another peculiarity that is found in all the more considerable houses in Pompeii.

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  • But all the more eagerly did he take advantage of Wallis's loose calumny to strike where he felt himself safe.

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  • The Assam Indigenous, in its two sub-races of Singlo and Bazalona, and the Manipur, originally found wild in the jungles of the native state of that name, have, with various intermixtures and crossings, been used to cover the greatest areas of all the more modern planting in India, Ceylon and Java.

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  • This seemed all the more evident, as at that time financial reasons made the construction of a costly Nile dam out of the question.

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  • His reliance upon the knights, or middle-class landowners, who now for the first time appear in the political foreground, is all the more interesting because it is this class who, either as members of parliament or justices of the peace, were to have the effective rule of England in their hands for so many centuries.

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  • Prussia, in spite of the promises of Frederick William in the hour of need, remained without a central constitution; all the more reason why the states of second rank should provide themselves with one.

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  • The settlement in East Africa menaced the old-established British influence over Zanzibar, which was all the more serious because of the close connection between Zanzibar and the rulers of the Persian Gulf; and Australia saw with much concern the German settlement in New Guinea, especially as a British Protectorate (which in the view of Australians should have included the whole of what Germany was allowed to take) had previously been established in the island.

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  • This is all the more remarkable as he found time to continue his studies, one monument of which was his Theologia Philosophica (a lost MS.), a learned attempt to harmonize revelation and nature, which drew forth the wonder of Baxter.

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  • We must bear in mind that he was no cold systematic thinker, but an Oriental visionary, brought up in crass superstition, and without intellectual discipline; a man whose nervous temperament had been powerfully worked on by ascetic austerities, and who was all the more irritated by the opposition he encountered, because he had little of the heroic in his nature.

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  • This system secured for him a large revenue, but it led to a vast amount of petty tyranny, which was all the more intolerable because it was carried out by French officials.

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  • In the heights of Harden (2651 ft.) and Whitecoomb (2695), whence the Clyde, Tweed, Annan, and Moffat Water descend, the high moorlands have been scarped into gloomy corries, with crags and talus-slopes, which form a series of landscapes all the more striking from the abrupt and unexpected contrast which they offer to everything around them.

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  • This makes it all the more remarkable that Beethoven's second and only important Mass (in D, Op. 123) is not only the most dramatic ever penned but is, perhaps, the last classical Mass that is thoughtfully based upon the liturgy, and is not a mere musical setting of what happens to be a liturgic text.

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  • It is evident from them that a dramatic treatment of the Agnus Dei was "in the air"; all the more so, since Schubert does not imitate Beethoven's realism.

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  • The change made in the character of Sorrow made Indulgences all the more necessary for the indifferent penitent.

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  • Again, as the Socratics - Plato himself, when he established himself at the Academy, being no exception - were, like their master, educators rather than philosophers, and in their teaching laid especial stress upon discussion, they, too, were doubtless regarded as sophists, not by Isocrates only, but by their contemporaries in general; and it may be conjectured that the disputatious tendencies of the Megarian school made it all the more difficult for Plato and others to secure a proper appreciation of the difference between dialectic, or discussion with a view to the discovery of truth, and eristic, or discussion with a view to victory.

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  • Administration will be all the more efficient if the officers who conduct it have greater opportunities of regular contact with those whom it affects and with those who influence and reflect common opinion about it."

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  • In all the more typical members of the family the three middle metatarsals of the long hind-legs are fused into a cannon-bone; and in the true jerboas of the genus Jaculus the two lateral toes, with their supporting metatarsals, are lost, although they are present in the alactagas (Alactaga), in which, however, as in certain allied genera, only the three middle toes are functional.

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  • Even the Reformation did not move them; if less money came in from Germany, that was all the more reason for leaving things unchanged in France and Spain.

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  • In the 17th century such immunities were all the more valuable since French statesmen found themselves in an awkward position.

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  • It is worth noting that up to 1672 (when Saint-Mars suggested utilizing Dauger as valet to Lauzun) none of the references to Dauger in letters after that of July 19, 1669, suggests his being a valet; and their contrary character makes it all the more clear that the second part of the letter of July 19 does not refer to Dauger.

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  • True, war with Sparta followed immediately, over the division of the spoils, and the campaigns of the Spartan generals in Asia Minor (399395) were all the more dangerous as they gave occasion to numerous rebellions.

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  • In spite of this, however, the rise of the Arsacid Empire marks the beginning of a reaction against Hellenismnot, indeed, a conscious or official reaction, but a reaction which was Reaction all the more effective because it depended on the impetus against of circumstances working with all the power of a natural ilelienism.

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  • Augustus lent nc support to Tiridates in his second march on Ctesiphon (26 B.C.), but Phraates was all the more inclined on that account tc stand on good terms with him.

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  • Thus it is all the more worthy of recognition that the Sassanian Empire was a fairly orderly empire, with an excellent legal administration, and that the later sovereigns did their utmost to repress the encroachments of the nobility, to protect the commonalty, and, above all, to carry out a just system of taxation.

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  • Armenia the Sassanids were all the more eager to regain, since there the Arsacid dynasty still survived and turned for protection to Rome, with whom, in consequence, new wars perpetually broke out.

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  • Chardin, whose testimony is all the more valuable from the fact that he was contemporary with him, relates many stories characteristic of his temper and habits.

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  • Ngeli (Der Wortschatz des Apostels Paulus, 1905, pp. 85 seq.), whose opinion is all the more significant on this point that he refuses to admit any linguistic features adverse to the Pauline authorship of the other epistles.

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  • His son George, who succeeded, was the earl to whom the custody of Mary Stuart was committed, his task being rendered all the more difficult for him by the intrigues of his second wife, Bess of Hardwick, the builder of Chatsworth, who had married three husbands before her union with him.

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  • On the other side, confusion in the command and other causes made the general advance slow and disjointed; the initiative was soon lost, and the battle became one of the parallel fronts along the 1 This is all the more remarkable as the Bulgarian I.

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  • It appeared therefore as a menace to the Lutherans - and all the more advanced Utraquists had now embraced that creed - as well as to the Bohemian Brethren.

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  • They are certainly of a mixed origin, and present a variety of ethnological types, all the more so as all who are neither Armenians nor Russians,.

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  • This broad comprehensiveness, which to outsiders looks like ecclesiastical anarchy, is the characteristic note of the Church of England; it may be, and has been, defended as consonant with Christian charity and suited to the genius of a people not remarkable for logical consistency; but it makes it all the more difficult to say what the religion of Englishmen actually is, even within the English Church.

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  • Alaskan mails leave the states daily, many post-offices are maintained, mail is regularly delivered beyond the Arctic circle, all the more important towns have telegraphic communication with the states,' there is one railway in the interior through Canadian territory from Skagway, and other railways are planned.

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  • Their resentment was all the more bitter when at the instance of the pope he mediated between them and Hungary and brought about peace on terms unfavourable to the republic. He received Feltre, Belluno and Cividale from the Hungarian king, but in 1369 a frontier dispute led to war between him and Venice.

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  • For similar reasons it is necessary to employ much more water than is required to form H 2 SO 4; and this is all the more necessary as strong sulphuric acid dissolves the nitrous compounds in the shape of nitroso-sulphuric acid, and thus withdraws these oxygen carriers from the gas-space of the chambers where the necessary reactions take place.

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  • It is served by the Baltimore & Ohio, the Philadelphia, Baltimore & Washington (the Pennsylvania system), the Baltimore & Annapolis Short Line, the Baltimore, Chesapeake & Atlantic; the Northern Central; the Western Maryland and the Maryland & Pennsylvania railways; and by steamship lines running directly to all the more important ports on the Atlantic coast of the United States, to ports in the West Indies and Brazil, to London, Liverpool, Southampton, Bristol, Leith, Glasgow, Dublin, Belfast, Havre, Antwerp, Rotterdam, Bremen, Hamburg and other European ports.

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  • The descendants of the vikings were easily incorporated in the English race, all the more so because of the wise policy of the conquering kings, who readily employed and often promoted to high station men of Danish descent who showed themselves loyaland this not only in the secular but in spiritual offices.

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  • Benefit of clergy became an intolerable anomaly, all the more so because the privilege was extended in practice not only to all persons actually in minor orders, but to all who claimed them; any criminal who could read had a fair chance of being reckoned a clerk.

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  • For fourteen years he was his masters chief ministerthe person responsible in the nations eyes for all the more unpopular assertions of the royal prerogative, and for all the heavy taxation and despotic acts which Henrys policy required.

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  • His recoil from Judaism is all the more intense because of St Paul.

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  • The disaster was all the more grave, as the Huns under Attila were carrying everything before them in the Balkan lands.

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  • Thespiae figures chiefly in history as an enemy of Thebes, whose centralizing policy it had all the more to fear because of the proximity of the two towns.

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  • Leipzig lies at the centre of a network of railways giving it direct communication with all the more important cities of Germany.

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  • From these sources come almost all the more inhuman, bestial and discreditable myths of the gods.

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  • Moreover, Sparta's attention was at this time fully occupied by troubles nearer home - the plots of Pausanias not only with the Persian king but with the Laconian helots; the revolt of Tegea (c. 473-71), rendered all the more formidable by the participation of Argos; the earthquake which in 464 devastated Sparta; and the rising of the Messenian helots, which immediately followed.

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  • They became petty local tyrants, all the more despotic because they had nothing to fear save the distant authority of the kings missi, and the more rapacious because they had no salary save the fines they inflicted and the fees that they contrived to multiply.

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  • Richelieu, by setting his special agents above the legal but complicated machinery of financial administration, had so corrupted it as to necessitate radical reform; all the more so because financial charges had been increased to a point far beyond what the nation could bear.

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  • It found all the more favorable foothold in that the Church, the States best ally, had made herself more and more unpopular.

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  • The lower mountains in the extreme west are very well wooded, but the extent of forest declines eastwards, and the eastern Pyrenees are peculiarly wild and naked, all the more since it is in this part of the chain that granitic masses prevail.

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  • A cry went up that to allow dissident churches to announce their presence was to insult and persecute the Catholic I at Rome the decree was attacked as unconstitutional, and a breach of diplomatic propriety all the more reprehensible as negotiations for a revision of the concordat were actually pending.

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  • But the first expression is to be preferred, all the more because it has been.

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  • When she spoke, she welcomed them with a soft melodic voice made all the more attractive with a Spanish accent.

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  • The air cooled appre­ciably and the ever-thinning atmosphere caused Dean to labor all the more as he struggled upward.

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  • That made their friendship with him all the more valuable.

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  • And all the more furious at anyone who would betray Tiyan and its queen.

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  • These problems are rendered all the more intractable simply because insufficient knowledge is available on which to base appropriate countermeasures.

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  • It's a downbeat experience, and the presence of those nets with the trapped and decaying fish makes it all the more foreboding.

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  • This advocacy of Christianity is all the more amusing from someone who writes in the name of a Norse god.

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  • Visually Warrior Within is also quite murky, making it all the more difficult to see that all-important ledge or pole.

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  • The cumulative effect of the stories is made all the more brutal for the primitive and often savage masculine code of ethics which prevails.

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  • That they are often shrouded in light mists makes them appear all the more mysterious.

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  • Just because he remained so steadfast in an execrated cause, entry into the acceptance world seems to have acquired all the more value.

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  • Which makes its current ubiquity seem all the more remarkable.

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  • Both women broke with social conventions, but while George Sand (if the expression may be allowed) kicked over the traces, George Eliot was impelled all the more emphatically, because of her exceptional circumstances, to put duty before inclination and to uphold the reign of law and order.

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  • The Papal States were ruled by a unique system of theocracy, for not only the head of the state but all the more important officials were ecclesiastics, assisted by the Inquisition, the Index and all the paraphernalia of medieval church government.

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  • Accounts of the teaching of Basilides are to be found in all the more complete works on Gnosticism (see bibliography to the article GNOSTICISM).

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  • Another source of trouble was the attitude of the emperor Sigismund, who, not content with protecting by his presence and as far as possible directing the deliberations of the "Universal Church," followed on more than one occasion a policy of violence and threats, a policy all the more irritating since, weary of his previously assumed role of peacemaker between the Christian powers, he had abruptly allied himself with the king of England, and adopted an extremely hostile attitude towards the king of France.

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  • The early Syriac translations are in many cases so literal as to do violence to the idiom of their own language; but this makes them all the more valuable when we have to depend on them for reconstructing the original texts.

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  • He addressed a comparatively small and select circle, a congregation of thoughtful and devout men, who cultivated reverence and loved religion all the more that their own beliefs were limited to the simplest and sublimest truths.

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  • He spent his time over books and in long daydreams, and evinced the strongest distaste for business and all the more bustling pursuits of life.

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  • He wrote a small book of memoirs of this campaign, Allemands et francais (1871), in which he spoke of the conquerors without bitterness; this attitude was all the more praiseworthy as his mother was an Alsatian, and he was unable to resign, himself to the loss of Alsace and Lorraine.

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  • Bach contrives to give this anti-climax a definite artistic value; all the more from the fact that his Crucifixus and Resurrexit, and the contrast between them, are among the most sublime and directly impressive things in all music. To the end of his Resurrexit chorus he appends an orchestral ritornello, summing up the material of the chorus in the most formal possible way, and thereby utterly destroying all sense of finality as a member of a large group, while at the same time not in the least impairing the force and contrast of the whole - that contrast having ineffaceably asserted itself at the moment when it occurred.

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  • For this he was violently attacked in the German parliament by the extreme Radicals; but on this and other occasions (he had himself been elected to the parliament) he defended moderate and constitutional principles, all the more effectively because he depended not on eloquence but on a recognition of what has been called the "irony of facts"- to which the parliament as a whole was so blind.

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  • Many incidents of those early years are fixed in my memory, isolated, but clear and distinct, making the sense of that silent, aimless, dayless life all the more intense.

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  • The enemy ceased firing, and that stern, threatening, inaccessible, and intangible line which separates two hostile armies was all the more clearly felt.

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  • Had Speranski sprung from the same class as himself and possessed the same breeding and traditions, Bolkonski would soon have discovered his weak, human, unheroic sides; but as it was, Speranski's strange and logical turn of mind inspired him with respect all the more because he did not quite understand him.

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  • He was proud of her intelligence and goodness, recognized his own insignificance beside her in the spiritual world, and rejoiced all the more that she with such a soul not only belonged to him but was part of himself.

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  • The brevity of the strip also neatly sidesteps the need for ' Unwinese ', and is all the more better for it.

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  • It is also a very British book (which makes its Stateside success all the more puzzling).

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  • He talked very little, and seemed all the more mysterious for his taciturn manner.

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  • It was widespread and unidentified, all the more perplexing because of its tendency to form highly distinctive euhedral tetragonal crystals.

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  • The events of last night were sharp in his mind, all the more so for the throbbing pain in his knuckles.

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  • It 's an unvarnished look at the life of Oscar Wilde that 's all the more compelling for its candor.

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  • If you are nervous, your milk may not flow easily, which may increase the howls of hunger from your child, making you all the more nervous..

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  • While "playing dolls" is a natural year-round hobby to fall into when a new baby is brought into the family folds, the extra novelty of holiday apparel makes it all the more tempting.

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  • I was told by my vet that one out of three cats suffer a forl at some point in their lives, so all the more reason for you to try to start when your cat is young, and brush his or her teeth a minimum of at least two times a week.

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  • Once kitty is clued in, you will have made your job all the more difficult.

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  • However, when supplementing the food with vitamins and nutrients, and entertaining the option of canning extra food, a meat grinder can make this process all the more simple.

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  • Rather, it is all the more important that we get serious and make a more concerted effort to put our individual and corporate houses in order.

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  • Having the right table decorations for Thanksgiving will make a special meal all the more memorable for you and your guests.

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  • Made from natural bristles, a MAC eyeshadow brush can make shadow application all the more foolproof, while a roll case serves as the perfect place to store your trusty tools.

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  • When these photos become part of your Easter layouts as spring happenings, your layouts will be all the more special.

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  • Holiday dresses are special and designed to enhance the seasonal nostalgia, so choosing the perfect dress can make such occasions all the more memorable.

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  • Whatever events you have planned for the day, both you and your daughter will enjoy it all the more when dressed for the occasion.

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  • If so, all the more reason to see the vet right away.

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  • It is worth noting that some of the early kinds of European Vine ripen well in some of our warm valleys, all the more so if pruned and trained as in France, but even without that they sometimes fruit very well.

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  • They are prized for their sweetness and bright color, and made all the more desired because of their brief season of availability.

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  • However, that just makes it all the more easy to navigate!

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  • However, the hunt is part of the fun for antiques lovers, and makes the piece all the more valuable to you when it is finally located.

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  • This is a good thing because it means that the odds of you finding a turtleneck sweater that suits your personality, and budget, is all the more greater!

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  • Therefore, it's all the more important to spend more money to get something really perfect and put the "special" in the occasion.

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  • Giving a personalized retirement gift makes it all the more special for the recipient.

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  • Whatever you decide to give as the gift, the time you spend with your father will make it all the more special.

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  • Power-ups such as banana peels, Starman and turtle shells make the game all the more interesting.

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  • All have been restored to pristine condition and decorated to make your experience all the more authentically "wine country."

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  • Part of its popularity lay in the forbidden nature of the dance; it was considered licentious and immoral, which made it all the more attractive to the youth of the time.

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  • Featuring a large chorus, this song may seem like a sleepy song at first, which is all the more reason to enjoy the fast and furious ending.

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  • They don't differ much between males and females, making the use of colored streaks all the more appropriate.

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  • Read the stories and realize that even in the best of circumstances problems occur, then sit back and be all the more thankful when your childbirth goes off without a hitch.

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  • Research shows that once a woman has one medical intervention like pitocin during labor, she is likely to have more - all the more reason to try natural induction first.

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  • Very fit and slender, Avril looks great no matter what she wears, and in a bikini, that sense of style and beauty is enhanced all the more.

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  • Aquaflite also offers suits for physically challenged divers too; all the more reason to shop there.

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  • Various behind the scenes photos of the shoot are on her website, including one of her in a much abbreviated white monokini that's made all the more sexy when paired with lethal-looking white heels.

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  • Not only is this star a stunning beauty, but her ability to portray a smart, confident, and successful detective in one of the most successful, longest-running franchises in television history makes her all the more admired.

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  • International Jock states that this "sheer" look becomes all the more so when wet.

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  • The color alone, a deep, inky plum, by itself, is quite attractive, but the fact that this is a sequined look makes it all the more captivating.

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  • Triangle tops are incredibly flattering, but are made all the more so when they feature, as this one does, mesh compression panels to help flatten he tummy.

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  • The scene is a timelessly sexy one, made all the more classic by Andress's fairly simple ensemble.

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  • Thus, the act of finding decent Sunday clothes becomes all the more complicated.

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  • In fact, that's all the more reason to go all out and embrace it.

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  • These are masks that are more expressive than pretty, and all the more intriguing for it.

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  • Feathers and other accessories can make your Easter bunny craft all the more dazzling.

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  • A unique ring can capture the personality of the bride-to-be as well as the couple, and is all the more significant because of its charm.

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  • A layer of history and patina can make a pearl ring all the more alluring.

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  • Famous trend-setters such as Jacqueline Kennedy and Elizabeth Taylor have favored Gucci bags and accessories, making these bags all the more desirable for fashion-conscious individuals.

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  • This is an elegant design made all the more so by its gold, zippered finish.

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  • Indulge the artistic side of your Pisces man and he'll love you all the more for it!

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  • While it's true that their inherent compassion can lead them down many different roads, their romantic partners usually love them all the more for it.

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  • He’ll love you all the more for it.

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  • What was all the more remarkable was that Saul and Bruce sold this amazing new footwear from the back of a van.In 1985, the company started manufacturing the ProWalker.

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  • Asian dragon faces are all the more fascinating because they are not the features of a single creature, but a composite of several.

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  • Malware is nastier than spyware because it replicates once installed, making it all the more difficult to remove.

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  • If any part of the underpinnings of the tutorial is missing, it will be all the more difficult for you to advance.

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  • The assurance that you have insured against the destructive financial impact of injury, sickness and death brings with it peace of mind that makes this insurance all the more valuable.

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  • Its embroidered design style is made all the more attractive with the addition of lace.

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  • The Europeans have a flair for subtle detail that makes classic pieces all the more beautiful, and European satin lingerie is no exception.

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  • Even piping in a similar color will make your nightgown look all the more expensive.

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  • It just makes the final reveal all the more exciting.

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  • It'll make that area seem all the more inviting.

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  • Leather is always sexy, but it's made all the more so when it comes in the shorts variety.

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  • Additionally, leather is quite moldable, and while having it professionally cleaned might be a bit of a hassle, the fact that the fabric will conform to your shape makes it all the more sexy.

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  • It's the kind of thing kids name their bands on shows on Nick Jr. That makes it all the more confounding that this music is really GOOD.

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  • Depending on the circumstances, the location itself may provide a distinctive theme, making the event all the more celebratory.

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  • Unique bat mitzvah invitations will help make this special event in your daughter's life all the more memorable.

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  • This will call attention to your group and allow passersby to congratulate the upcoming bride, which makes the event all the more fun.

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  • The episode, titled The Body, was completely devoid of a musical soundtrack and the empty silences were made all the more poignant.

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  • Because they were one-of-a-kind tokens, they became all the more valuable.

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  • I know I should be upset that Fitzgerald is running against you but I know his being in the race makes you want to run all the more.

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  • It made him all the more untamed, unlike Romas's sculpted beauty.

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