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164 Sentences With "tantalising"

How to use tantalising in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "tantalising" and check conjugation/comparative form for "tantalising". Mastering all the usages of "tantalising" from sentence examples published by news publications.

It plays tantalising into the myth of Jean "the seductress".
Erotic thrill is generated through the tantalising possibility of possession.
The tantalising question is how this bears on Mr Democracy.
Look, here's a tantalising gif of a bearded Andrew Lincoln smiling.
He did let a couple of tantalising crumbs slip out, though.
They offer regular jobs rather than a tantalising chance of riches.
That makes a union of Baidu and ByteDance a tantalising prospect.
But such tantalising notes stand on their own as miniature set pieces.
His music swirls and settles in tantalising, exquisite and occasionally sinister patterns.
The result is a brilliant, weird, tantalising hotch-potch of old and new.
Amid all this change are tantalising hints of another potentially transformative trend: full automation.
If so, we can hope to learn even more about our tantalising new neighbour.
There are tantalising hints that Uber hopes to follow this logic to its conclusion.
But for investors, the prospect of a pickup in big-bank mergers is tantalising.
It is also a tantalising but tricky model for Singapore's fast-urbanising neighbours to follow.
With LABs, nature seems to have given us the tantalising snapshot of what's going on.
Exclusive data from blockchain research company Chainalysis seen by the FT provides some tantalising answers.
Mr Mokyr has not fully explained the "great divergence", but he has offered some tantalising insights.
All this makes growing organs in livestock a tantalising alternative to harvesting them from the dead.
The dazzling array of cases may have been too tantalising to watch from the golf course.
Here the author leaves them, as fragile, tantalising and inaccessible as they were in the desert.
Following the legacy Australian horror classics such as Saw and Wolf Creek, this sure looks tantalising.
It offers a tantalising glimpse of what a prosperous, post-racial America might one day look like.
He is the mildest-mannered of the talkative group; he leaves tantalising, sometimes deferential, pauses in conversation.
For young actors and directors, meanwhile, Netflix presents the tantalising prospect of both creative freedom and a vast audience.
That tantalising fact makes it much more likely that future close elections will be an exercise in elector-courting.
The presence of certain gases would be tantalising hints that the planets in question might play host to life.
"The potential for storytelling in the new TV version is going to be enormous and absolutely tantalising," he enthused.
Hospital spokeswoman Kjerstin Lastufka told local outlet Anchorage Daily News the moose likely saw the tantalising plants through the window.
She left "no outlines, notes about characters, drafts scribbled over with revisions and additions" or any other such tantalising clues.
After opening the season with a tantalising three-set final in Doha in which Mr Djokovic triumphed, both lost earlyin Melbourne.
Tantalising references in ancient Greek and Egyptian texts to cities and temples along that coast were all that was left of them.
The success of WeChat, owned by China's Tencent, also makes the prospects of replicating a similar feat in Japan even more tantalising.
However, it turns out that Mr Trump's performance on Facebook provided tantalising clues as to where the public surveys were likely to misfire.
Those who saw impeachment as a protest against Ms Park's stubborn refusal to step down find the possibility of a negotiated exit tantalising.
Yet the hundreds of pages of indictments that have already been made public provide a tantalising portrait of the scandals surrounding Mr Trump.
Though close by, the world's highest mountains make only a brief appearance as tantalising wisps in the early morning before vanishing into the murk.
The most tantalising outcome was Mr Macron's announcement that a meeting between the American and Iranian presidents could take place in the "coming weeks".
China provided a tantalising look at the DF-17, a wedge-shaped hypersonic glider that would be launched and released from a traditional missile.
China provided a tantalising look at the DF-17, a missile that could release a wedge-shaped hypersonic glider known as the DF-ZF.
It is a prospect which would be more tantalising for science-fiction buffs if "Prometheus", his last "Alien" offering, hadn't been such a muddled disappointment.
THE MOST eagerly anticipated work of American literature has finally been published, albeit with a few parts missing, which only make it seem more tantalising.
In a 22014-year-old Zlatan, Ajax had a tantalising prospect; in Ahmed Hossam Hussein Abdelhami – Mido for short – they had an even better one.
The International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association (ILGA) has released some numbers that provide a tantalising hint, if not much more than that.
Mr Bullough gives tantalising accounts of two investigations into corrupt behaviour which never saw the light of day because of the mere threat of legal action.
In the meantime, Colorado offers a tantalising glimpse of the future: there are now more cannabis dispensaries in the state than there are Starbucks coffee outlets.
Both Ms Ryder and Mr Harbour are given interesting back stories and there is the tantalising will-they-won't-they possibility of romance between the pair.
Magic Leap, a secretive company in Florida that has raised more than $1bn from investors including Google, has dropped tantalising hints about the realities it can create.
There are tantalising hints: a dentist on the Finchley Road advertised his practice as "Riddle Stower's English & American Dental Association", suggesting that association with America added prestige.
Mr Trachtenberg and his team just about pull it off, firstly by doling out regular tantalising morsels of new information, and secondly by making Michelle so resourceful.
Or maybe the dazzling array of cases coming to the Supreme Court in the term beginning on October 2nd is just too tantalising to watch from the sidelines.
Well, a lot of that tantalising content is just out of reach due to geo-blocking, meaning that certain programmes are only available from a certain country or region.
By then, the colony—which included his granddaughter, Virginia Dare, the first English child born in North America, according to legend—had vanished, leaving only a few tantalising clues behind.
From these dual dimensions of grief and memory, one personal and one historical, Han Kang, a South Korean writer, has fashioned a winter book made up of beautiful, tantalising fragments.
He found a few tantalising things: a length of ancient, foreign rope in a circle of stones, and a shaman's belt on which hung a rusty pair of pocket scissors.
Photo: NASA/JPL-Caltech"A Mars sample return mission is a tantalising but achievable vision that lies at the intersection of many good reasons to explore space," said Parker in statement.
As methane would react in the atmosphere to form water or carbon dioxide, its continued presence means there must be a source replenishing it, and one tantalising option is biological activity.
There is huge potential for these words to enrich and expand people's own emotional worlds, with each of these words comes a tantalising glimpse into unfamiliar and new positive feelings and experiences.
Most tantalising is Angela Merkel, Germany's chancellor—and, as it happens, an eastern European woman—though few think she would exchange her present burden for one in the UN's New York headquarters.
One form involves pasting a face onto someone else's body—in ZAO'S tantalising offering, your kisser can be stitched onto the svelte silhouette of an actor or actress in a hit film or television drama.
"Kuroda completely stuck to his guns on maintaining current policy, despite recent tantalising hints that the central bank may be losing faith in the efficacy of its policy mix," said Saxo Bank currency strategist John Hardy.
Unable to raise the money he needed to finish his experimental, semi-autobiographical drama, he abandoned it in 1976, and it seemed destined to remain just another entry on the voluminous, tantalising list of his unrealised works.
If at times the show was overshadowed by current royal scandals—Prince Andrew's disastrous BBC interview aired the same day as the new episodes—it still offered tantalising glimpses of life in the palace and outstanding performances.
Dog-eared tomes in college bags; shiny review copies dropped in by critics; bland boxes of publishers' remainders, and tantalising parcels from private estates; leather-bound volumes with uncut pages, and paperbacks rescued by vagrants from the trash.
As with so much else that occurred on the edges of the Roman world, in the shadowy time when the empire was collapsing, the story of Patrick's life is a mixture of tantalising clues and big question-marks.
With a possible 4-4 split between the court's liberals and conservatives before Brett Kavanaugh is confirmed by the Senate, and five votes needed to reverse a lower-court ruling, anti-gerrymandering activists see a tantalising window of opportunity.
In his book, Guillaume Serina tells the tantalising story of the Reykjavik summit between the Soviet and American leaders, Mikhail Gorbachev and Ronald Reagan, who came within a whisker of a ten-year deal to eliminate both countries' arsenals.
It marks a three-way border with North Korea and Russia created in 19693 when tsarist forces took advantage of imperial China's weakness and swiped a swathe of coastal land, leaving Jilin province landlocked and the sea a tantalising 15km away.
Cook said on Twitter that the company he has headed since its late founder Steve Jobs stepped down in 2011 had created 1.4 million jobs in Europe, a tantalising prospect for Italy, where almost 40 percent of young people are unemployed.
The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.) By Clyde Russell LAUNCESTON, Australia, Dec 17 (Reuters) - As 2020 approaches, the year ends with the tantalising prospect of a trade deal between the United States and China. Again.
First we had that tantalising blue square he posted on social media last month, then a short video announcing new music featuring the man himself — and now, finally, two all-too-brief snippets that we can safely assume are from his new upcoming tracks: pic.twitter.
This was capped off with his April win over Pettis, showcasing the Brazilian's immense athleticism, tantalising technique and some new wrinkles in his boxing attack—a world away from the man who was perhaps overly-reliant on an arsenal which exclusively focused on kicking a few fights back.
On the other side of a pro-Brexit vote on June 23rd, these revolutionaries manqués see no end of tantalising, utopian prospects: Britain as a high-tech Singapore-on-Thames, Britain in a revitalised union with "Anglosphere" countries like Canada and India, Britain a neo-Bennite socialist commonwealth.
"In some ways, you can trace all the familiar visual trappings that tempt us to travel today, such as Rough Guide or Lonely Planet guides, Tripadvisor and even Instagram, back to this book as they all offer tantalising glimpses of what wonderful places are out there in the world to see," said Bartrum.
If the SDP, in 1983, could come within a tantalising 2.2 points of second-party status (it obtained 25.4% of votes and 23 seats to Labour's 27.6% and 209 seats), surely a new political start-up today—fresher, wise to the SDP's mistakes, propelled by an unprecedented tide of anger and dismay—could do better?
The challenge and opportunity that Signal AI is tackling is the fact that the world is awash in information, much of it unstructured and usually bombarding us from many angles, but tantalising all the same for hinting at the insights that it might hold if it could be looked at in a more comprehensive way.
Democrats sense a tantalising thicket of embarrassment: that the president paid ludicrously low amounts of tax (as the few leaked excerpts suggest); that he is not worth as much as he claims; the possibility of bank, insurance and tax fraud (as his former consigliere Michael Cohen claimed under oath in his testimony to Congress) and large, undisclosed entanglements with Saudi and Russian companies.
And rather than seeing the writer as a vampire sucking the blood of those around him, which is a tantalising trope for the business of writing about other people, at least as it is perceived by the public, I saw the writer as someone in danger of losing his independence, a person held captive and paralysed by the power of another, who fawningly acts like him, pale, bloodless and ghostlike, perhaps because I have always had such a weak ego, always felt myself inferior to all others, in every situation.
" On his return to London, Bowie went on to push for an exhibition of contemporary South African art in the UK to coincide with africa95, a festival of African arts in the UK. His hope was that this would "challenge our preconceptions of 'otherness' and establish African art as being some of the most tantalising and provocative work to be seen," adding that, "if we continue to categorize art that is outside our cultural experience as somehow 'low art,' curio or merely artefact, we will be dealing these artists a serious injustice and we ourselves will be far poorer for it.
The Financial Times wrote that the song "spelt out the tantalising promise of love and nurture".
This tantalising glimpse of Lewis's hidden power suggests that if she wants her to career to really have legs she should wear the trousers more often.
The official Libyan report imputed all the blame for the accident to the pilot. Subsequent conspiracy theories have circled the events ever since, but none of these has progressed beyond a series of tantalising conjectural scenarios.
It screened at the Angoulême Film Festival,Fabien Lemercier, "Angoulême unveils a tantalising line-up". Cineuropa, July 10, 2020. and at the 2020 Toronto International Film Festival.Kate Erbland, "TIFF Unveils 2020 Festival Plan: ‘Ammonite,’ Virtual Screenings, and a Reduced Number of Films".
This opera could only have been produced in countries that at the time were not signatories to European copyright law, such as Russia. Ultimately, Rachmaninoff abandoned further work on this opera and never wrote a complete setting.Geoffrey Norris, "Tantalising torso". The Musical Times, 133(1792), p.
ZETA as seen from above in late 1957 The news was too good to keep bottled up. Tantalising leaks started appearing in September. In October, Thonemann, Cockcroft and William P. Thompson hinted that interesting results would be following. In November a UKAEA spokesman noted "The indications are that fusion has been achieved".
The result of this drastic surgery was certainly a more unified work of art, alliterative in form and narrative or epic in content. But reviewers (e.g. Steinhoff 1968; Seiffert 1969) soon detected serious flaws in Minis's reasoning. Though interpolated text remains a tantalising possibility, later scholars have favoured a far more conservative treatment.
Haider 'Aao Na' song review: Shahid's rancorous act and boisterous music fit the billFirstpost called the second single "Bismil" as lyricist Gulzar's richly embellished lyrical work with tantalising symbols and innuendo that reflect the story of Haider. According to Bhardwaj, Bismil was the toughest song to compose for the album. It took over four months to compose.
The building, as it currently exists, is constructed in red sandstone with slate roofs. It is in two and three storeys. It "represents a fragment of a substantial hotel that served the Furness Railway". The architectural historians Matthew Hyde and Nikolaus Pevsner comment that "it is a pity no more is left of so tantalising a building".
Things are not as simple as they seem as all the suspects appear to have unbreakable alibis. A second murder occurs later in the narrative and there is a tantalising ending when one of the "murderers" appears to confess with the knowledge that the case could never come to trial because of a lack of evidence.
The song received generally positive reviews from critics. NME critic Barry Nicholson suggested it was the better track from the double A-side and commended its "sleek garage sexiness". He additionally praised the song as smooth and tantalising. A critic from the Daily Mirror described "Angels with Dirty Faces", as well as the album track "Virgin Sexy", as "alive with wry palpitations".
The gods threw Tantalus into the underworld, where he spends eternity standing in a pool of water beneath a fruit tree with low branches. Whenever he reaches for the fruit, the branches raise his intended meal from his grasp. Whenever he bends down to get a drink, the water recedes before he can drink. Thus is derived the word "tantalising".
In due course, leading members of London's then burgeoning Gay Liberation movement--equally ignorant of Bach's true identity-- took up human ethology and started publishing pamphlets of their own, much attracted by the tantalising notion of homosexuals as the vanguard of evolutionary change. Bach continued to elaborate upon her original thesis up to the time of her death in 1981.
Outlaws Outlaws Typically for an Ultimate release, players are given a tantalising and cryptic introduction: :Outlaws :Many years ago, rode a band of men. They came from the East of the desert and with them they brought terror and destruction. Nobody was safe from the perils of a merciless death, no family was complete, no man was free. :They were the OUTLAWS.
A view of the coast of Sanda The island is designated a Site of Special Scientific Interest for its importance for both migrating and breeding birds. Sanda Bird Observatory was the first bird observatory to be set up on the west coast of Scotland. The island is currently treeless, however, Wood Hill in the north west provides a tantalising clue that this was not always the case.
This was to fund a chantry for Burley himself and Julian, his wife, in the chapel of St Katharine at Shrewsbury Abbey. Arundel himself died of dysentery, contracted at the Siege of Harfleur and this may also account for Burley's death shortly afterwards. On 28 November 1415 another pardon was issued to Prestbury and some tantalising details are given.Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1413–1416, p. 373.
He plans the wedding of the real Sasirekha and Abhimanyu in his hermitage which is attended by Krishna. Using his divine powers, Krishna also attends as a guest for the marriage taking place in the Mayabazar. On the wedding day, Ghatotkacha appears before Lakshmana Kumara in various tantalising form while, at the hermitage, Sasirekha marries Abhimanyu. When Shakuni discovers what has really happened, he blames Krishna.
Vijayakumar, Bharath (1 August 2014). "Jigarthanda review - Tantalising recipe". Moviecrow. Retrieved 1 August 2014. Anupama Subramanian of the Deccan Chronicle gave 3.5 stars out of 5 and wrote, "Aided by his entire cast and technical department, breaking the myth that promising debut filmmakers may not fare in their next, Karthik Subbaraj clearly proves that he is here to stay".Subramanian, Anupama (2 August 2014).
She has a young admirer called Marcel who gets drunk and is knocked down by Henri's car. Henri takes the lad to his apartment in Cherbourg, where Odile can look after him. One day the provocative Marie turns up at Cherbourg, tantalising Henri but not giving in. Tired of trying to seduce her, he takes her to Marcel's room, where they find Odile in bed with him.
Jim Sangster and Paul Condon, authors of Collins Telly Guide, describe the episode as "decidedly less aimed at realism" than those of later Supermarionation series. They also refer to dream sequences as "one of Anderson's most annoying recurring plot devices". La Rivière suggests that the "tantalising glimpse of reality" provided by the episode conflicted with APF's ongoing efforts to make its puppet characters seem more human.La Rivière, p. 98.
It was later reported that serial killer Silas Blissett (Jeff Rawle) lines Jenny up as his next victim. Jenny is short of cash and starts talking to a "rich old man" online, wanting to arrange a meeting, drug him and steal his wallet and cards. Jenny is oblivious to the fact that she is talking to Silas. Rawle branded the scenario as a "tantalising game of cat and mouse".
Nicole Sia of Idolator called the clip Brown's "Video of the Year" and complimented its "stunning dream imagery". A writer for The Edge called it "another visually tantalising music video" from Brown, while Rap-Up described it as surreal. Trent Fitzgerald of PopCrush described the video as "good visual fun" and wrote that it reminded him of the television series Day Break. He compared the ending to the 1999 film The Matrix.
Lapidge, Anglo-Latin Literature, pp. 92–103 In Foot's view: :Israel provides a tantalising link between the spheres of masculine camaraderie of a conventional royal court and the more rarefied, scholarly atmosphere that Æthelstan may have liked both his contemporaries and posterity to think he was keen to promote.Foot, Æthelstan, p. 105 Israel was a practitioner of the "hermeneutic style" of Latin, characterised by long, convoluted sentences and a predilection for rare words and neologisms.
Melody Maker wrote a rave review, calling it "sublime", but noting that some listeners would be "horrified by its baggy backbeat and sheer unashamed danceability. It doesn't just groove, [...] It floats almost imperceptibly to its ecstatic climax, each sweet verse and saccharin chorus a tantalising hint of what's to come. And when it comes, by Christ your knees give way". PopMatters retrospectively included it in their list of "The 20 Most Memorable Songs of 1991".
One would also add that it is the tantalising effects of visual illusion from a distance which completes the picture. The mountain is actually divided into two parts, each with its own peak. Lisawo - which is the peak motorists view as they drive along the Blantyre-Zomba Road - is a younger sister to the mightier peak described above, which is simply called Chiradzulu. A winding road, a sight-seer's boon, runs between these two peaks.
It's a slight step back from a rapper who is capable of much greater. While the brief glimpses of his personal life aren't quite enough to elevate the project, it's worthwhile to hear him breezing over Mustard beats once again." In another mixed review, The Guardians Rachel Aroesti stated: "YG doesn't cover his subject matter with a huge amount of wit or creativity. Yet the rapper makes up for lyrical dullness with a sound that can be tantalising.
It was reported that Silas sets newcomer Jenny (Daisy Turner) in his sights as his next victim in April 2011. Jenny is in desperate need of money and decides to use her skills as a con artist and starts talking to a "rich old man" online, wanting to arrange a meeting, drug him and steal his wallet and cards. Jenny has no idea that she is talking to Silas. Rawle called it a "tantalising game of cat and mouse".
David becomes the owner of this dragon because he was the one who named him (with Gadzook's help). But fate seems to be dictating an unusual course for David when his college tutor, Dr. Bergstrom, sets him an essay on the existence – or not – of dragons. The tantalising prize is a fully funded research trip to the Arctic, which seems just within his grasp. David starts to research the subject and soon discovers a connection between dragons and the Arctic.
In later years, Cushing considered his Holmes performance one of the finest accomplishments of his career. Cushing drew generally mixed reviews: Film Daily called it a "tantalising performance" and Time Out David Pirie called it "one of his very best performances",Earnshaw, p. 23 while the Monthly Film Bulletin called him "tiresomely mannered and too lightweight" and BBC Television's Barry Norman said he "didn't quite capture the air of know-all arrogance that was the great detective's hallmark".Earnshaw, p.
The repetition of road signs in his works, for example, suggest an inconclusive direction and a world outside the frame is tantalising suggested. Figures are present in many of Smart's paintings. These are said to be "impassive observers, reconciled to the contemporary state of things, prepared to accommodate themselves to an increasingly impersonal environment" or as "statements on the dehumanising conformity of modern architecture and social painting". According to Smart however, "the truth is I put figures in mainly for scale".
He went on to captain the state side between 1951 and 1954 and earned selection in the inaugural All-Australian team for his performances during the 1953 Adelaide Carnival. Throughout his career Hank was known for his fine ball handling and his distinctive left foot drop-kicks. Hank played in the centre or across half-forward with immense courage and tantalising elusiveness. In his latter years he played despite serious injuries and when finally retired in 1958 he had played a total of 224 games.
People, Hell and Angels received generally positive reviews from critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, it received an average score of 74, based on 18 reviews. In Rolling Stone, David Fricke said Hendrix "plays at an elevated level in every setting" on the album, while The Wire called the recordings "among the best of Hendrix's late work". Patrick Humphries from BBC Music wrote that it "offers a tantalising glimpse of how Hendrix's genius might have progressed".
One tantalising highlight occurred when Frank Gardner, who performed much of the P68's limited developmental testing, took pole position at the 1000km Spa race. However, once again the car flattered to deceive, as it stuttered to a halt on the first lap of the race with faulty electrics. By this time the P68's faults were all too apparent, and Alan Mann Racing decided not to travel to the Zeltweg race. For 1969 AMR intended to replace the P68 with its sister car, the P69.
The general structure of the algorithm is a Feistel-like network. The encryption and decryption routines can be specified in a few lines of code. The key schedule, however, is more complex, expanding the key using an essentially one-way function with the binary expansions of both e and the golden ratio as sources of "nothing up my sleeve numbers". The tantalising simplicity of the algorithm together with the novelty of the data-dependent rotations has made RC5 an attractive object of study for cryptanalysts.
Donnchadh Walsh fired in a second goal four minutes later from a Darran O'Sullivan assist. 60 seconds later Diarmuid Connolly floated in a tantalising delivery from the left, and a flying Paul Mannion rose to punch to the net past a helpless Brendan Kealy. Dublin conceded a third goal in the 20th minute when Stephen Cluxton hauled down Walsh, and O’Donoghue drilled home the penalty for a three points advantage. Both sides exchanged several points as Kerry held a 3-5 to 1-9 half-time advantage.
The general structure of the algorithm is a Feistel-like network. The encryption and decryption routines can be specified in a few lines of code. The key schedule, however, is more complex, expanding the key using an essentially one-way function with the binary expansions of both e and the golden ratio as sources of "nothing up my sleeve numbers". The tantalising simplicity of the algorithm together with the novelty of the data-dependent rotations has made RC5 an attractive object of study for cryptanalysts.
Kerala cuisine is so diverse and distinct from the rest of India that the tantalising flavours are going to keep you craving, long after you've returned from your trip. You could say that it was the intoxicating aroma of spices that lured traders long ago to Kerala. The same heady concoctions make the cuisine a delicious enough reason to travel to this part of India today. So, expect a generous use of coconut, chilli and spices, in mouth-tingling local recipes that differ with region and community.
Robert Christgau of The Village Voice described it unfavorably as more "art project" than the work of a band, and Greg Sandow in Entertainment Weekly felt the lyrics were sometimes forced. Wif Stenger of Trouser Press called the first side "a bit shaky" but considered side 2 to be "damn near perfect". NMEs Steve Lamacq described the album as "a tight-ish piece of tantalising rock", and said that listeners who found it too minimalist would soon warm to it. Karen Schoemer of The New York Times praised Pods intelligence and originality.
One of the earliest uses of earth-moving machinery was at Durrington Walls in 1967. An old road through the henge was to be straightened and improved and was going to cause considerable damage to the archaeology. Rosemary Hill describes how Geoffrey Wainwright "oversaw large, high-speed excavations, taking bulldozers to the site in a manner that shocked some of his colleagues but yielded valuable if tantalising information about what Durrington had looked like and how it might have been used." Machines are used primarily to remove modern overburden and for the control of spoil.
These blocks of white marble bear almost the same pattern and size as architrave and frieze from the Hellenistic naiskos of Apollo. Therefore, it seemed likely they belonged to the elusive and tantalising temple of Artemis because of the twinning stylistic components. But this idea could not be proved until 2012. The architrave and frieze blocks from the Artemis temple are deeper and wider than the ones from Apollo's naiskos. A cornice block (consisting of geison and sima), already found in 1909, but first investigated in 2012 belongs to them.
Saint Ninian, born about AD 360, may have been of Cumbrian origin, although, once again, there is no evidence to confirm this: his major connection seems to have been with Whithorn in Galloway. The name of Ninian has strong associations with Ninekirks near Penrith. Not only did Ninian give his name to the place, he is believed by some to have had a hermitage in the caves of Isis Parlis overlooking the present church, which was originally dedicated to him. Earthworks in the area also give tantalising clues to an early monastery here.
The official Libyan report imputed all the blame for the accident to the pilot. Subsequent conspiracy theories have circled the events ever since, but none of these has progressed beyond a series of tantalising conjectural scenarios. Bodies of the German victims of the accident were subjected to autopsies at the Charité (university hospital) in Berlin. The corpses should have included that of Werner Lamberz, but one of the pathologists involved, Wolfgang Keil, stated in a later interview that it had not been possible to find the remains of Lamberz.
This was to see the first appearance of Mackintosh's trademark high-backed chair design. In 1900 Miss Cranston commissioned him to redesign an entire room in her Ingram Street tearooms, which resulted in the creation of the White Dining Room. Patrons entering the dining room from Ingram Street had to pass through a hallway separated from the room by a wooden screen with leaded glass inserts, offering tantalising glimpses of the experience to come. This led to the commission to design completely the proposed new tearooms in Sauchiehall Street in 1903.
"Human Rights Human Wrongs" , The Photographers' Gallery. Among many initiatives at Rivington Place, he co-curated with Renée Mussai (archivist and head of research at Autograph) the critically acclaimed Black Chronicles II, first shown in 2014,Charlotte Runcie, "Black Chronicles II, Rivington Place, Review: 'powerful'. A tantalising new exhibition seeks to redress the absence of black people from the history of photography", The Telegraph, 18 September 2014. a solo retrospective of the work of Rotimi Fani-Kayode (1955–1989) marking the 25th anniversary of his death,"Rotimi Fani-Kayode (1955–1989)", Autograph.
23 Some tantalising opportunities seemed to be within reach but vanished unexpectedly. For example, an offer from the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, to run through some of his works was withdrawn at the last second when Sir Arthur Sullivan arrived unannounced to rehearse some of his own music. Sullivan was horrified when Elgar later told him what had happened. Elgar's only important commission while in London came from his home city: the Worcester Festival Committee invited him to compose a short orchestral work for the 1890 Three Choirs Festival.
The only question was whether Australia's bowlers could get them out first. In 42 nail-biting overs, India steadily lost wickets, sinking to 135/7, a tantalising 20 runs short of victory, but in dire danger of losing their last batsmen before they could score them. The 8th wicket fell at 151, 4 runs short of victory, and it was left to wicket-keeper Sameer Dighe and Harbhajan Singh to see out the end. Harbhajan Singh scored the winning runs past point and sealed the game and an incredible comeback series victory for India.
The players were nervous and the scoring was low throughout the match with half time coming at 3–3. The second half was very much the same, both teams working hard in defence and not allowing the attack to create many scoring opportunities. With 2 minutes remaining, Trojans worked a nice attack which saw the ball fly through their opponents basket and put them into a tantalising lead of 5–6. For the remaining 90 seconds, the Spanish team pressed and looked for the equaliser, twice coming close with efforts.
Admiral Wilhelm Canaris, head of the Abwehr (German military intelligence), is ordered to make a feasibility study of capturing Churchill and taking him to the Reich. Canaris realises that although Hitler will soon forget the matter, Himmler will not. Fearing Himmler may try to discredit him, Canaris orders one of his officers, Oberst Radl, to undertake the study, despite feeling that it is all a waste of effort. An Unteroffizier on Radl's staff finds that one of their spies, code named Starling, has provided a tantalising piece of intelligence.
Perhaps this is the reason for the return of Tamagnino to Brescia. A tantalising project was the commission of the Palazzo della Loggia, in which he participated between November 1499 and June 1500. Sculptural works that had begun at the Loggia in 1492, when Tamagnino had left Brescia, were now the hegemony of Gasparo Cairano, for some years considered as a court sculptor by the Brescian grandees, both public and private. The two artists, therefore, a decade after their mutual debut, now returned to compete for the most prestigious commission in Brescia of the moment.
The Hallyday sessions therefore proved to be the Small Faces' final studio recordings. Embryonic versions of "Bang!" and "What You Will" from Humble Pie's debut album were recorded by the Small Faces and Frampton during the sessions, and the five musicians can be heard playing together (and also in various combinations with Hallyday's regular band) throughout the album, with Frampton's distinctive guitar work especially prominent. Their performances together offer a tantalising glimpse of how an expanded Small Faces lineup might have sounded. It was not to be, however.
In 200 BC, a nomadic group of shepherds, in search of new pastures, leaves the mountains to settle close to a fishing village. The women of the village hide and the only ones to venture out are Arta, the fisherman's wife, and a twelve-year-old girl, Chloe. Skymnos, a young shepherd, approaches Chloe who walks semi-naked around the rocks and the beach. Among the two children begins a tantalising game; as a sign of his affection, Skymnos catches a pelican for Chloe and mounts it on a gantry.
It is highly likely that the tradition of painting in the site is far older than this, with older paintings having faded away or been painted over. Of relevance here are the fragments of ochre recovered from the lowest occupation levels during the 2012 and 2015 excavations at Madjedbebe, some of which have ground facets. These are a tantalising suggestion that even at this early time people were engaging in some form of artistic pursuit, whether that was painting motifs on the walls of the shelter, or decorating objects or themselves with the ground ochre.
Both Peter McKeon and Janet Nelson subscribe to the view that Hincmar was sympathetic to Carloman. The timings of Hincmar's renewed oaths, the backing of the pope to both Hincmar and Carloman, and both men's connections to Lotharingia offer a ‘tantalising persistent thread.’ While Nelson admits that none of the charges against Hincmar mention complicity with Carloman the timings of events ‘seem more than a coincidence.’ Only two days after Hincmar swore allegiance at Attingy (June 16) Carloman was arrested by Charles (June 18) and taken to the stronghold of Senlis.
In 1712, Handel decided to settle permanently in England. In the summer of 1713 he lived at Mr Mathew Andrews' estate in Barn Elms, Surrey.Wikisource George Frideric Handel: Volume 1, 1609–1725: Collected Documents edited by Donald Burrows, Helen Coffey, John Greenacombe, Anthony Hicks He received a yearly income of £200 from Queen Anne after composing for her the Utrecht Te Deum and Jubilate, first performed in 1713.There is a tantalising suggestion by Handel's biographer, Jonathan Keates, that he may have come to London in 1710 and settled in 1712 as a spy for the eventual Hanoverian successor to Queen Anne. news.bbc.co.
Not strictly part of the Symphony of Science series as this was made for the BBC science show Bang Goes the Theory, it nevertheless uses the same formula of pitch correction of spoken words over an original music track. It celebrates the tantalising questions that science throws up, as well as being an entertaining showreel for the show itself. In addition to the four presenters - Liz Bonnin, Dallas Campbell, Jem Stansfield, and Yan Wong - there are guest spots for Jim Al-Khalili and Tara Shears. The clips are all taken from the TV show or its website.
Even though observation does not play a central role in this case, questions about observation are still relevant to the discussion. In Roger Penrose's words: > I do not see why a conscious being need be aware of only "one" of the > alternatives in a linear superposition. What is it about consciousnesses > that says that consciousness must not be "aware" of that tantalising linear > combination of both a dead and a live cat? It seems to me that a theory of > consciousness would be needed for one to square the many world view with > what one actually observes.
Bobby Moore thought this was the best team Scotland ever fielded. The following year Scotland, again inspired by Baxter and Law, beat England 1–0, and only poor finishing prevented them from scoring a bigger win. In 1966, sixteen months after his leg had been broken, Baxter was not able to inspire his teammates, and Scotland lost 4–3 to England. In the 1967 British Home Championship, Baxter produced a dominating but controversial performance for Scotland, tantalising England, who had won the World Cup in 1966, by playing "keepie uppie" (ball juggling) while waiting for teammates to get into good positions.
After a brief blessing, these documents describe the seven Liberal Arts, assigning predominance to Geometry, which is equated with Masonry. They then proceed to a history of masonry/geometry, finishing with King Athelstan, or Edwin, his brother or son depending on source, assembling England's masons to give them their charges. The regulations or charges follow, usually with instructions as to the manner in which a new mason should swear to them.Masonic World The Old Charges, Wallace Mcleod, retrieved 22 June 2012 Also around 1450 the will of a mason from Beverley gives a tantalising glimpse into the emergence of masonic regalia.
Proceeding to the interior you certainly feel that Graeme Gunn, the architect, must have used the analogy of climbing a tree with the series of half floor stairs spirally linking the five levels. At first it appears quite dark and your eyes need to adjust between the intriguingly designed internal spaces and the openings with tantalising views of the surrounding forest and the occasional glimpses of sea and coastline. Baronda is also an important early example of passive and active environmental design. This is an extraordinary dwelling; the successful outcome of a client, architect and builder who shared values of understanding of place, beauty, courage and farsightedness.
He starred in Richmond's semi-final victory over Collingwood, which set up a tantalising clash with St Kilda in the preliminary final, with Richmond hot favourite to win and advance to the Grand Final. On a very wet day, the Saints gained some vengeance for the deal by keeping Stewart relatively quiet and winning the game by five goals. Stewart was hampered by injury during the 1972 finals, and was not fully fit for the Grand Final against Carlton. The Tigers selected him on the bench, but when he came on at half time, the game was effectively lost as Richmond trailed by 45 points.
He built his career around easel paintings for private clients, and never pursued the public commissions upon which wider reputations were built, but his works were widely collected in the 17th century and he was considered Caravaggio's equal or even superior. His Mars Chastising Cupid offers a tantalising hint at a lost Caravaggio: the master promised a painting on this theme to Mancini, but another of Caravaggio's patrons, Cardinal Francesco Maria Del Monte, had taken it, and Mancini therefore commissioned Manfredi to paint another for him, which Mancini considered Manfredi's best work. Manfredi died in Rome in 1622. Gerard Seghers (or Segers; 1589–1651) was one of his pupils.
" Tom Wicker of Exeunt praised the play as "unsentimental and richly written". Wicker praised the set design as evocative and also stated that the dialogue "is suitably earthy, enriched with colloquialisms and nuggets of folklore that turn the play into something more interesting and freestanding than the straightforward diatribe against early ‘80s capitalism it threatens to be at the start." In The Guardian, Lyn Gardner described Fen as a "mysterious, tantalising play that, with its elliptical scenes and multiple characters, refuses to spoon-feed its audience. It offers a clear-eyed, feminist-socialist perspective on women and labour, but there is something darker and wilder lurking in its witchy psychic landscape.
However delightful this may sometimes be, Hazlitt observes, Moore carries all to excess, to satisfy popular taste: "It has been too much our author's object to pander to the artificial taste of the age. ... Now all must be raised to the same tantalising and preposterous level. ... The craving of the public mind after novelty and effect ... must be pampered with fine words at every step—we must be tickled with sound, startled with show, and relieved by the importunate, uninterrupted display of fancy and verbal tinsel as much as possible from the fatigue of thought or shock of feeling."Hazlitt 1930, vol. 11, p. 170.
Dr Stamp was not the operating surgeon on either of these cases, but was rather acting as a commentator. After concerns voiced by surgeons surrounding the nature of the event, Seven revised the format of the event placing the heart operation on hold. The Royal Australasian College of Surgeons president John Batten stated, "live surgery transmission was appropriate in professional education but not for 'tantalising' TV audiences", the college expressing "grave concerns" and strongly suggesting the show be pre-recorded and edited in case anything goes wrong or it distracts the surgical team. The caesarean section show was well received by audiences, with the open heart surgery yet to be given an air date.
The poem gradually reveals itself as a monologue by a person who is ill, probably with leprosy, as he laments his exile from society and the ruin of his homestead. It is characterised by the use of the natural world as a frame and reference point for human emotion, shifts of focus from the speaker's observations on his particular situation and gnomic observations on life in general, and jumps from one subject to another producing tantalising juxtapositions. The poem has frequently been compared (and contrasted) with the roughly contemporaneous Old English poems The Wanderer and The Seafarer.Jenny Rowland, Early Welsh Saga Poetry: A Study and Edition of the 'Englynion’ (Cambridge: Brewer, 1990), p. 190-228.
However, L'Humanité was largely negative, concluding that "the film is very narrative and severely short of breath". The British press were very positive about the film: Screen Daily labelled the film "an anxious, tantalising creature which returns the Spanish director to the exclusive world of women" and stated that Almodóvar's "distinctive voice [grows] in texture and depth with each new production". Empire also responded very positively, calling the film "a celebration of elegance and good living as well as motherly love and romance". Time Out singled out the cinematography, design, costumes and Iglesias' score as "typically exquisite", concluding that: "It might be familiar territory for Almodóvar, but only a master of his art could make it look so easy".
As part of the Pretoria-based poetry collective "Bekgeveg" Krueger appeared at venues in Pretoria, Johannesburg, Alberton and at major Afrikaans festivals including the Klein Karoo Nasionale Kunstefees and Aardklop, between 1998–2003. He appeared in a Bekgeveg revival show in 2013 at the Asbos Theatre in Pretoria. Krueger has also experimented with a range of other genres, including short stories, lyrics, manifestos and physical theatre texts. His first collection of poetry, Everyday Anomalies appeared in 2011 and was reviewed by Craig Mackenzie: “Krueger revels in stripped-down, minimalist poetry in the imagist style…the poet knows how to evoke images and emotions by the way of tantalising fragments…irreverent, funny and caustic he delights in the incongruity of things…I was impressed with this debut collection.
The episode premiered on ABC on 27 May 1961. Anthony Aldgate described the episode as a "tantalising glimpse into the content and style of the first season and suggests that, at least to begin with, the series was a low-key crime drama which bore little relation to the fantasy and stylistic excess that was to follow in later years... It is essentially a thick-ear melodrama, featuring seedy underworld locations and villains with a nice line in slang dialogue ("I'm out on ticket, see? One lumber on me present form an' I'll be eatin' porridge till it's comin' out of me flippin' ears")." Aldgate also highlights that the episode does much to inform the viewers that Steed and Dr. Keel are still not professional detectives.
In stochastic geometry, Davidson is known for introducing the study of line processes, which he modelled as point processes on spaces of parameters of lines.. The second winner of the Rollo Davidson Prize, Olav Kallenberg, won the prize for settling (negatively) a conjecture on line processes posed by Davidson in his thesis.. In stochastic analysis, also, Davidson has been described as a "remarkably original mathematician" who left a legacy of "tantalising unsolved problems".. He particularly studied Delphic semigroups, a class of topological semigroups introduced by his advisor to study renewal sequences;. write that, despite the many applications of these semigroups, Davidson was "the only one to contribute seriously to Delphic theory" after Kendall, and that "his untimely death certainly deprived this theory of interesting developments"..
In the Nice's 1968 live performance of "Hang on to a Dream" on the German television program Beat-Club (later released on DVD in 1997), Emerson can be seen and heard reaching inside his grand piano at one point and plucking its strings. In addition to such experimentation, Emerson also incorporated unique musical stylization into his work. Emerson is recognized for having integrated different sounds into his writing, utilizing methods of both horizontal and vertical contrast. Horizontal contrast is the use of distinct styles in a piece of music, combined by alternating between two different segments (in Emerson's case, most frequently alternating classical and non-classical); this technique can be seen in numerous works, such as "Rondo", "Tantalising Maggie", "The Thoughts of Emerlist Davjack" and others.
The Sunday Times, in its review of Stripes of the Sidestep Wolf, wrote "Teenagers whose developing intellect is above the gossipy pap and illiterate dialogue that "young adult" writing sometimes embraces will find in Hartnett's latest novel exact and thoughtful writing that gives localised events general resonance." and concluded "This book not only exercises the mind, but also stirs the heart." Booktrust wrote "Hartnett’s precise, graceful writing explores the tantalising potential of suspended lives. A hugely-absorbing book that repays slow reading, in which even small events are momentous". Stripes of the Sidestep Wolf has also been reviewed by Kirkus Reviews, Publishers Weekly, Booklist (starred review), Horn Book Guide Reviews, Voice of Youth Advocates, School Library Journal, and The Daily Telegraph.
Director Mike Flanagan takes on King's 2013 follow-up novel to The Shining, but adjusts some details to ensure continuity with Kubrick's cult 1980 adaptation of the original book... The new material is fresher and considerably more fun." BBC's critic Nicholas Barber gave the film four out of five and stated, "Credible in its characterisation, rich in mythological detail, and touchingly sincere in its treatment of alcoholism and trauma, the film is impressive in all sorts of ways. But its greatest achievement is that it makes The Shining seem like a prequel – a tantalising glimpse of a richer and more substantial narrative." Chris Hewitt of Empire gave the film three out of five and noted, "Working off source material that is very different from its predecessor, anyone expecting a straightforward Shining sequel will be disappointed.
Retrieved 19 June 2011."Prehistoric finds on remote St Kilda's Boreray isle". (17 June 2011) BBC News. Retrieved 19 June 2011. RCAHMS surveyor Ian Parker said: > “This new discovery shows that a farming community actually lived on > Boreray, perhaps as long ago as the prehistoric period. The agricultural > remains and settlement mounds give us a tantalising glimpse into the lives > of those early inhabitants. Farming what is probably one of the most remote > – and inhospitable – islands in the North Atlantic would have been a hard > and gruelling existence. And given the island’s unfeasibly steep slopes, > it’s amazing that they even tried living there in the first place.” Macauley (1764) reported the existence of five druidic altars in the islands including a large circle of stones fixed perpendicularly in the ground, by the Stallar House.
Karthik Srinivasan of The Hindu said the song "Meghaalu Lekunna", "sounds at best like the Telugu version of a song by the Hindi pop band Euphoria", that the tune is "similarly lush and folkish", and that Prasad does "some interesting things in the interludes—the use of violins and solo-violin in the first and second interludes, to be specific". Madhavi Tata of Outlook India called Prasad's music, particularly "Love Cheyyala Vadda" ("To love or not to"), a "winner". The Times of India gave the soundtrack 2 stars out of 5 and said the album "falls desperately short" of the standards expected from Prasad. The reviewer called "Meghaalu Lekunna" a "beautiful and melodious track, courtesy the tantalising acoustic guitar, violin and flute sounds", and praised Nisar's rendition of it.
He seldom tried to strike the ball hard, but preferred to place it with "tantalising precision". In Portsmouth's first season in the Second Division, Haines shared the goal-scoring with Jerry Mackie with both players scoring 17 goals as Pompey finished in a creditable fourth place in the table. Haines was top- scorer in the next two seasons with 20 goals in 1925–26 when Portsmouth finished in mid-table, and 40 goals from 42 appearances in 1926–27 as Pompey gained promotion to the First Division as runners-up, squeezing out Manchester City on goal average, by a margin of just 0.006. Haines's goal tally included a hat-trick scored in a 9–1 victory over Notts County on 9 April 1927 – this remains Portsmouth's record margin of victory.
With the precision of dance and the punch of a K.O. champion, Evans keeps the action coming like nobody's business." Amber Wilkinson of The Daily Telegraph commented, "Hyper- violent it may be but there is beauty in its brutality," and wrote, "To say a martial arts movie brings something fresh in terms of choreography may sound like fighting talk, but Gareth Evans's sequel to his 2011 film is endlessly inventive." Matt Risley of Total Film gave the film 5 stars and wrote: "Sumptuously shot, perfectly paced and flat-out exhilarating, The Raid 2 cements Evans as the best action director working today and may not be the best action, gangster, or even martial-arts movie ever made. But as a combination of all three, it's unparalleled in recent memory and offers a tantalising glimpse into a post-Bayhem action-movie world.
The original mix of the song was recorded in November 1979 and originally appeared on the 1980 Metal for Muthas compilation, featuring several other artists associated with the new wave of British heavy metal, which the band recorded as a four-piece with Doug Sampson on drums. Although the compilation was panned in Sounds, Iron Maiden's songs were praised, with their contributions being described as "raucous heavy metal/punk crossovers and tantalising tasters for their own forthcoming album." Already a regular in the band's live set, the "Sanctuary" single was released on 7" vinyl on 16 May during the UK leg of the Iron Maiden Tour. This version of the song was recorded during the Iron Maiden album sessions, and, according to guitarist Dave Murray, "was ten times better than the original Metal for Muthas version.
Simon Callow writing for The Guardian noted the book's "occasional tantalising glimpses of his friendships" and "gamely attempts to sketch the broad outlines of Howerd's sex-life". In 2001 he published Dad's Army – The Story of a Classic Television Show. He has also authored Only Fools and Horses: The Untold Story of Britain's Favourite Comedy (2011), Fawlty Towers (2012), and A Very Courageous Decision: The Inside Story of Yes Minister (2014), and has edited a book containing material by the comedian Dave Allen (The Essential Dave Allen, 2005). McCann has written numerous articles about politics and popular culture for The Guardian, Evening Standard, the Daily Mail, The Independent, The Daily Telegraph, Daily Express, The Sunday Times, The Observer, The Washington Post, The Times Literary Supplement, The Modern Review, Sight & Sound, Radical Philosophy and the New Statesman.
Trace by Greyworld, at Hampton Court Palace, England Trace (2005) is a work created for the maze at Hampton Court Palace, UK. Drawing on its history and on the idea of a maze as a place of furtive conversation and flirtation, Greyworld have created a gentle soundwork that affects the visitors’ experience of their journey from entrance to the centre and back again. As visitors pass through the many green corridors of the maze, they are tempted to follow tantalising sounds – a fragment of music, a snatch of laughter, the seductive rustle of fine silks or the whispers of an illicit conversation as it disappears around a corner and into a dead-end. Slowly the sounds weave together in the visitors mind to create a rich tapestry of the other people who have passed through the maze over the centuries and lost themselves in the seductive privacy of its secluded corners.
Men are intrigued by the demure floor-length attire and tantalising display of a bare midriff in the back. Indian actress Ileana D'Cruz had commented that there were shots where a big porcelain seashell was thrown on her belly and flowers decorated around her waist during the shoot of her debut film and stated that the belly and navel is supposed to be a mark of a woman's beauty in South Indian films and they believe that the waist line is the most attractive part. Indian Singer Chinmayi had tweeted for a fan's question on wearing saree during performances,"Groups of men...take photographs of my waist + side of my chest, circle it and upload it on soft porn websites." "I get messages on how they're masturbating to it," Some Indian women too tend to get aroused on getting pinched on their midriff bared by the sari.
He was painted with his brother Andrea and Andrea's seven sons in Titian's Portrait of the Vendramin Family in the 1540s (illustration). Though he married Maria Grimani in 1538, and had seven daughters, none of the women of the Vendramin house appeared in the group portrait. The Vendramin collection was one of the marvels of Venice noted in print by Jacopo Sansovino in his Descrizione di Venezia, 1581. Tantalising glimpses of Gabriele's collection as it was displayed in 1530 in the Camerino, or "little study", of Palazzo Vendramin in Santa Fosca feature in the writings of Marcantonio Michiel, who left important descriptions of many of the patrician collections of Venice.Michiel's description of Vendramin's "little studio of antiquities" was published by A. Rava, "Il 'Camerino delle antigaglie' di Andrea Vendramin", Nuovo archivio veneto39 1920:155-81; Doge Andrea Vendramin's mother was a Michiel, so Marcantonio was probably a cousin of some sort to the brothers.
The one remaining Carson brother, Edward, was not like his brothers; while they were dim-witted thugs he was like a modern-day Moriarty, and set his sights on ruthlessly hunting down Barry, and avenging his brothers. While Chris, frantic and love stricken, searches Oxford for Jenny, she finds work with a friend as a waitress. Her boss, who, like most of the men she meets, reminds her of her father, seeks to take advantage of her, and she tries to avoid him as much as possible, spending all her spare time searching for Chris. Fate, it seems, is against them, for the obnoxious boss Jenny works for so disgusted Chris when he came looking for a job that he vowed never to go there again, and although they catch tantalising glimpses of each other occasionally, they do not find each other, and as Jenny's love begins to cool, Chris' only intensifies.
Fortuna is a highlight, a slightly world-weary tale backed by a Hammond-led slow blues containing a delightful organ solo by Jim Watson [...]. Linda has always had a folk influence in her work, and the fiddle, mandolin and accordion on It’s The World takes this tradition onwards. Earth And Stars goes further back in time and sounds like a modern take on a medieval madrigal [...]. The Fetch is a highly enjoyable album that defies easy categorisation – Linda would not have it any other way! – and one that any lover of “the song” in all its forms will enjoy, a must for those of us who remember, even at some years remove via the arcane delights of record collecting, the belting jazz rock of Affinity and Linda's more eclectic 1970 solo album Pieces Of Me. Linda, having rediscovered her muse, is eager to make more music, and with the tantalising prospect of UK gigs in the hopefully not too distant future, things are looking good for Linda Hoyle, and I for one will be following this late blooming with anticipation.
The first description is given by Jonathan Harker when the calèche reaches the courtyard of the castle: The ruined state of the castle is confirmed by the Count's words: The interior decoration, on the other hand, is still in good shape and the library is well equipped: Harker's window opens into the courtyard, but soon he sets out for a little expedition: All other doors are locked, however. The Count warns him not to sleep outside the rooms he already knows, including the library and the dining room; it seems as if the castle has a life of its own: When Harker finds another open door, though, he ignores this warning and falls asleep in the forbidden chambers: In this room, indeed, the ladies of the castle pay him their tantalising visit. The Count's room is also one storey below Harker's own room; from there, a circular staircase and a tunnel lead to the chapel with the boxes: When Van Helsing comes to Castle Dracula, he goes directly to the ruined chapel and finds Dracula's "brides" in three of the tombs there, as well as Dracula's own tomb, which is empty.
However, from around May 2011, both experiments had seen among their results, the slow emergence of a small yet consistent excess of gamma and 4-lepton decay signatures and several other particle decays, all hinting at a new particle at a mass around . By around November 2011, the anomalous data at 125 GeV was becoming "too large to ignore" (although still far from conclusive), and the team leaders at both ATLAS and CMS each privately suspected they might have found the Higgs. On 28 November 2011, at an internal meeting of the two team leaders and the director general of CERN, the latest analyses were discussed outside their teams for the first time, suggesting both ATLAS and CMS might be converging on a possible shared result at 125 GeV, and initial preparations commenced in case of a successful finding. While this information was not known publicly at the time, the narrowing of the possible Higgs range to around 115–130 GeV and the repeated observation of small but consistent event excesses across multiple channels at both ATLAS and CMS in the 124-126 GeV region (described as "tantalising hints" of around 2-3 sigma) were public knowledge with "a lot of interest".

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