A press agent with a camera was trying to get closer, but uniformed officers pushed him back. |
|
He's cynical about whether the new inquiry will get closer to the truth or whether it is mere window-dressing. |
|
Along the police demarcation line at 14th Street, people did their best to get closer to the scene. |
|
As negative values of x get closer to zero, the value of f gets closer to zero. |
|
I tried to get closer to the high-top shoe, but the young man only launched more seeds my way. |
|
They're becoming more serious as the provincials and Western Championship get closer. |
|
Since your big sister is away, this could be a good time for you and your mom to get closer. |
|
As colors get closer to each other on the wheel, the more soothing their effect when combined. |
|
As more people get closer to dissaver status, they want to maintain current consumption and increase savings. |
|
However, instead of this helping me get closer with Ben and Kate, I just distanced myself further. |
|
Being fed up with the madding crowd in one of the country's most populous cities, I wanted to get closer to nature. |
|
He let himself get closer to the water, watching the waterfall's little waves rippling over the surface of the cool, deep pool. |
|
As they get closer to the main base, the Jody calls get louder until they reach the Parade Deck. |
|
As you move away from the equator and toward the poles, the longitude lines get closer together, creating a nonhomogeneous globe. |
|
From a distance, this appears to be the mottled brown of old brick, but as I get closer I see that there is a coating of fine brown weed. |
|
As the numbers in the sequence get larger, the ratios of consecutive numbers get closer to the golden ratio. |
|
As I get closer, there's a faint gleam behind the stained-glass windows of the 13th-century abbey. |
|
As we get closer to town, the bus begins making stops more frequently, the wheels grinding angrily on their worn bearings each time. |
|
She moved along the edge of the cliff and he passed along the rocks to get closer. |
|
To get closer to a definition of terrorism we need to unpick its political logic. |
|
|
On one hand, helicopters are more maneuverable over a target and can get closer to the ground. |
|
Suddenly the sound vibrations began to get closer and were paced like walking. |
|
The tides are especially high right now, as we get closer to Samhain and the vernal equinox. |
|
Now, the song sparrow is a very elusive creature, and it rarely lets you get closer than 25 or 30 feet away from it. |
|
For the race fans, it is a great day to get closer to the action and have an occasion to see the car a lot closer than usual. |
|
By investing energy into trying out different possible approaches, you improve your understanding of the problem, and get closer to a reasonable solution. |
|
From the third floor up, guestrooms are arranged around an open-air poolside terrace, some of which have balconies for customers to get closer to the outside greenery. |
|
Since, with respect to poetry, I only translate what I like, translation is a way for me to get closer to work that I find appealing. |
|
Six partners share in Loïc Touzé's project: to get closer to the inner nature of this form of expression. |
|
It will allow pregnant women to get closer to their work surface without having to bend forward as they currently do. |
|
Try to simply get closer to your subject and if you can't do that, brace yourself against a solid object. |
|
However, you don't have to knock over the skittles, just aim for the little animals that try to get closer. |
|
That particular mission was accomplished when some kind touristy soul let us worm our way in front of his milk crate to get closer to the barriers. |
|
You should straighten up your mind from the moment you depart, and as you get closer to the place, you should be even more careful. |
|
I wonder if she would take it amiss if I tried to get closer to her. |
|
You spend so much time with the children so as a result you get closer to them. |
|
It's going to be harder to get closer to the others now, but I'm going to continue to sail as fast as I can, in spite of this handicap». |
|
Barbra told us she planned to move in order to get closer to water and perhaps find a new job. |
|
What we have discovered, of course, is that when the combat troops get closer to the drug crops, the Taliban increase their efforts. |
|
As we get closer to the end of the week, we should expect the debate on key issues to intensify. |
|
|
We are very pleased to inform you that you can now get closer to 2N on social networking sites! |
|
We were trying to get closer to a music aimed at our generation, but which we hadn't really got control of yet. |
|
As people get closer to dying, there will be less food or drink taken in and less production of stool, so bowel movements will be decreased. |
|
Distortion may be more visible when using a wider area of the zoom lens as you get closer to the subject. |
|
Whatever the season, get away to Ottawa with your significant other, and get closer in the process. |
|
I want to get closer and closer to the object to make my own interpretation of reality. |
|
After breakfast we come nearer to the peak as we get closer to the Lava Tower. |
|
As soon as that player takes a step, the opposing player checking him will be allowed to get closer. |
|
By Jerome Groopman, New Yorker Researchers get closer to outwitting a killer. |
|
Some companies use pre-assignment estimates, accrual, and quarterly reconciliation processes in an effort to get closer to tracking and managing the total costs. |
|
You target them though, during the spring tides either side of low water as you can get closer to the waters edge and drop your bait right into their lair. |
|
As you go farther and farther to the right in this sequence, the ratio of a term to the one before it will get closer and closer to the Golden Ratio. |
|
Some people, with traumatic events, you get closer or you get further away. |
|
Basically, the objective is to strengthen these buildings without making them look like fortresses, because obvious fortifications do not help the Afghan government improve its image or get closer to the people. |
|
Centralize to save or decentralize to get closer to the client? |
|
But I gave examples of ways in which, in my opinion, a less adversarial process would be more likely to get closer to an objective truth and to be cheaper and fairer. |
|
Today we are working to get closer to the center of a customer's life. |
|
During the meeting, exporters emphasised the need to get closer to producers to ensure a better quality of exportable production. |
|
This corporate site allows us to get closer to you, members and clients, and to make our financial advice, products and services more readily accessible to the public at-large. |
|
To avoid that, we implemented a procedural textures-based system that uses a set of reference textures to generate more detailed ones that appear as you get closer to the ground. |
|
|
Not only is it always attending economic events organized within the country or abroad, but the Wouroud Group takes pains to get closer to the customer and thus meet his demands or even anticipate them. |
|
As you get closer to the coast, ceanothus tends to get shrubbier until it nearly flattens out in ground-cover form. |
|
With solutions tailored to your needs and country-specific expertise based on our local presence around the world we help you to get closer to your customers. |
|
Her interest in primitive cultures, especially African culture, has led her to use some of the most characteristic ancient references, which has helped her to get closer to them and interpret them in her own personal way. |
|
The uneven surface disappears when we get closer to the road. |
|
Some families get closer and bond together, but for those families that do not and then experience the double whammy of divorce and immigration, if you want to call it that, the stresses are really considerable. |
|
So, as we get closer to political leaders, the Liberals want to put an end the proceedings of the Standing Committee on Public Accounts and adopt a partisan report. |
|
I recently wanted to get closer to the notion of nomadism in art. |
|
Your cheese is begging to get closer to mustard. |
|
It's flipper to flipper as the 28 Hawksbills competing in the Great Gulf Turtle Race get closer to the finish line. |
|
Some shifted around it to get closer to the curb. |
|
The frontman is on top form and knows how to harangue a crowd like no other: he often moves to one extremity of the stage or to the other, even kneels down to get closer to a very responsive audience. |
|
Megabus also tries to get closer to its target groups by remaining outside the coach stations used by National Express and by stopping closer to where its target groups are located, on the curbside or on university campuses. |
|
A examines certain key features of sovereignty, in particular indivisibility and inalienability, in an attempt to get closer to the kernel of sovereignty itself. |
|
In his mathematical project, Pardon proved that a closed curve can be made convex without permitting any two points on the curve to get closer to one another. |
|