Evidently, Davis had touched upon a story with profound reverberations for our own times. |
|
Her last point raises a spectre of uncertainty around the Summit and its long-term reverberations. |
|
The initial impact sends reverberations throughout the whole building and opens a huge hole near the top of the 110-storey block. |
|
The reverberations of the war continue even into our time and they have not yet abated. |
|
Living on her starboard side with the decks at about 35, its imposing immensity is magnified by the metallic reverberations in the ocean. |
|
Officials of the main labour federation convened an emergency meeting yesterday on the reverberations throughout the economy. |
|
The reverberations of that event will continue for quite some time, if not forever. |
|
Marshall says she doesn't take into account the real-world reverberations of her rulings. |
|
As we have seen time and time again, these international reverberations are by no means unidirectional or even multidirectional, but revolving. |
|
It was wonderfully meditative, and as I sat there cross-legged, gonging away and soaking up the mystical reverberations, I got to thinking. |
|
The eurozone's leaders realise that although in isolation, a Grexit does not threaten the single currency, its reverberations do. |
|
Taken individually, each object may have provoked some unsettling reactions and reverberations, but those were fleeting and ephemeral. |
|
The fetal head was high in the fundus and imaging was not easy with reverberations partially obscuring the proximal hemisphere. |
|
In both tracks surrounds are used aggressively with pans, reverberations, crashes, explosions, and gunshots coming from all corners. |
|
It echoed and re-echoed around the room long after the reverberations ceased. |
|
As the Enron scandal continues its reverberations, as guilty pleas and tales of trials to come mount, the books about the case grow longer. |
|
The leisured progress, the sensuous attention to phrases, coupled with nuances in phrasing, created the reverberations of singing at a durbar. |
|
They amplified simple stories with such emotional reverberations that they became elemental and overpowering, like a force of nature. |
|
The publication of the study had wider reverberations throughout the academic and scientific institutions connected with it. |
|
However, the reverberations in the rest of the world economy were immediate and extensive. |
|
|
It was a political manoeuvre that would send reverberations down the following three centuries. |
|
On a smaller, but no less significant, scale there are isolated continental and intra-border disputes that have global reverberations. |
|
The reverberations from this research facility for the care and cure of children will be felt all over the world. |
|
It was one of those panicky quick decisions that has long-term reverberations that aren't necessarily what you want. |
|
When the changes come, we are going to have reverberations on our revenue side here in Canada. |
|
If companies turn off their people's water, so to speak, the reverberations could go on for weeks. |
|
And the reverberations of that would be felt up and down the food chain. |
|
And as we have all seen, agriculture commodities are not immune to Wall Street reverberations. |
|
The EU has no choice other than to cement its relations with the East as the reverberations of Asia's roars grow louder in Europe. |
|
Leaders whose energy and commitment have such a huge impact on our kids, the reverberations of which can be felt right into adulthood. |
|
The whales may also use the reverberations of their calls to help them judge an ice floe's dimensions. |
|
Lest there be any doubt, remember Sept. 11, 2001, and its worldwide reverberations. |
|
Even those many who may never read poetry once they have left school will feel the reverberations of great poetry through the people around them. |
|
The PLAY Engine's Reverb controls can simulate the natural reverberations produced when a sound is generated in an enclosed space. |
|
At the beginning of the decade, the reverberations of the external debt crisis were still adversely affecting the region's output. |
|
Just think of the reverberations created with all those pings and clicks! |
|
In the wood thrush's preferred concert hall of moist woods, every leaf seems to serve as his sound reflector, imparting bell-like reverberations to his clear, round notes. |
|
Easily the most influential paper of the generation, its reverberations continue to be felt whenever philosophers discuss the nature of their enterprise. |
|
The reverberations of that carry on throughout the whole series. |
|
You know, this is really pitching right into the hot days of the general election campaign and the reverberations are going to go on through the fall. |
|
|
I am convinced that the powerful re-emergence of monotypes and woodcuts relates directly to the explosions and reverberations of new technologies. |
|
The impulses to move are triggered by the deepest reverberations or vibrations in your body, as explained by the prana of Indian traditions and qi in the East. |
|
At the end of 2008, the Federal Government agreed the first recovery package worth 32 billion euros as an initial response to the reverberations of the financial crisis. |
|
We recorded the new album in several stages, first in Saint-Rémy de Provence, in the south of France, in this place with the most amazing natural reverberations. |
|
It shook the Union, and its reverberations continue. |
|
From its beginnings and for the year following, the Sudan affair had reverberations in Canada, where colonels declared their readiness to raise their militia regiments to fight in the distant Upper Nile. |
|
The country may be peaceable and secure, but it is just as vulnerable to external developments and their domestic reverberations as to homegrown political instability. |
|
The first opinion poll after the controversy showed Mr Akin's 11-point lead over Ms McCaskill all but vanishing. The reverberations will be felt beyond Missouri. |
|
The harrowing events of Angela Machinga's death had a devastating effect on Tutu and her family, the reverberations of which she says are still very present two years on. |
|
Ashgabat, 3 Jan-The Volgograd bombings have shaken Russia and reverberations would be felt in Central Asia, slowly, unevenly, but surely. |
|
Like the several reverberations of the same image from two opposite looking glasses. |
|
The reverberations of that Conreport of mine have been wringing in my ears for weeks. |
|
The reverberations from this highly original exhibition will continue to be felt as Across Borders travels to a number of Canadian and American institutions. |
|
Setting bigger values will simulate reverberations in a bigger room. |
|
With the demise of the Soviet empire, the expectations of nationalist movements have been heightened around the world, and the reverberations may yet be felt in Canada. |
|