Three minutes without air, three days without water, three weeks without food.
2
But, in contrast, Sydney's north will actually have good air quality today.
3
Asked if he wanted less use of air power, Karzai said, Absolutely.
4
Hope Lee was given the opportunity to allow his story to air.
5
Beginning at sea level, air weighs about 15 pounds per square inch.
1
Western Europe asked North America, Military Intelligence, and Halo to remain on-line.
2
So just top line question; is wearing sunscreen still a good idea?
3
The line I remember was 'Change before they change you.' Autonomy, right?
4
Therefore this time line possible: -maybe contracted last Saturday at ACB event.
5
Take a good look at its product line over the past year.
1
Health services always come under extra strain at this time of year.
2
Russia recorded several cases of this strain of the virus last year.
3
Argentina's health ministry has confirmed one case of the new flu strain.
4
Differential exposure to financial strain may explain some differences in population health.
5
Aid agencies worry that the huge influx will strain present government resources.
1
That said; you may need to be quite in-tune with incoming information!
2
Everyone needs to tune in and listen carefully for change to come.
3
But Ms Bolger said the Australian government was not changing its tune.
4
Surely the owner must have the principal say in calling the tune.
5
He's a fine lilter too, carrying a tune by any means necessary.
1
His guitar added texture and counter melody which made good songs great.
2
It is in the key of D, the melody opening for horn.
3
And as they worked, they usually sang some simple melody without words.
4
There is nothing of this in the melody of the second movement.
5
The melody itself is plaintive; a plaintive grace informs the entire piece.
1
Another useful exercise at this stage is to let the children add a second part, either above or below a given melodicphrase.
2
In rendering purely melodicphrases, Herr Formes was not so preëminent as in declamatory passages.
1
So would the seamless match of words to melodicline.
2
I wanted the word to be able to find its own sound, to draw its own melodicline.
3
He played the adagio movement first, lingering on the graceful phrases, the swell and rise of the melodicline.
4
He's the man who carried classical harmonies and a simplicity of melodicline into the dark heart of romantic sensibility.
5
Compare the wall of pounding, resonant percussion heard in Man of Steel to the peppy melodicline from Driving Miss Daisy.
6
The Adagio, with its broad, solemn melodicline, is, as a whole-anddespite passages of burning pain-eloquentof comfort and grace.
7
Music continued to be polyphonic, but became simpler, with a single melodicline (L. van Beethoven, contemporary with Mozart).
8
The bassoon concerto was an opportunity to create an extended work exploring the melodicline, and to push the limits of Ben's exquisite upper register.
9
They weave poetry with melodiclines for a live performance in the Wellington studio.
10
All players have an opportunity to embrace fervent melodiclines as the accompanying roles are passed around the ensemble.
11
One of his studies for player piano consists of no fewer than 12 melodiclines, each progressing at a different tempo.
12
Grating and grinding effects reminiscent of Xenakis are juxtaposed with melodiclines sliding in patterns that can uncannily evoke vocal inflections.
13
The prime melodic talents are wild fiddler Rudy Velghe, and crystalline box-player Raquel Gigot, shivering great rhythmic ornament out of the main melodiclines.
14
French pianist Jean-Efflam Bavouzet approaches the music with light fingers, crisp articulation, an airy approach to phrasing, and a readiness to embellish melodiclines.
15
It showcased their style, with fast melodiclines on banjo, tin whistle and accordion set against a punchy electric bass and stripped-down drum kit.
16
The stately Andante proves elusive -both harmonically and texturally -and hints playfully at Baroque counterpoint (two or more coalescing melodiclines).