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112 Sentences With "makes much of"

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

None of this makes much of an impression on non-Israelis.
Mrs May makes much of Labour's fuzzy position and internal divisions on Brexit.
AS AMERICA'S oldest airline still aloft, Delta makes much of its southern roots.
Google also makes much of its efficient power usage inside its data centers.
China makes much of the fact that it is the world's biggest Buddhist nation.
His work makes much of Bausch's use of repetition and eccentric, briskly executed gestures.
This is how Denino makes much of his income, and he responded to each one.
The city's Department of Buildings, which regulates construction, helpfully makes much of its data public.
Singapore also makes much of its efforts in "regtech"—software helping banks comply with increasingly complex regulations.
He makes much of his humble origins and subsequent success, including scholarships and a brilliant army career.
And its website therefore makes much of its selective approach to recruiting (only) native speakers to its marketplace.
President Donald Trump, for instance, makes much of how he will trust his gut more than any adviser.
Google makes much of its research and data available publicly for engineers to access and build off of.
Unfortunately, the way Congress set up the fund effectively makes much of the money off-limits to crime victims.
I can't see how that makes much of a difference when the NSA or the Bolivian hackers come a-knocking.
"Defense makes much of fact that it is politically motivated but he doesn't quote from Ms. Zervos's statement," she said.
Mr. Lipman makes much of that connection, and threads "Notfilm" with lovely clips from Vertov's films and other silent treasures.
He makes much of how the Elizabethan Reformation drove the creativity of Thomas Tallis and William Byrd, and rightly so.
The series makes much of her being a woman navigating what was until then a department that employed only men.
But at the end of the day I don't think the difference between Europe-US makes much of a difference.
Mrs May's government makes much of the prospects of concluding trade deals with non-EU countries—including, in fact, New Zealand.
This attention to detail — tantamount to a reverence — is what makes much of the fair's art so intriguing and, simply, great.
Apart from Halifax and Chamberlain, desiccated aristo puddings played by Stephen Dillane and Ronald Pickup, nobody makes much of an effort.
And he makes much of the fact that he has more military experience than any president since George H. W. Bush.
It makes much of its money from online travel agencies, which pay for each click a customer makes on their hotel offers.
The show makes much of the conflict between Noesner and the FBI cohort that wants to crush the sect with military might.
Ellingstad's report makes much of the fact that a video documenting an abusive incident which Monahan claims exists has not been produced.
"A Memory Called Empire" makes much of past and future selves, of memory and language and the things that can change them.
"Not sure [it] makes much of a difference unless it turns out [Bannon] was ghostwriting all the self-immolation tweets," said another.
Pai makes much of the FCC's response to the ongoing widespread outage of connectivity in Puerto Rico following an unusually intense hurricane season.
The game is full of abstract concepts, but its roots in board games and physical puzzles makes much of it easy to understand.
The report makes much of it's assessment based on information from the International Drug Testing Service—a non-governmental organization based in Spain.
That makes much of Gaza's seafood, like the beloved blue crab, a no-go for those worried about what poisons the fish have ingested.
President Xi Jinping makes much of his "One Belt, One Road" initiative to create infrastructure tying Eurasia closer to China by land and sea.
Bordo makes much of "Bernie Bros"—loud, male Sanders supporters who, she says, harassed Clinton supporters at rallies and abused female reporters on Twitter.
It's a business, of course, with a business model that makes much of its money by channeling tidings of sludge around, often to great harm.
While the company is best known for its $99 and up DNA test, it makes much of its money through research collaborations with pharmaceutical companies.
Global Future's report makes much of the fact that the future is open for the simple reason that close-minded old people will die off.
In Abbasi, Justice Kennedy makes much of the "great peril" America faced in the aftermath of the attacks on the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon.
And, although Vera makes much of Lev's work possible, Lev himself portrays her as controlling, even sinister — someone to escape, or to be gotten rid of.
In perhaps the most egregious failure to fill out a story, Poirier makes much of the roundup of 300 or so American women in September 703.
While most economists I spoke to think it's fair to levy tariffs on dumped Chinese steel, they don't seem to think it makes much of a difference.
In Mr Binay they see less a corrupt politician than one who gets things done: he makes much of having got Makati residents free health care and better schools.
And while black women did much of the actual work of organizing the massive rally, Kauffman rightly makes much of the fact that the March leadership was all male.
It might not seem like this makes much of a difference, but it's an enormous help for Democrats — because they face such a horrifically bad Senate map in 2018.
For the organization's 30th anniversary, the three composers created a new evening-length work, "Road Trip," which makes much of the long creative path all these artists have traveled together.
I'm no Jaime Escalante, and one more illusion from which I have liberated myself is that any single class makes much of a difference in an 18-year-old's life.
Not that the sunshine makes much of an impression inside the subterranean walls of Black Rock—any gleaming splashes of amber are reserved for the whisky bottles lining the glass cabinets.
Variety can be a virtue, but this recurrence makes much of the offering feel like a mountain of merchandise in search of a stern curator, special items adrift in mere swag.
The real problem in the DRC is less this mining itself, but more the lawlessness that surrounds it and makes much of the cobalt from the region effectively a "conflict mineral".
But he would preside over a company that makes much of its money from a traditional business model, the bundle of pay-TV channels, that is under serious threat from technological innovation.
Nesbo also makes much of one advantage he has over Shakespeare, who during the reign of the Scottish King James, recently targeted for assassination, could not show a Scottish monarch being killed onstage.
Today, Topf's business makes much of its income by renting out machines to touring productions, and it recently partnered with a businessman who has started an American version of Rock 'n' Roll Laundry.
Perry makes much of NERC's warning that "premature retirements of fuel-secure baseload generating stations reduces resilience to fuel supply disruptions," but if you look at that language closely, it's practically a tautology.
But the script makes much of Willy's desire to be liked, and you can't help but wonder whether an African-American man in post-World War II Brooklyn wouldn't worry more about being accepted.
If the bravura dementia of his Howard makes much of the rest of the show seem as two-dimensional as a flat TV screen, it's a trade-off I'm willing to accept, albeit with a sigh.
It takes a minimalist yet utterly modern approach to game design, rendering the original template in 21st century colors, and the result is a thrillingly straightforward experience that makes much of its competition feel bloated and laborious.
Cole-Adams makes much of these sorts of hidden memories in her book, and of various experiments with hypnotizing patients before and after anesthesia to find them, but as she admits, the evidence is confused and contradictory.
They include tech companies like Apple, which makes much of its iPhone in China, automakers such as General Motors and Ford, heavy machinery firms like Caterpillar, retailers like Starbucks and makers of shaving foam and detergent, like Procter & Gamble.
Stross makes much of that failure in his biography, but consumer markets are hardly the only, and rarely the best, measure of genius—a point made clear, and painfully so, by Edison's preference for and optimism about electric cars.
Trivago, whose platform allows customers to search through hotel deals aggregated across a variety of online travel sites, makes much of its money from online travel agencies that pay for each click a customer makes on their hotel offers.
This gap in paleontological knowledge is caused both by the remote location of amber mines and fossil beds in the region, as well as the longstanding social and political unrest that makes much of Myanmar's north off-limits to outsiders.
Allowing those third parties to carry your data, even though there's really no way to avoid them if you want to be online at all, theoretically makes much of it legally fair game for the government to collect without a warrant.
He makes much of a fire-fighting accident in 1861, narrated at length but still left majestically befogged, in which he seems to be saying that his balls were crushed while he was turning the water crank of a fire engine.
None of the four actors who play the main band members makes much of an impression initially, but "Billions" scene-stealer David Costabile (as their manager) and "Saturday Night Live's" Pete Davidson (as a label executive) seem like intriguing choices.
When one of these affectionate eaters forcefully smooches a coral, the lip slobber likely has a dual function: The snotty barrier makes much of the polyp's aggravated stinging fruitless, and it helps make a suction-producing seal on the coral's own lubricated exterior.
The scientific community rightly makes much of one of his miracles, a discovery he made in 1974 of something now known as Hawking radiation: the phenomenon in which black holes — so named because nothing can escape them — actually allow radiation to get out.
The 2015 adaptation by the poet Anne Carson also makes much of King Pentheus's fetishy eagerness to spy on the women; when he applies lipstick as part of his disguise he does so like someone who has been longing for just this chance.
Unsurprisingly, given the comic, allusive and metaphoric potential of the pairing, Comensal makes much of an angry, dying man's mute efforts to communicate while accompanied in his final days by a loud, caged bird prone to harsh expressions and indifferent to being understood.
The whole process requires providing a lot of your most private information to Google and (probably) pharmaceutical companies who want to see the anonymized data, which — given Google makes much of its sweet, sweet cash by selling data — is not something to take lightly.
"Gloria" (well danced by Northern Ballet), created in 1980 and set to Poulenc, is both moving and slightly dated in feel (this is partly a costume problem), with a ballet vocabulary that makes much of the physical tension between soaring uplift and grounded, earthbound despair.
No more thoughtful than he was as a TV game show host and no more reliable than when he was a salesman practicing "truthful hyperbole," Trump makes much of the world cringe as he fails to achieve his agenda at home and undercuts his own secretary of state abroad.
There's a fascination, to be sure, that comes from a glimpse of an embryonic Loman family — the beleaguered matriarch, Esther (Nesba Crenshaw), seems like a dry run for Linda in "Death of a Salesman," a later Miller play that also makes much of the shifting dynamics between two brothers.
The result is a new subset of professional instructors: the yogalebrity who makes much of her living on the road, not unlike a small-time rock star, appearing at retreats and conferences, posting inspirational quotes fashioned in flowery Pinterest-friendly fonts, and pictures of inner peace found through arm balances or legs over one's head.
For instance, the protagonist's name, Ka, the name of the town, Kars, and the word for snow, kar (which is the novel's original Turkish title), deliberately echo one another—a point Kirsch makes much of: In Turkish, then, kar forms a linguistic bridge between the protagonist, Ka, and the city, Kars: ka, kar, kars, a pun that suggests deep unity.
The play makes much of this image, depicting Swetnam muzzled by a group of angered women in a carnivalesque episode redolent of a skimmington.
"Moving Picture World" stated: "Pauline Bush gives a good portrayal...It is a disagreeable part and a hard one, but she makes much of it. There are good mountain backgrounds."Blake, Michael F. (1998). "The Films of Lon Chaney".
The chapter depicting the funeral scene makes much of the Herrite prohibition of attendance at funerals of other faiths; to accommodate them, two separate funeral sermons are preached, and the conclusion of the first sermon by a Reformed Mennonite minister is the signal for the Reformed Mennonites to depart.
Sandy and saline soils are the most common soil types, which makes much of the land unsuitable for wet rice cultivation. In spite of poor fertility, however, agriculture is intensive. Glutinous rice, maize, and cassava are the principal crops. Drought is by far the major hydrological hazard in this region.
Apparently she was still often known as Mrs Catty. A family note says she was always a devoted mother and her children 'adored' her. She died in London in 1874 and was taken to Stockbury for burial. An obituary in the Kentish Times makes much of her friendship with Shelley, suggesting it was an important event in her life.
Much of his work draws on ideas from Eastern philosophy and the spiritual teachings of various indigenous peoples. Eisenstein has been involved in the Occupy, New Economy, and permaculture movements. His work has also been popular with countercultural and New Age audiences. An advocate of the gift economy, he makes much of his work available for free on his website.
Primarily geared towards drug discovery and design, areas of application include conformation generation, docking, shape comparison, charge/electrostatics, cheminformatics and visualization. The software is designed for scientific rigor, as well as speed, scalability and platform independence. OpenEye makes much of its technology available as toolkits suitable for custom development. The toolkits are available in multiple languages: C++, Python, Java and C#.
The ping pong show is designed to get people talking about it so that people will come to the bar to see it. Often customers come only to see the show and leave when it is over. This is good business for the bar, which makes much of its profits from drinks. However, the majority of the bar workers do not participate in the show.
The Washington Post, 23 May 1988. Battiata, Mary. "John Hurt into Africa; After Making Mischief in Kenya, The Actor Enjoys His New Domicile" The film adaptation makes much of Alice's eccentricities, including scenes in which she watches a polo match with a snake twined around her shoulders, or doses herself with a syringe of morphine in the ladies' toilet.The New York Times, 22 May 1988.
They are Polish patriots pursued by the Austrian authorities. Devilshoof agrees to help them, and having disguised them, somewhat clumsily, he sends the pursuing Austrian soldiers in the wrong direction. Thaddeus saves the young Arline from a savage wild boar. Her father is overjoyed, and he makes much of Thaddeus until the latter refuses to drink the health of the Austrian emperor, declaring himself a Polish patriot.
This allows throughput to scale with chip complexity, easily utilizing hundreds of ALUs.IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits:"A Programmable 512 GOPS Stream Processor for Signal, Image, and Video Processing", Stanford University and Stream Processors, Inc.Khailany, Dally, Rixner, Kapasi, Owens and Towles: "Exploring VLSI Scalability of Stream Processors", Stanford and Rice University. The elimination of complex data patterns makes much of this extra power available.
Each user must somehow pass the name on to the next, and must somehow "mean" the right individual as they do so (suppose "Socrates" is the name of a pet aardvark). Kripke himself notes the difficulty, John Searle makes much of it. Mark Sainsbury arguedSainsbury, R.M., Departing From Frege: Essays in the Philosophy of Language, Routledge, 2002, Essay XII. for a causal theory similar to Kripke's, except that the baptised object is eliminated.
Other locations include Trondheim, Norway; Colorado Springs, Colorado; Chennai, India; Shanghai, China; Taipei, Taiwan; Rousset, France; Nantes, France; Patras, Greece; Heilbronn, Germany; Munich, Germany; Whiteley, United Kingdom; Cairo, Egypt. Atmel makes much of its product line at vendor fabrication facilities. It owns a facility in Colorado Springs, Colorado that manufactures its XSense line of flexible touch sensors. In 2016, Microchip agreed to buy Atmel for billion in a deal brokered by JPMorgan Chase and Qatalyst.
Microsoft adCenter released an add-in for Microsoft Excel 2007 that allows users to consume the Keyword Services Platform data directly via Excel rather than through the API. The add-in makes much of the keyword technology available directly through Excel. Essentially it is an example of the type of mashup and creative use of data that can be associated with the KSP. The add- in delivers features such as keyword extraction, suggestion, forecasting, monetization, etc.
The combination of rain shortage and extreme heat makes much of Iraq a desert. Because of very high rates of evaporation, soil and plants rapidly lose the little moisture obtained from the rain, and vegetation could not survive without extensive irrigation. Some areas, however, although arid, do have natural vegetation in contrast to the desert. For example, in the Zagros Mountains in northeastern Iraq there is permanent vegetation, such as oak trees, and date palms are found in the south.
Branas led his army towards the Normans who were laying waste the area around Amphipolis and Serres, contacting them at Demetritzes, which is to the northwest of Serres. Choniates, the main source for the battle, does not describe the conflict in any tactical detail. Instead, he makes much of the confidence that the Byzantine troops had gained from their earlier success at Mosynopolis, and the loss of morale the Normans had suffered for the same reason. The Normans initially offered to negotiate and sue for peace.
Variety and combination of colours is most pleasurable. Knight makes much of the need to fragment an image into tonal and colouristic "masses", a view that has been claimed to anticipate the late work of Turner, or even Impressionism. However, it most directly justifies the practices of contemporary painters of picturesque landscapes, such as Girtin, whose stippling effects are comparable to Knight's account of pleasing colour combinations. Knight commissioned landscape artist, Thomas Hearne to produce several drawings of the grounds of his home, Downton Castle in Herefordshire.
Husain mentions Gufler by name, and makes much of his promoting a positive US image among people in the non-aligned Ceylon/Sri Lanka, and in also covertly promoting US relations with Pakistan, via his connections to senior Pakistani diplomats such as HE Mr Salim Khan, aa, and others. Husain also claims that Gufler and Salim Khan played a special role in convincing the Pakistani military commander-in-chief and later dictator, General Ayub Khan to visit the USA and to eventually develop a strong pro-USA and anti-Soviet policy in Pakistan.
The second episode shows Elizabeth from several months to a year after her coronation, establishing herself as Queen, to the emergence of Mary, Queen of Scots, as her political rival. The episode makes much of her clandestine romance with Robert Dudley, and her resistance to marriage. Elizabeth is shown to be struggling with the adjustment to being Queen, especially in regard to Dudley. A scene shows Elizabeth dreaming of making love with Dudley, but the plot of the series follows the opinion that she resisted these urges, and remained a virgin.
The Niagara cafe opened in 1938 and was a notable stop on the Hume Highway. The cafe makes much of a brief visit by then Prime Minister, John Curtin, in 1942, with a display in the window of the cafe of the crockery used by Curtin and Curtin's link to the cafe. Niagara cafe was established by a Kytherian Greek, Strati Notara, and is the oldest continuously Greek-run cafe in Australia. In August 2019, the cafe closed and was put up for sale; it faces an uncertain future.
Moderate intentionalists such as Richard Breitman believe that Hitler had decided upon the Holocaust sometime in the late 1930s and certainly no later than 1939 or 1941. This school makes much of Hitler's "Prophecy Speech" of January 30, 1939 before the Reichstag where Hitler stated "If the international Jewish financiers in and outside Europe should succeed in plunging the nations once again into a world war, then the result will not be the victory of Jewry, but the annihilation of the Jewish race in Europe!"Domarus (1990). Hitler Speeches and Proclamations, 1932–1945. [Vols.
The impending invasion of the Spanish Armada is dealt with fairly rapidly, the primary scene concerning the Armada being Elizabeth's encampment at Tilbury, where she gives an invigorating speech. These scenes are intercut, and immediately followed with her grief and heartbreak over the death of Robert Dudley, and her brief seclusion during the celebrations over the Armada's defeat. The episode ends with her first encounter with Robert Devereux. The ending makes much of the theory that Devereux was actually the son of Robert Dudley by Lettice Knollys, instead of the result of her first marriage to Walter Devereux.
WWE 2K16 received "mixed or average" reviews, according to review aggregator Metacritic. Eurogamer called it "best wrestling game in years", praising the gameplay changes and deep roster, while noting long load times. In a positive review, IGN called the game a "step in the right direction" for the series and praised the gameplay and roster features, but criticized overall inconsistency within the game. GameSpot rated the game a harsher 4 out of 10, praising the 2K Showcase mode and the return of Jim Ross on commentary but saying that "Little else in the game makes much of a positive impression".
Kholm, 1939 – most Afghans are tribal Afghanistan is a predominantly tribal society, with different regions of the country having their own cultures as a result of differing ethnicities and geographic obstacles that makes much of the country remote. Family is the mainstay of Afghan society and families are often headed by a patriarch. In the southern and eastern region, the people live according to the Pashtun culture by following Pashtunwali (the Pashtun way).US Library of Congress: Afghanistan – Ethnic Groups (Pashtun) Key tenets of Pashtunwali include hospitality, the provision of sanctuary to those seeking refuge, and revenge for the shedding of blood.
Academic Claudiu Turcuș remarked that the dinner scene, where the characters look down on some careers and act as if smoking in front of one's elders is disrespectful, shows how regressive they are. Ovidius University author Ileana Jitaru credited the film for reconstructing "an entire communist class ideology which divided society into 'working class people' and 'intellectuals'". Jitaru specifically cited the dinner scene, where the conversation makes much of the divide between those with university degrees and those with none. The attendees boast about belonging to the middle class, and make denigrating comments about Otilia's rural origins.
The Wolves are Coming—when installed at 798 Art Zone After buying a run-down farm in Arrowtown, Hill's interest in golf grew to the point where he built his own 18-hole golf course called "The Hills" on the property. Built into the course is a unique two-thirds underground clubhouse designed by Auckland architect Andrew Patterson and his company, Patterson Associates. The clubhouse won the New Zealand Institute of Architects Supreme Architectural Award in 2008 and was a finalist in the World Architecture Festival in 2008 in Barcelona. The course is notable for the sculpture which makes much of the course into an open-air gallery.
Several of the film's actors were unable to return, so Lewis simply replaced their parts with new characters who mysteriously appear and fill the roles of the missing characters. One of the actors Lewis managed to rehire had gained weight, gone bald, and grown a goatee, so Lewis recast him as the brother of the original character. The picture consists mostly of lengthy dialogue sequences concerning the apparent mutation of an astronaut into a monster portrayed by the giant Henry Hite. Poor audio quality makes much of the dialogue unintelligible, and when the film is overexposed, several characters' faces appear as bright white, glowing circles.
This in turn makes much of the population vulnerable to being easily seduced by authoritarian forms of religion and tempts them to reject liberalism altogether, its strengths as well as its weaknesses. Lerner further argues that the cultural excesses of the Left in the 60s and 70s led to backlash in the 1980s. Rabbi Lerner believes that a solution is to develop a progressive form of religion which can speak to people's real spiritual and emotional needs without pulling its followers into the dark side of religion. Lerner proposes a Spiritual Covenant with America that emphasizes a caring and nurturing society focused not merely on social responsibility but on human connectedness.
The Ratzinger Foundation, also known as The Pope Benedict XVI Foundation, is a charitable organization whose aim is "the promotion of theology in the spirit of Joseph Ratzinger." which it achieves by funding scholarships and bursaries for poorer students across the world.Pope Benedict XVI's book is a best-seller – Telegraph The foundation was launched on the initiative of former students (including 16 professors) of Joseph Ratzinger in December 2007. The foundation makes much of its money from the selling of Pope Benedict XVI's writings. In 2007, £1.6 million was raised for the charity by the selling of Pope Benedict's biography on Christ, Jesus of Nazareth.
" Easterly notes that much of Collier's advice is constructive, but he is concerned that it is advice based on shaky argument, argument which relies on statistical correlation to establish causation. For example, Collier makes much of the "conflict trap" and clearly poverty and civil war do occur together, but this may be, according to Easterly, "[perhaps] only because they are both symptoms of deeper problems, like Africa's weak states, ethnic antagonisms, and the legacy of the slave trade and colonial exploitation."William Easterly The Lancet Volume 370, Issue 9597, pp. 1475–76, 27 October 2007 Collier counters, "At present the clarion call for the right is economist William Easterley's book The White Man's Burden.
In 2004, Benitez gained her first experience in filming as an assistant on the set of Laurenti Dyogi's romantic drama Now That I have You. Later that year she shot footage for Jeffrey Jeturian's major hit Minsan Pa (2004), as well as having a minor role as an American backpacker in it. A reviewer of Minsan Pa in the Manila Bulletin talked of "beautiful cinematography that makes much of Cebu's beautiful tourist spots (such as its famous dive sites in Moalboal)." Liz Braun of the Toronto Sun also praised the cinematography in Minsan Pa. She made the 161 minute film Ang Anak ni Brocka in 2005 as a Berlinale Talent Campus project.
The term is derived by analogy from the 20th-century use of the word "tetrachord". Unlike the tetrachord and hexachord, there is no traditional standard scale arrangement of three notes, nor is the trichord necessarily thought of as a harmonic entity . Milton Babbitt's serial theory of combinatoriality makes much of the properties of three-note, four-note, and six-note segments of a twelve-tone row, which he calls, respectively, trichords, tetrachords, and hexachords, extending the traditional sense of the terms and retaining their implication of contiguity. He usually reserves the term "source set" for their unordered counterparts (especially hexachords), but does occasionally employ terms such as "source tetrachords" and "combinatorial trichords, tetrachords, and hexachords" instead (; ; ).
The novel makes much of the intrigues of the Cold War years, the struggles of the Church in Eastern Europe, the attempts to reconcile the Catholic and Orthodox Churches, and the upheaval within the Catholic Church in the wake of Vatican II. In 1987, Archbishop Elko, asked me to help him create a charity, where The Rosary would be sent to missions. With his permission, I named the project "Rosaries Around The World" He provided an Archdiocesan Directory and we created stationary for the letters to the missionaries. I sent out hundreds of letters and received an incredible response. In a 3 year span, we mailed over 1,000,000 Rosaries and Brown Scapulars and many other items, to world wide missions.
French piano players of Haas's generation were moving away from the facile and often brittle technique associated with Marguerite Long (frequently referred to as the "diggy-diggy-dee" style).Fourestier. See, for example, Jean-Philippe Collard in Gramophone Magazine 1997 Haas combined the cleanness and precision associated with the older school with a warmth of tone colour that reflected the influence of Alfred Cortot. Her unsentimental readings, especially of Debussy and Ravel, give a different view of their music, presenting them as both modern and as inheritors of the tradition of Couperin and the clavecinistes of the 18th century. Contrasts can be found between her two recordings of the Ravel Concerto in G. The earlier one, made in 1948, makes much of the work's connections with the jazz idiom of the 1920s.
The album received a score of four and a half stars from AllMusic, with Eugene Chadbourne saying, "With an album behind him, Weird Al Yankovic makes much of the improvements expected of new artists when they get a second crack at a release a year later." Christopher Thelen from The Daily Vault wrote that "All in all, this disc held out the promise that Yankovic was destined for greatness ..." In addition, "Weird Al" Yankovic in 3-D was also named one of the Year's Top 10 Albums in 1984 by People magazine. Den of Geek even named In 3-D as one of the "10 Reasons Why 1984 Was a Great Year for Geek Movies"—despite it not being a movie. On November 1, 2011, Spin magazine named In 3-D as the seventeenth greatest comedy album of all time.
Borrow's route through Wales Wild Wales: Its People, Language and Scenery is a travel book by the English Victorian gentleman writer George Borrow (1803–1881), first published in 1862. The book recounts Borrow's personal experiences and insights while touring Wales alone on foot after a family holiday in Llangollen in 1854, and has come to be regarded as a source of useful information about the social and geographical history of the country at that time. It has been described as "robust, dramatic and cheerful", and the author as "an agreeably eccentric, larger-than-life, jovial man whose laughter rings all through the book". The author makes much of his self-taught ability to speak the Welsh language and how surprised the native Welsh people he meets and talks to are by both his linguistic abilities and his travels, education and personality, and also by his idiosyncratic pronunciation of their language.
Fromm portrays herself as a leading figure in Berlin political society, on intimate terms with ministers, editors and diplomats, and the recipient of confidential information from many of them. She makes much of her close friendship with Schleicher and his wife, and writes of her attempts to warn Schleicher that President Paul von Hindenburg was about to remove him as Chancellor in favour of Hitler. It is notable, however, that two of the best-known contemporary accounts of politics and the press in Berlin at this time do not mention Fromm: William Shirer’s Berlin Diary,Johns Hopkins University Press, 1941 and the memoirs of Hitler’s press chief Otto Dietrich, Zwolfe Jahre mit Hitler Otto Dietrich Zwolfe Jahre mit Hitler, 1955; published in English as The Hitler I Knew, Skyhorse Publishing 2010 As a Jew and an outspoken liberal, Fromm found her position increasingly precarious after the Nazis came to power in 1933. She was protected to some extent by her friendship with leading foreign diplomats and also with conservative members of Hitler’s government such as Schacht and von Neurath.

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