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116 Sentences With "wring out"

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

Ring in the new year and wring out the risk!
He urged the government to help wring out its excesses.
Think of what happens when you wring out a wet towel.
And you should never wring out your towel in the bath.
Wring out the sheet until it's just slightly damp, but still cool.
There's still plenty of money for Disney to wring out of it.
Never. Enough to wring out one last gasp of enjoyment from the madhouse?
I realize this slightly too late, and I have to wring out the bath mat.
Volatility is crucial for traders, who can wring out more profits when prices move wildly.
For Apple, it's another sign the company is looking to wring out costs where it can.
I just have one more left to wring out of this and then you can move on.
Wrap the zucchini in a clean cheesecloth or tea towel and squeeze to wring out excess moisture. 22017.
For its part, Verizon argued that the new call center rule would allow it to wring out inefficiencies.
The Combined Locks mill also lacked a "shoe press" that traditional brown mills use to wring out water.
And the Japanese buyer's tiny footprint in Europe means there are few obvious opportunities to wring out cost savings.
The vests are submerged in cool water for about a minute, then gently squeezed to wring out excess liquid.
And Vanya, basically the towel girl for the team most her life, can't wring out the smallest semblance of confidence.
Wring out and reform the brush hairs to the shape of the brush and lay them flat overnight to dry.
It's not a BMW M type of affair, but hey, Lexus owners don't tend to wring out their cars hard.
Still, the more info on this kind of stuff that Congress can wring out of Facebook and Twitter, the better.
At first, it seems like there's only so much story the show could wring out of a literal death trap.
If the show is willing to go this far to wring out emotional reactions from its audience, where does it end?
The machine got the name "Thor" from the Hurley Machine Company of Chicago and included rollers to wring out wet clothes.
But Mr. Röttgen added that despite European fears, Mr. Putin did not wring out concessions that would hurt America's Western allies.
Rinse your clothing well with fresh water until all soap has washed away, wring out and then lay flat to dry.
Light and dark carry poetic weight: in one image, hands wring out a cloth; the cool water stains their hands like ink.
"Fernand," a Jacques Brel song, was a raspy, witchy incantation, with its oom-pah-pah speeding and slowing to wring out drama.
The variety of colors Mr. Cale is able to wring out of his voice as he sketches them in song is remarkable.
West, who has urged consolidation to wring out costs, said oilfield firms would be better off rejecting contracts that are not profitable.
It's Memorial Day weekend and there's truly no better way to wring out some relaxation than by taking a dip in the pool!!!
But the mountains might have also caused the storm to wring out more water and intensify winds while it was traversing the island.
Mass transit already offers some of the benefits we're trying to wring out of not-quite-here-yet technologies like self-driving cars.
One message, he said, will be to "wring out some of the undue optimism" that had been part of the mind-set there.
Simply put, these were already challenging songs, and it's no coincidence that audiences found more energy to wring out from each of them.
At that point, he can also just assert that whatever concessions he was able to wring out of the Chinese were amazing game changers.
The Kim family long ago perfected the art of the steal: string out talks, wring out economic concessions and walk away from any commitments.
" Robyn's writing process is designed to wring out truths: Mr. Ahlund described it as a series of "very intimate, open and sort of confessional conversations.
It will wring out the duplicative and wasteful administrative costs of the free marketplace and provide negotiating leverage to stabilize medical provider and pharmacy costs.
Both movies are based on pulpy page-turners, but only Gone Girl understands how to both wring out suspense and also dig into the characters' heads.
There are plenty well-documented accounts of buyout firms loading their companies up with debt and forcing rigorous cost cuts that wring out any growth potential.
The Kim family long ago perfected the art of the steal: String out talks, wring out economic concessions, walk away from any hard commitments, then repeat.
The first and most obvious is that the iPhone has become boring, trapped by the diminishing returns Apple can wring out of the device year after year.
Sweeten the deal with special pricing you wring out of channels because they can't afford to leave this new walled garden, and say consumers come out ahead.
PE firms have muscled into the money-maker to wring out those that pay for it, even as allegations of collusion and price-fixing have become rampant.
She's in Monterey to squeeze out the truth, and she's applying pressure ever so masterfully, mostly to Celeste and Madeline, to see what leads she can wring out.
Grids in general are not the most flexible things, but I am always astounded by how much puzzle makers can wring out of them to get their message across.
But at this point, if you can manage to wring out any fun or feel-good moments from an episode of The Walking Dead, that can be considered a victory.
The potential holdout senators were able to wring out concessions as leaders scrambled to push the legislation to approval, an outcome Mr. McConnell attributed to their skillfully using their leverage.
In a briefing last week, a Beats representative grabbed one earcup in each hand and tweaked them hard, like he was trying to violently wring out the world's wettest towel.
Meanwhile, FedEx Ground is working to wring out more residential profit by shifting the delivery of nearly 2 million SmartPost packages from U.S. Postal Service mail carriers to its own drivers.
While central and northern Luzon is not densely populated, this area has a varied topography, with mountains that could help wring out more than a foot of rain from this storm.
For a while, it seemed like Trump was aiming for something similar with China — talk a big game, wring out a few concessions for a few specific industries, and declare victory.
"Those companies which can wring out the maximum cost efficiency are the ones investors should bet on," said Ajay Bodke, head of portfolio management services at financial firm Prabhudas Lilladher in Mumbai.
But people involved in the process long believed that Verizon, with its enormous cash pile and its ability to wring out efficiencies by merging Yahoo with AOL, was the most likely winner.
The combination of yoga (to wring out the body's toxins) and meditation (to flood the mind with stillness) felt infinitely more organic than Israel's gathering — the focus was actually on the body.
Beyond productivity problems and geriatric Gene no longer working at the machine, there's a sense that big multinational companies may have wrung all the efficiencies they're going to wring out of the system.
No. Ever the opportunist, Drake's using this thing with Meek to wring out more street cred, and that's an unusual gambit around someone who's seen the inside of real jail a couple times.
Many multi-part series, in particular, are like the Harry Potter books: chatty, repetitive, and discursive, churning through tons and tons of plot (and pages) to wring out a modest bit of meaning.
If swimming, sangria and siestas fail to soothe MPs' nerves, Mrs May will face defeat in the autumn, as EU negotiators wring out concessions that make the deal even less palatable to its critics.
HBO somehow managed to turn his hulking fantasy series into a global cultural juggernaut, and now everybody is racing to adapt his other books in hopes that they can wring out another ratings bonanza.
"It's a friendly seller, it's a good price, they know the properties so they will be able to able to wring out more savings, and they'll be able to cover their financing," he said.
On the other side of the ledger is the savings the government can wring out of the health system by setting the prices doctors, hospitals, and pharmaceutical companies can charge and by simplifying administration.
There are times when my diaphragm is sore at the end of a four- or five-hour recording session, just because the challenge is to wring out every possible option for every piece of dialogue.
Hardtop versions of the the M Roaster, called the M Coupe, are more popular with collectors because the stiffer body — thanks to that added roof structure — can wring out more of the engine's performance potential.
The next recession is lurking out there, and when it hits, whatever gains American workers were able to wring out of the economic expansion will be lost to the long-term weakness of their bargaining clout.
Yet Witt manages to wring out plenty of insight from her doldrums: Internet dating had evolved to present the world around us, the people in our immediate vicinity, and to fulfill the desires of a particular moment.
This is somewhat baffling, but we can intuit that Ticketmaster knows just how dedicated fans are to seeing their favorite artists, and how much they can wring out of them in that moment of high-stakes desperation.
America's relationship with its allies now largely turns on how much cash the President can wring out of them, in the form of higher defense spending and bigger subsidies for US troops in places like South Korea.
The best way to sanitize your keyboard is to use a microfiber cloth that's lightly dampened with a disinfectant solution or a disinfectant wipe (just wring out most of the liquid first) and gently wipe the keys down.
" What The Muse is trying to wring out of employees, she continues, is ultimately less feedback of the "I love this place" variety, and more "this place is hard-charging" or "this place is very individualistic versus collaborative.
The group managed to wring out cost cuts, however, to grow organic adjusted core earnings by 2.9 percent to 13 billion euros ($7.96 billion) for the six months to the end of September, in line with market forecasts.
That's because manufacturers are under intense pressure to meet strict fuel economy standards by 2025 and they are using ever more creative ways to wring out every last bit of fuel efficiency from conventional gasoline and diesel engines.
And while we're modernizing the agency to wring out every inefficiency we can, many of the delays that have long been attributed to the agency occur simply because we won't let construction proceed unless the building is safe.
So the most plausible interpretation of his administration's strategy is that it's trying to maximize the political capital he can wring out of each initiative -- a sure sign that an election is just 18 months away and approaching fast.
Road warriors search out "points gurus", who pass on wisdom about how to wring out every last air mile and hotel upgrade from a programme, whether by signing up for a new credit card or booking a particular flight.
The company concedes that it has debated this question, but, so far, has come down on the side of keeping the huge program in one piece and working to make it faster and wring out any bugs that occur.
After pitching himself to voters as a hard-nosed negotiator who could easily wring out of the political system accomplishments that had eluded all past presidents, Donald Trump turns out to be uniquely bad at quarterbacking legislation through Congress.
Weird ocean scene aside, this is actual plot information, featuring an actual protagonist and a clearly defined mission, explicitly spelled out in a trailer without viewers having to obsessively parse every individual shot and wring out a meaning. Hallelujah!
Though the margin of defeat was less than the rejection of the previous version in January, it remained sufficiently large to rule out the possibility of May going back to the European Union to try to wring out further concessions.
We ended with 30 minutes on the CVAC (Cylic Variations in Adaptive Conditioning), a slightly scary looking pod that uses fluctuating elevation, atmospheric pressure and oxygen to essentially wring out metabolic waste and help the body quickly recover from a workout.
We both get frustrated, and B. "removes himself from the situation" and then proceeds to read in bed while I wring out the entire load of laundry by hand over the bathtub and scoop all of the water out of the machine.
After years of lobbying, coercing and influencing the Obama administration, their efforts were reversed by the solicitor's opinion and they no longer have a path to use the arbitrary government decisions to wring out money, power and control of American industry and hamstring our economy.
U.S. oil producers, which have been spending and drilling less as investors focus on returns, have shifted focus to drilling longer lateral wells requiring more sand and pumping in more proppant per well to wring out as much oil as possible at cheaper prices.
Mr. Scalise, who can be seen after House votes cheerfully plowing through the Capitol like a bobcat on the hunt for his next meal, is popular among his colleagues, who say he refrains from the sort of hardball tactics that whips sometimes use to wring out votes.
Mr. Paes boasts that Rio is in good financial shape despite the expense of preparing for the Olympics, but Rio de Janeiro State, which is responsible for water cleanup, recently declared a "state of public calamity" in an effort to wring out more money from the federal government.
In 2016, they set up in the hallowed ground of Philip Johnson's Glass House in New Canaan, Connecticut, bringing along singing glass bowls and keyboards as well as attaching contact mics to the panels of the building itself, brushing the walls with mallets and seeing what sonic textures they could wring out of it.
"Yesterday's Not Here" meanwhile sounds like a duet between the Kinks and Giorgio Moroder (a beautiful thing, obviously, and all the more poignant lyrically now Pete's no longer with us), while the closing track, "It's Hard Enough Knowing," is a gorgeously weighted electronic waltz that traverses a tightrope slowly but elegantly in order to wring out all the tension.
The shift happened after publications realized that they weren't making enough money from banner ads (which have dismal click-through rates of around one-tenth of a percent) and before they started cutting deals directly with large tech platforms like Facebook and Google to serve their content to broader audiences and try to wring out some revenue.
While attempts to cut costs, centralise administration, and wring out economies of scale from Electrolux's operations were made in the 1960s and 1970s with the focus so firmly on growth, further company-wide restructuring efforts only began in the late 1990s.
Extraction of Modeccin from the roots of Adenia digitata follows the following procedure. It is firstly chopped into small pieces and then soaked in a sodium chloride solution overnight. It is then homogenised in a Waring Blender and left standing overnight. A cheesecloth is used to wring out all moisture from the mixture.
Let it be! is all I say and, looking like a drowned rat, > I walk on, Finally can't go on any longer and take shelter in the lee of a > roadside warehouse. I wring out my clothes, each lunch, stay there for two > hours. Deluge!—no other word for it—violent wind lashing it around, sheets > of rain streaming sideways like a loose blind.
Rupert Hawksley of i called the series "camp and gaudy with plenty of oo-er humour" and remarked, "Emily’s confusion between grief and anger over her father’s disappearance was cleverly handled by [the writers], who managed to wring out just the right amount of emotion, never dampening the jaunty, end-of-the-pier feel". Alex Fletcher of BT praised the cast and described the series as "a deliciously bonkers escape to seaside nostalgia".
In Wales and Cornwall a passerby must avoid being seen by the washerwomen. If they do get seen however, they are required to help wring out the sheets. If they twist the sheets in the same direction as the washerwomen, the individual's arms will be wrenched from their sockets and they will get pulled into the wet sheets and killed instantly. If, however, they twist in the opposite direction, the washerwomen are required to grant the person three wishes.
The staff at Variety magazine liked the film and wrote, "The hard-hitting suspense of the chase formula is given topnotch presentation in Cry of the City. It's an exciting motion picture, credibly put together to wring out every bit of strong action and tension inherent in such a plot. Robert Siodmak's penchant for shaping melodramatic excitement that gets through to an audience is realistically carried out in this one."Variety magazine, film review, September 29, 1948.
Sir Timothy Shelley had at first agreed to support his grandson, Percy Florence, only if he were handed over to an appointed guardian. Mary Shelley rejected this idea instantly.Spark, 102–03; Seymour, 321–22. She managed instead to wring out of Sir Timothy a limited annual allowance (which she had to repay when Percy Florence inherited the estate), but to the end of his days he refused to meet her in person and dealt with her only through lawyers.
Autograph replica of the original, Fogg Museum A young maidservant bends over to wring out linen with her hands as she stares provocatively at the viewer with a sensual, flirting glance. She appears unkempt, wearing clothes which cover her body and red mules on her feet, but her ankle and foot are exposed suggesting a lack of sexual restraint. A marabout, a kettle used for boiling water, is seated on a small table in the lower left frame.
At bottom, Caetano was still an authoritarian himself, and didn't understand democracy. He was very disappointed when he discovered that the opposition was not content with what reforms he was able to wring out of the hardliners. Indeed, the elections of 1969 and 1973, as in past elections, were characterized by harsh repression of opposition elements. After the 1973 poll, the regime's hardliners used their closeness to Tomás to pressure Caetano into abandoning his reform experiment.
Tu says she was influenced by a traditional Chinese herbal medicine source The Handbook of Prescriptions for Emergency Treatments written in 340 CE by Ge Hong saying that this herb should be steeped in cold water. This book contained the useful reference to the herb: "A handful of qinghao immersed with two litres of water, wring out the juice and drink it all." Tu's team subsequently isolated a useful extract. Results were published in the Chinese Medical Journal in 1979.
At the point at which the shinai strikes the opponent, both right and left hands should be squeezed for a second which is called tenouchi, (手の内) also the right arm must be exactly parallel with the ground and at shoulder height. The shoulders should be relaxed. At the moment of the strike, both hands should flex inwards in a movement called shibori, (絞り) the Japanese verb for "to wring out (a cloth)". This flexion should only be maintained for an instant.
Their commander-in-chief that day, Marshal Tallard – who, unlike his subordinates, had not been ransomed or exchanged – was taken to England and imprisoned in Nottingham until his release in 1711.Tincey: Blenheim 1704: The Duke of Marlborough's Masterpiece, p. 88 The 1704 campaign lasted considerably longer than usual as the Allies sought to wring out maximum advantage. Realising that France was too powerful to be forced to make peace by a single victory, however, Eugene, Marlborough and Baden met to plan their next moves.
This book contained the only useful reference to the herb: "A handful of qinghao immersed with two litres of water, wring out the juice and drink it all." Tu's team subsequently isolated a nontoxic, neutral extract that was 100% effective against parasitemia in animals. The first successful trials of artemisinin were in 1979. Artemisia annua being grown as a field crop in West Virginia for the production of artemisinin, 2005 Artemisinin is a sesquiterpene lactone containing a peroxide group, which is believed to be essential for its anti-malarial activity.
Some drivers have been known to draft behind other vehicles, particularly tailgating larger vehicles, to save fuel. For example, hypermilers using this technique can achieve 75 mpg or more (a 10% increase in efficiency of certain hybrid vehicles).Hypermilers' wring out every last bit of mpg , NBC News May 29, 2007 Some sources say that the most common tailgating does not save gasoline even at freeway speeds because one is likely to accelerate and brake so frequently that any aerodynamic savings are lost through the brakes."Tailgate for Mother Earth!" ecogeek.
The day after the sale opened, it was discovered that during the night thieves had broken in and stolen all the good men's suits. The members rectified this situation promptly by raiding their husband's wardrobes. The President appointed herself chief swamper and could be seen for days on end, attired in slacks and gumboots, shoveling snow from the sidewalk so the customers could be in. When the thaw came she made it her job to mop up the floor and wring out the merchandise, as the roof leaked in a multitude of places.
He praised the fact that the "dialogue captures the perverse sense of humor that many people in Northern Ireland employ as a defense mechanism", stating in conclusion that "in Colin Bateman's world, the blind see and everybody dies. The reader, meanwhile, can't help but laugh". Kirkus Reviews were less effusive in their praise, finding Cycle of Violence to be "less manic - except for its luckless heroine - than Bateman's blackly comic debut, Divorcing Jack", finding that "Bateman and his hero both pay a high price for the few sweet, funny moments they wring out of this vale of tears".
The Allmusic review by Brian Olewnick awarded the album 4 stars, stating, "If anything, the length of the pieces allows Murray to drift on a bit longer than necessary at times. As often as not, though, he manages to wring out some extra juice, making it easy for the listener to grant him significant slack. Still in his mid-twenties, this recording captures him moving toward the crest of his powers (evidenced in his octets) and is one of the better trio dates in his discography. Recommended, as much for the marvelous "sidemen" as for Murray himself".
In the second half of the 19th century, commercial laundries began using steam-powered mangles or ironers. Gradually, the electric washing machine's spin cycle rendered this use of a mangle obsolete, and with it the need to wring out water from clothes mechanically. Box mangles were large and primarily intended for pressing laundry smooth; they were used by wealthy households, large commercial laundries, and self-employed "mangle women". Middle-class households and independent washerwomen used upright mangles for wringing water out of laundry, and in the later 19th century they were more widely used than early washing machines.
" USA Today noted: "A military drumbeat drives Like Toy Soldiers, in which Eminem offers an explanation for his beef with the Murder Inc. rap clique, The Source magazine and its rapper/owner Benzino, and his part in a dispute between 50 Cent and Ja Rule. He seems to wish none of it had ever happened, and he's ready to move on." RapReviews was less positive: "Continuing to wring out sympathy from his tear-soaked towel of a life, Eminem doubles-up with "Like Toy Soldiers," another self-produced, self-sorry introspection on the Slim Shady saga.
Buddy, dressed in a leopard pelt and wearing his ordinary shoes, steps from his house amid the jungle trees, thumps his chest, and utters a great yell before swinging from tree to tree down to the earth. Cleverly, he washes himself with the water of an elephant's trunk, steps behind the great beast to wring out his raiment, then, when again decent, re-emerges. Buddy steps over to a nearby pond, where he brushes his teeth with a reed thereby growing. We see animals doing similar things: a giraffe rinses its mouth and spits, an alligator cleans its dentures, and a monkey flosses the teeth of a hippopotamus.
Salazar saw no prospects for his regime beyond his death. Nonetheless, the Estado Novo persisted under the direction of Marcelo Caetano, Salazar's longtime aide as well as a well-reputed scholar of the University of Lisbon Law School, statesman and distinguished member of the regime who co-wrote the Constitution of 1933. Caetano tried to blunt the harsher edges of the regime he helped create, but the meager reforms he was able to wring out of the hardline elements of the government did not go nearly far enough for elements of the population who wanted more freedom. The Estado Novo would eventually fall on 25 April 1974 with the Carnation Revolution.
After some experience using L3, Liedtke came to the conclusion that several other Mach concepts were also misplaced. By simplifying the microkernel concepts even further he developed the first L4 kernel which was primarily designed with high performance in mind. In order to wring out every bit of performance the entire kernel was written in assembly language, and its IPC was 20 times faster than Mach's. Such dramatic performance increases are a rare event in operating systems, and Liedtke's work triggered new L4 implementations and work on L4-based systems at a number of universities and research institutes, including IBM, where Liedtke started to work in 1996, TU Dresden and UNSW.
According to Claire Webb of the Radio Times, Merton was "in his element pootling around railways with a flat cap and a boyish grin". Sam Wollaston of The Guardian, attracted to the series by Merton as opposed to love for travelogues, also observed that Merton pootles about, in the process producing a gentle but rather nice addition to the genre. Ben Arnold of the same paper stated that "Beneath a curiously niche premise....is a fairly standard, albeit charming, British travelogue show". Gerard O'Donovan of The Telegraph gave it three out of fives stars, arguing that Merton's role was obviously to wring out something worth saying from unpromising prospects, also observing that he tootled about, concluding that the outcome was worth a look, but was unlikely to become destination viewing.
Writer Bob Kapur of the Canadian Online Explorer rated Turning Point a 7 out of 10, which was the same as the rating for the 2005 event. The TNA X Division Championship bout was rated an 8 out of 10. The Six Man Tag Team match between The Kings of Wrestling (Kevin Nash, Scott Hall, and Jeff Jarrett) and A.J. Styles, Jeff Hardy, and Randy Savage was rated a 3 out of 10, while the Six Sides of Steel cage match main event was rated a 9 out of 10. In his review, Kapur stated that he felt the Six Man Tag Team match was "an overbooked train wreck whose only saving grace was Styles's performance, as he tried to wring out something decent out of the old-timers".
At first, it was ineffective because they extracted it with traditional boiling water. Tu Youyou discovered that a low-temperature extraction process could be used to isolate an effective antimalarial substance from the plant; Tu says she was influenced by a traditional Chinese herbal medicine source, The Handbook of Prescriptions for Emergency Treatments, written in 340 by Ge Hong, which states that this herb should be steeped in cold water. This book contained the direction to immerse a handful of qinghao in the equivalent of 0.4 litres of water, wring out the juice and drink it all. After rereading the recipe, Tu realised the hot water had already damaged the active ingredient in the plant; therefore she proposed a method using low-temperature ether to extract the effective compound instead.
The puritans Henry Barrow and John Greenwood were converted to Separatism – now known as Brownism after the Norfolk Separatist Robert Browne – around 1586. The pair joined and revived the London Underground Church. The church met in fields in summer and houses in winter, from 5am, sometimes worshipping all day. The rejected written liturgy as ‘babbling in the Lord’s sight’ and allowed any member to preach. According to a visitor, ‘In their prayer, one speaketh and the rest do groan or sob or sigh, as if they would wring out tears.’ The underground church, as taught by Barrow and Greenwood, believed that churches had to be voluntary communities of committed believers, and that the Church of England, which coerced the whole population into joining, was therefore not a true Church.
From Christgau's perspective, Mos Def offers a credo in the lyrics: "More of less than ever before / It's just too much more for your mind to absorb / It's scary like hell, but there's no doubt / We can't be alive in no time but now". Throughout The Ecstatic, Mos Def alternates between what AllMusic's Andy Kellman calls nonsensical yet intellectual raps and "seemingly nonchalant, off-the-cuff boasts", set against eccentric, lightly reverbed productions. According to The Guardians Paul MacInnes, The Ecstatic features his characteristically "fragmented lyrical style, which loops words within phrases and plays on sound as much as meaning". "Auditorium" showcases his "complex and convoluted" lyricism delivered closely in rhythm with the beat, Patrin says, citing the lines "soul is the lion's roar, voice is the siren / I swing 'round, wring out and bring down the tyrant / chop a small axe and knock a giant lopsided".
For example, Derrida views narrative as having a terrible secret, in its way of oppressing story: > The question-of-narrative covers, with a certain modesty, a demand for > narrative, a violent putting-to-the-question, an instrument of torture > working to wring out the narrative as if it were a terrible secret, in ways > that can go from the most archaic police methods to refinements for making > (and even letting) one talk unsurpassed in neutrality and politeness, most > respectfully medical, psychiatric, and even psychoanalytic. (Derrida, 1979: > 94). If story is more than fabula, dominated by narrative, it could have its own manner of discourse, rather than being subordinate to narrative. Derrida plays with just such an idea as follows in setting story in relation to its homonym: > Each "story" (and each occurrence of the word "story", each "story" in the > story) is part of the other, makes the other part (of itself), each "story" > is at once larger and smaller than itself, includes itself without including > (or comprehending) itself, identifies itself with itself even as it remains > utterly different from its homonym.

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