a porcupine's panoply of quills.
a deliciously inventive panoply of insults.
a panoply of colorful flags
all the panoply of Western religious liturgy.
a panoply of alpine peaks;
a panoply of colorful flags.See Synonyms at display
Something for Mr Kloppers to consider as he mulls over the $290m paid to BHP's panoply of high-octane advisers over the past 18 months.
When fat was seen as the devil, the food industry gave us a panoply of low-fat products.
Spikes in blood glucose after meals are known markers for weight gain and a panoply of metabolic disorders.
The arrows of the pleasant sunshine fell back, frostbitten, from the cold panoply of her unthrilled bosom.
And we think of inflation in a really singular way… and that really limits the vast panoply of tools that we actually have to fight this problem.
Some thirty pictures by the masters, uniformly framed and separated by gleaming panoplies of arms, adorned walls on which were stretched tapestries of austere design.
His figured panoply of death looked more like a disguise assumed in mockery than a fierce annunciation of a desire to carry destruction in his footsteps.
And yet unless the full panoply of our emotions is regularly identified and adequately 'felt', we are likely to fall prey to a range of psychological ills: anxiety, paranoia, depression and worse.
For that very reason Virginia Woolf warned women in the 30s not to be tempted by the panoply of power and the trappings of national honour – which would suck them into war.
Quicker than the thoughts could follow those unexpected and audacious movements, an image, armed in the emblematic panoply of death, glided before their eyes, and assumed a threatening attitude at the other's side.
They don't cough or feel short of breath, and they don't get the strange panoply of other symptoms that can herald a COVID-19 infection like frostbite-like bumps on the skin, diarrhea, or the loss of smell or taste.
a porcupine's panoply of quills.
a deliciously inventive panoply of insults.
a panoply of colorful flags
all the panoply of Western religious liturgy.
a panoply of alpine peaks;
a panoply of colorful flags.See Synonyms at display
Something for Mr Kloppers to consider as he mulls over the $290m paid to BHP's panoply of high-octane advisers over the past 18 months.
When fat was seen as the devil, the food industry gave us a panoply of low-fat products.
Spikes in blood glucose after meals are known markers for weight gain and a panoply of metabolic disorders.
The arrows of the pleasant sunshine fell back, frostbitten, from the cold panoply of her unthrilled bosom.
And we think of inflation in a really singular way… and that really limits the vast panoply of tools that we actually have to fight this problem.
Some thirty pictures by the masters, uniformly framed and separated by gleaming panoplies of arms, adorned walls on which were stretched tapestries of austere design.
His figured panoply of death looked more like a disguise assumed in mockery than a fierce annunciation of a desire to carry destruction in his footsteps.
And yet unless the full panoply of our emotions is regularly identified and adequately 'felt', we are likely to fall prey to a range of psychological ills: anxiety, paranoia, depression and worse.
For that very reason Virginia Woolf warned women in the 30s not to be tempted by the panoply of power and the trappings of national honour – which would suck them into war.
Quicker than the thoughts could follow those unexpected and audacious movements, an image, armed in the emblematic panoply of death, glided before their eyes, and assumed a threatening attitude at the other's side.
They don't cough or feel short of breath, and they don't get the strange panoply of other symptoms that can herald a COVID-19 infection like frostbite-like bumps on the skin, diarrhea, or the loss of smell or taste.
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