| 11. | Some believe that that frisson of the new can be reflected on MTV.
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| 12. | Yet this odd co-existence also lends the enterprise a real frisson.
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| 13. | Today's Boston connection, in contrast, ripples with political frisson.
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| 14. | Still, a viewer felt a frisson of horror.
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| 15. | The fact that they happen to be mother and daughter is an added frisson.
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| 16. | But they have the added frisson that the disasters they depict are for real.
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| 17. | Ford, too, sometimes creates this kind of frisson of anticipation of attack.
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| 18. | His past criticism of Bill Clinton's stonewalling adds a frisson of hypocrisy.
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| 19. | Throughout the play, such literary frissons occur.
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| 20. | And for an added frisson of mystery, we have an unidentified local heavy.
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