| 31. | Evans managed in prose something of what he achieved in his pictures : concision, clarity, no pretense, dry wit.
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| 32. | Those animals were apparently urging concision, simplicity, " making our eloquence more direct, " as Gerson said.
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| 33. | Greenfield described this need to " say things between two commercials " as the media's requirement for " concision ".
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| 34. | In his songs, Rorem, like Francis Poulenc ( one of his idols ), has valued concision, economy and literacy.
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| 35. | His new book does not pretend to be comprehensive; it aspires to the concision of a collection of three-minute singles.
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| 36. | El diario Liberation de Paris definio la ejecucion de McVeigh con una concision impecable : " Asesinato de un asesino ."
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| 37. | This transaction is described with amusing concision in " Molto Agitato : The Mayhem Behind the Music at the Met,"
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| 38. | Tuck's " News From Paraguay " may be the best book on the list, because it uses concision so richly.
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| 39. | Chomsky has elaborated on this, saying that " the beauty of [ concision ] is that you can only repeat conventional thoughts.
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| 40. | Japanese have long enjoyed abbreviation, but to be practical, writing on a typical 15-button keyboard calls for hyper-concision.
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