Venture de Paradis, alternatively, who had lived in Tunis, understood Arabic grammar and vocabulary, but did not know how to use them idiomatically.
32.
His early works built on the achievements of Steve Reich and Philip Glass, delivering a post-Minimalism that was rigorously structured yet idiomatically conceived for orchestra.
33.
The term " Rosetta stone of Malta " has been used idiomatically to represent the role played by the cippi in decrypting the Phoenician alphabet and language.
34.
The statement that NFC had the note idiomatically'in hand'on 23 / 1 / 2007, in the evening is on the link above, Shuki.
35.
Aside from the very best non-native English writers, I find that a majority of non-native speakers of English write awkwardly and non-idiomatically.
36.
But Andre Cluytens'1956 document, mono though it is, has two factors in its favor : it is idiomatically French, and you can drink the voices.
37.
His affinity for the Mediterranean culture and his feel for the idiomatically rich language have made " The Postman " the most authentically Italian film that Italy never produced.
38.
In the same volume, Philip Scowcroft praised Edwards'books set in the Lakes'which he describes idiomatically and evocatively in a series of well-plotted mysteries '.
39.
Although Dodgson lacked any practical knowledge of the instrument, by the time of his Guitar Concerto No 1, completed in 1956, he had come to write for it idiomatically.
40.
Even in the early sixteenth century, these genres were truly, idiomatically instrumental; they could not be adapted for voices because they were not composed in a consistent polyphonic style.