| 41. | The shape is known among scholars as bucchero impasto and prefigures later Bucchero pottery.
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| 42. | His appropriation of advertising imagery prefigured Pop.
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| 43. | He encouraged an expressionism that prefigured free jazz _ wandering trombone figures, chattering saxophones.
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| 44. | Just as his rise prefigured modern ideas about celebrity, so also did his fall.
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| 45. | The painting's bold brushstrokes prefigure the epic black abstraction of his breakthrough style.
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| 46. | Typological interpretation of this story holds that it prefigures Christ's burial and resurrection.
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| 47. | If I'm right about this reading, then Leibniz is prefiguring David Hume.
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| 48. | There is much in this novel that prefigures further developments in Clarke's fiction.
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| 49. | This prefigures some of the work later undertaken by the Albion Band and Home Service.
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| 50. | Napoleon's invasion was prefigured by the Swedish invasion of Russia a century before.
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