Sentences with phrase «from jumbles»

Here, black - and - white images extend the makeshift childhood fort — those temporary hideaways built from jumbles of couch cushions, blankets, and bedsheets — into adulthood.
Pick just one political story for each page, and 2011's kaleidoscope might just take a turn from jumbled to intelligible.
A legend has emerged from a jumble of facts: Someone using the name Satoshi Nakamoto released the software for Bitcoin in early 2009 and communicated with the nascent currency's users via email — but never by phone or in person.
I picked up some more false flowers from a jumble sale for about three euros fifty after some haggling, but my brother says the white peonies look like onions and now I'm self conscious that they do.
Henry is a commoner and thus illiterate, so to read you have to go get lessons from a scribe before then remembering to read a book every now and then to hone Henry's knowledge, allowing the letters to go from a jumbled mess to a slightly jumbled mess to completely legible.
Video clips from Bollywood, rap musicians, Jamaican dance clubs, and a call to prayer, among other clips, will overlap and compete in an aural and visual chaos with the soundtracks and videos from the jumble of sculptures in the space.
Migrate your pots and pans from a jumbled cabinet to a deep, divided drawer.
Do you find yourself tugging at a towel from a jumbled mound of linens threatening to topple out?

Not exact matches

And so often — too often, really — the message that emerges from trials is a jumble.
My notes from the section read like a jumble of mushy fragments — «equipping providers with the tools they need to do their jobs,» «augmenting the abilities providers already have,» «widening access to expertise.»
When lead qualification is an entirely manual process, you're asking your sales reps to digest and analyze a jumble of various points of data, often from wildly diverse sources, and then make a judgement accordingly.
Wow, I should refrain from typing when tired as much of what I wrote earlier is a bit jumbled.
All of the precious photos from my first three years were jumbled together.
A big wonderful jumble of a book, with entries ranging from the masterful to the risible.
In fact, both versions are actually a derivative of an English, cookie - like - pastry from the 17th century, known as «Jumbles
If ingredients are jumbled, it is too easy to omit that item from the recipe.
From afar it's a jumble of compass points (Central Michigan, Eastern Michigan, Northern Illinois, Western Michigan), notches on the Rust Belt (Akron, Buffalo, Toledo) and identity crises (Miami and Ohio — please, not Miami of Ohio and Ohio U).
The birth of a baby can trigger a jumble of powerful emotions, from excitement and joy to fear and anxiety.
Then, after months of worn out knees from scrubbing messes and frayed nerves from bashing our heads against the Wall of Lack of Communication, our brilliant son put together all the pieces of the jumbled up mess of a puzzle we handed him and was «trained»!
Being unable to move things away from him or herself, a baby can suffocate in the crib if it is jumbled with too many accessories.
And I'm not saying such people are bad or incompetent, but I think the [change from the] weft and weave of the House of Commons where you had all kinds of people jumbled up is something that older hands are quite right to regret.
The prose is so lively, the thinking so lucid, and the use of such devices so artful, one might not notice it all adds up to a 500 - page systematic analysis of a massive, dry, sometime jumbled philosophical corpus from a profoundly alien society.
Jumbles of wires protrude from an opening at the top of her skull, snaking down to her left shoulder in stringy black tangles.
But below the substation's chain - link fence, a jumble of cut and spliced wires snake from the overhead power line toward a cluster of makeshift shacks.
Speaking inside a mobile trailer atop the substation, Naylor says one of the things he found when he started the project was a jumble of unmatching equipment from various governments that had provided aid in the past.
One of those layers stood out from the others; it was a jumbled mix of angular pebbles and boulders.
A week later the researchers took each person's raw material — all those people, places and things from near and distant pasts — and jumbled it all together.
The data is all jumbled up, but what we really want is information from individuals.»
In recent years, several groups of scientists have grown lung cells from human iPSCs, but the recipes aren't perfect — the resulting lung cells grow amidst a jumble of liver cells, intestinal cells, and other tissues.
Ancient bones from many animals lying in a big jumble are more easily put in context than you might think.
Hepatic encephalopathy occurs when the liver can not remove certain toxins and chemicals, such as ammonia, from the blood.1 These toxins and chemicals then build up and enter the brain.1 Hepatic encephalopathy is one of the major complications of cirrhosis (scarring of the liver), and a leading cause of hospital re-admission due to its recurrence, despite treatment.1 It can occur suddenly in people with acute liver failure, but is seen more often in those with chronic liver disease.1 Symptoms of hepatic encephalopathy include mild confusion, forgetfulness, poor concentration and personality or mood changes, but can progress to extreme anxiety, seizures, severe confusion, jumbled and slurred speech and slow movement.1 The first step in treatment is to identify and treat any factors that cause hepatic encephalopathy.2 Once the episode has resolved, further treatment aims to reduce the production and absorption of toxins, such as ammonia.1 Generally, there are two types of medication used to reduce the likelihood of another hepatic encephalopathy episode — lactulose and rifaximin.2 However, it remains a leading cause of hospitalisations and re-hospitalisations in cirrhotic patients, despite the use of the above - mentioned standard of care treatment.
Modern physics began with a sweeping unification: in 1687 Isaac Newton showed that the existing jumble of disparate theories describing everything from planetary motion to tides to pendulums were all aspects of a universal law of gravitation.
For example, they note, Saitta used stegosaur skeletons from the Aathal Dinosaur Museum in Switzerland as a model to help sort out the jumble of bones dug out of the quarry.
Each contained jumbles of DNA sequences collected from environments such as soil, the ocean, hydrothermal vents, industrial effluent, and cow and baboon faeces.
At first glance, the jumbled waves from those areas might seem as varied as the sounds of Mozart, the Sex Pistols, and Tuvan throat singing.
JUMBLED The hippocampus (blue, mouse brain shown) churns out neurons (white) early in life that may disrupt memories from infancy.
In other cases, Cohn jumbled panels from different strips so that they had none of the ordinary structure found in comics — the visual equivalent of stringing together a randomly chosen set of words.
Researchers think they arise from occasional mistakes during cell division, when DNA is jumbled up and copied.
A lot of lecterns are fitted with plenty of drawers and cupboards, but a quick check of the one in our main science theatre last week revealed a jumble of forgotten handouts from a conference, an expensive but chalky calculator, several well chewed pens, some overhead projection transparencies with print so minute that I took one and frightened my students with it, a pair of prescription spectacles (abandoned, perhaps, because their owner couldn't read the words on the screen?)
The company has developed digital circuits which analyse the colour required and compare it with the colours available; the circuits then switches on a jumble of pixels to create a mix of colours which fools the eye into seeing colours which are not in theory available from the screen.
A jumble of nanostructures on this material's surface enables it to absorb light from many angles.
are now thought of as inaccurate because the lower layers of the ice sheet have become buckled and jumbled up However, at least one major cold and dry event during the Eemian seems to be corroborated by the terrestrial pollen record from Europe and China (Zhisheng & Porter 1997).
With its jumble of letters and adorable images, the My First Alphabet Crib Bedding from Lolli Living by Living Textiles is a soft, sweet nursery choice.
The more «weird» part of this outfit is my crazy skirt which was a jumble sale find, from ages ago.
The straws keep the chains straight and prevents them from getting jumbled up.
In my opinion so many people shy away from charity shops and jumble sales because I suppose the idea is a little bit odd.
Over the years, I've spent more money at charity shops and at jumble sales, than I have with a brand like Topshop (in fact, I can list everything I own from Topshop straight off the top of my head; a single pair of socks and sunglasses).
Unlike the clean, cohesive Casino, the action sequences here look like jumbled rejects from one of Paul Greengrass's Bourne movies (don't get us started on that phony - looking parachute drop).
Surprisingly, the movie's more weirdly interiorized and not as expansively outgoing as the book would lead you to anticipate: the Inherent Vice of my dreams would have more sense of the jumbled archaeology of L.A. back then, more of the grunge - funk edifices, the leftover potluck from previous generations, the smog and the unexpected torrential rains, the feeling of reality bleeding and strobing like a cheap color TV picture in a thunderstorm.
Despite her assistance in the physical, Cole is still jumbled up from the crash mentally, and soon he has to face a decision as to whether he will retire from his passion or risk his life for glory.
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