However, I do not necessarily distinguish it from «man - made» nature — a city is as
strange as a tree.
Not exact matches
As I sit at the shot - at
tree The rough wound opens and grows
strange and deep Within the wood, till suddenly I see A galaxy aswirl with flame, I do not sleep And yet I see a trillion stars speed light In ever - singing dance within the hole Surrounded by the
tree.
It sees the truth of any sort of object (say an apple) not
as that object itself, in its
strange and lovely transience, passing through its various moments of existence (seed,
tree, ripened fruit hanging on the bough, fruit eaten or moldering away) but
as the unchanging form on which it is modeled (the apple that never shines forth in the beauty of its own color, that has no flavor or fragrance, that has never lived).
And I wonder if we don't get a little clue
as to what that was in Jesus»
strange — downright bizarre — image of a mulberry
tree getting planted in the ocean.
We're excited to continue expanding our mission in the US and beyond, just
as we have in Australia and the U.K.» No
stranger to setting new industry standards, Enjoy Life also achieved Gluten Free Certification by the Gluten - Free Certification Organization (GFCO) for all of its products, and has a full portfolio of 70 + foods that are Non-GMO Project Verified, Kosher and free - from 14 allergens (wheat, peanuts,
tree nuts, dairy, casein, soy, egg, sesame, sulfites, lupin, mustard, fish, shellfish, and crustaceans).
It is so amazing and
strange at the same time to realize how much inspiration you can draw from such small things
as the cherry blossom
trees.
The funniest scene in the film is Thor and the Guardians of the Galaxy (which includes a talking raccoon and
tree) feeling each other out, although the inevitable convergence of Dr.
Strange and Iron Man's egos provides a lot of laughs
as well.
Mads Mikkelsen, currently in «Dr.
Strange» and forever Hannibal to this fan of the NBC show, gives a glorious performance
as a twisted, crazy jerk of a man who, with his brother, tries to track down his family and discovers that his family
tree is full of nuts.
I referenced other games that used decision
trees as a mechanic, such
as Telltale's Minecraft: Story Mode, Bethesda's blockbuster Fallout 4, and the brilliant, emotional Life Is
Strange.
It was to this stem that he led me, and
as we approached a short but sprawling
tree, I could see that it was both
strange and curious.
A pair of six foot long monitor lizards clamber over giant granite boulders beside the beach, forked tongues flashing; Hornbills, reminiscent of pre-historic birds from a school textbook, squawk loudly and sweep through heavily scented frangipani
trees; fruit bats dangle like
strange fruit over the tropical gardens and macaque monkeys chatter
as they scramble through the
trees tops.
We found one Verreaux's sifaka, who was enjoying the sun atop a tamarind
tree at the camp entrance, gazing down on all this
as though it were
as strange to him
as to us, and perhaps slightly embarrassing.
The towns were compact, in about equal proportions, of bright, new wooden houses and great and growing forest
trees; and the chapel bell on the engine sounded most festally that sunny Sunday,
as we drew up at one green town after another, with the townsfolk trooping in their Sunday's best to see the
strangers, with the sun sparkling on the clean houses, and great domes of foliage humming overhead in the breeze.»
That's fair enough, its been used successfully in many titles, the most prominent being Gearbox's awesome Borderlands series, but
as soon
as I moved to the left or right while looking at a rock or
tree I noticed something rather
strange: the thick, black outline was quite literally moving around the object in question.
It was very
strange when I realized I was enjoying fighting tall skinny
trees more than bokoblins
as they all had swords that they'd put up to block my attacks, essentially eliminating the whole purpose of the sword controls being capable of slashing in eight directions.
As Deemo tries to help the little girl return to her world, they discover a
strange tree attached to a piano which grows taller with each note it hears.
There exists a picture of me
as a child in a
tree, dressed in faux Native American garb made of plastics manufactured in China, purchased at a store run by
strangers.
A lone figure walking beside an indigo swimming pool; a boat passing before the entrance of a cave
as a great black bird swoops by; a girl dressed in white, clambering high in the branches of a vast
tree on a starlit night: these are some of the
strange and poetic recent subjects of the painter Peter Doig, the subject of a major exhibition at the Scottish National Gallery this summer.
I'm no
stranger to this twisted perception of
trees as Whomping Willows out to get vulnerable little children that many Canadian municipal authorities seem to have.
Horrace Burges,
as a landscape architect, is no
stranger to building structures that compliment their setting so well — but he's also an ordained minister, which means he's no
stranger to the often curious calls of divine inspiration which led him to build the giant
tree house.
and it was not nearly
as painful
as the year of the «
Stranger»
tree.