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But there was another, nondramatic, purpose for this vision.
January 1, 1953 Recording and performing rights extended to nondramatic literary works.
So feeble and nondramatic a framework is, though, just what Schubert needed.
Maybe the most remarkable element of the last week and a half is the thrall in which such nondramatic events have held us.
These, and his other nondramatic poems, are occasional-that is, they celebrate public events.
Lighting for corporate headshots is simple and nondramatic, but flattering.
"Well, they are going to bring the police in here," Mary Beth said by way of excuse, very practical and nondramatic.
Brickman found it "nondramatic and ultimately uninteresting, a kind of cerebral exercise."
But the nondramatic form and sardonic theme of the piece are only unconventional compared with a network mini-series.
I remember hearing a successful Hollywood agent dismissing the film as nondramatic; he characterized the voice-over as being like listening to a history lesson.
The tone here is more deliberate and nondramatic, a distancing mechanism that is probably necessary when turning one's own life into fiction.
L. 94-553, to be served as a condition of preventing the noncommercial performance of a nondramatic literary or musical work under certain circumstances.
The program, sponsored by the university's drama department, included student presentations of one dramatic and one nondramatic excerpt from literature reflecting a cultural heritage.
She is not served very well by the nondramatic and rather "academic" accompaniment of the Amsterdam Bach Soloists.
Most database registration claims are submitted on the form for nondramatic literary works (Form TX).
L. 94-553, and required by that section to be filed for every compulsory license to make and distribute phonorecords of nondramatic musical works.
"I believe in being responsive, in having that fire in the belly, but as nondramatic as possible, as conservative as one can be."
"Rain Without Thunder," a dreary, nondramatic tract envisioning an America in which abortion is outlawed, deserves special notice for its unfortunate timing.
Hazlitt felt compelled to add to his commentary on the plays some words on Shakespeare's nondramatic poetry, in the chapter "Poems and Sonnets".
While he liked a few of the sonnets, for the most part Hazlitt found Shakespeare's nondramatic poetry to be artificial, mechanical, and, overall, "laboured, uphill work."
"My explanation is that our everyday life has become very boring and nondramatic," said Jens Jessen, chief culture editor of Die Zeit, the German newsweekly.
Its "nondramatic" numbers are more active than the narrative, because it's in those arias and chorales that Bach concentrates the struggle to grasp the continuing significance of Christ's passion.
(4) A Notice of Intention shall be served or filed for nondramatic musical works embodied, or intended to be embodied, in phonorecords made under the compulsory license.
In the opinion of Samuel Johnson, Granville's nondramatic poetry is slavishly imitative of Edmund Waller; some of it, however, was popular in its day.
The earliest Passion plays of France and Flanders are thought to have their source in a nondramatic narrative poem of the 13th century, the Passion des jongleurs.