The elephants are known to have a taste for rice beer brewed by tribal communities across north-east India.
You have to have a taste for the unconventional path, to be sure.
Both groups have a taste for sports, culture and entertainment, all of which can be found in town centres.
It's no secret that movie and television audiences have a taste for sensational dramas, driven by raw passion and brutal violence.
Rathod might have a taste for coffee but isn't prepared to pay for a serving in a new style coffee shop.
The first Green chancellor will no doubt have a taste for paradox.
He now delegates more, to his deputies and departmental heads some of whom may, as a result, find they have a taste for leadership.
If you have a taste for adventure, however, hiking the old weather-beaten flagstones that link up the remote villages is an intriguing option.
The Nobel Foundation seems to have a taste for controversial prize-giving.
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Gilanis have a taste for tart, fruity flavors like those in this dish, which has been around in one form or another since the days of the Persian Empire.
And audiences still have a taste for spy movies.
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However, the rise of the celebrity press in France since the introduction in 2005 of magazines such as Closer, -- the French edition is published by Italian company Mondadori, part of the Berlusconi empire -- has proved that French readers have a taste for gossip too.
Some critics of Thai lakorn or dramas say they have created a taste for simplistic, hyped story lines.
"The food and drink sector is performing extremely well and it is clear that many counties have developed a taste for Scottish goods, " he said.
He and Mrs Gandhi have shown a taste for redistributing the proceeds of growth to favoured constituencies, some of whom happen to be desperately needy.
Before you write any checks, though, be warned: That nonprofit may be among the many that have developed a taste for fee-laden, high-risk investments in the past few years.
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And so over time, human beings may have actually evolved a taste for fermented beverages.
The husbands have a lot in common too (besides an apparent taste for housekeepers): both have a certain reputation with women.
Chinese consumers seem to have even more of a taste for variety than most.
Its pamphlets have a near-fatal taste for grandiose pronouncements which fall apart on closer inspection.
In Barack Obama we have a man with little patience or taste for true leadership, with a defining disproportion between his experience and his power, who is a bigger hypocrite than Romney and far more consequentially so.
The current ambassador, Robert Tuttle, and his wife, Maria, a well-to-do couple from Los Angeles with a taste for contemporary American art, have taken a special interest in the house.
But India and Mexico have more in common than a taste for spiced popcorn.
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These tiny, fugitive-looking images, in which luminous fragments of nature pines bowing before a wind, the undulation of a flock of cranes were painted in colored inks on handmade paper by his collaborator Tawaraya Sotatsu and then written over by Koetsu, have acquired, for Japanese taste, the sort of cardinal importance that a fresco cycle or an altarpiece might have for ours.
Affluent urban Chinese who have travelled to other parts of Asia now visit North Korea for its rarity value, and for a taste of what they themselves have escaped from.
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Letting new providers in also attracts people who are interested in education and have a talent for organisation, but no taste for bureaucracy.
But the Japanese anyway seem to have lost their taste for what was once a delicacy.
Those who have little taste for religious zeal should welcome a subsidised, non-competitive market in beliefs precisely because it will produce lower-quality religion the one product for which differentiated and customer-pleasing brands yields no increased social good but much potential strife.
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Tyco's Dennis Kozlowski may have murdered good taste by using company funds for a urinating ice sculpture.
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