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However wrapped up in sonorous stuff about synergy, plenty of mergers begin with sheer executive boredom.
ECONOMIST: How to make mergers work
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" The father, Day remembered, "spoke in a very sonorous tone, and it seemed to be the same way with Al.
CNN: Excerpt: 'The Prince of Tennessee: The Rise of Al Gore'
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It all adds up to a fairly amusing car to thrash: punchy, willing, with sonorous notes from the induction and exhaust.
WSJ: 2011 Cadillac CTS Coupe: Sharp��On the Outside | Rumble Seat by Dan Neil
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Its beautiful round tone and sonorous volume had not been heard before.
WSJ: When Two Makes Perfect | By Byron Janis
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And because of its natural structure, it produces a fantastic sonorous quality.
BBC: Becky's solar-powered radios on the right wavelength
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There's something, I don't know, something sonorous about the name.
NPR: Ponzi Schemes Have Colorful History
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Gregory is a good boy, though all the Latin he has learned, all the sonorous periods of the great authors, have rolled through his head and out again, like stones.
NEWYORKER: Invitation to a Beheading
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But in my mind, nothing holds a candle to Duke of Clarence , a sonorous title most famously held by a bloke who features prominently in a Shakespeare play.
FORBES: Connect
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Musically, despite the mix, the band surrounds the singers with a dense tangle of jangling keys, angular guitar and a fantastic brass section, which crafts the sonorous horn line in the beginning of the song.
NPR: Theron And Darrell: Wichita Linemen
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For all of that, there's no getting around the fact that NPR remains best known for its radio news broadcasts, which are often characterized by sonorous interviews with heads of state and winsome features about pumpkin-growing contests.
WSJ: The Improbable Rise of NPR Music
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PepsiCo (nyse: PEP - news - people ) itself has gotten fat by peddling many of the world's best-known nibbles and drinks--Gatorade and Pepsi-- and that sonorous trio of Frito-Lay snacks--Cheetos, Doritos and Tostitos.
FORBES: Pepsi's New Challenge
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Set to excerpts from Johann Sebastian Bach's "Solo Suites for Cello, " the dance features what Mr. Taylor sometimes calls his "scribbles" of movement, as the cast's five women and three men ride wildly or serenely into, over and through Bach's sonorous accompaniment.
WSJ: Paul Taylor | A Season of Scribbles, Pantomime and Bugs | Dance Review by Robert Greskovic