adapt (exact matches only)
They are so basic, so blank, so formless that people adapt them to all sort of uses, he says.
For David Rogers' adaptation of Daniel Keyes' 1966 novel likes to reduce things to black and white.
We want to adapt the standard formula to what France likes."
2004 will also see the arrival of a GBA wireless adapter, and a brand new 1019 memory card for the Cube.
We're creative people who must quickly adapt to ever-changing markets.
The people with MHE performed worse in car handling, adaptation, cautiousness, following road signs and rules, attention to pedestrians and cyclists, checking the rearview mirror before changing lanes, tracking and signaling to turn.
Still, I was looking forward to Starting Gate Productions' staging of Frank Galati's adaptation, a treatment originally produced by Chicago's Steppenwolf Theatre in 1988. Like any La-Z-Boy leftist, I feel a little tingle when Tom Joad gives Ma his famous post-enlightenment speech of selective omnipresence:
The picture, adapted from Annie Proulx'snovella by Larry McMurtry, will shoot this spring in Wyoming.
Caring for aging parents, witnessing the illnesses and travails of friends, adapting to a move to the suburbs -- these are all experiences that bind Pauline and Michael to each other, even as their very different temperaments and interests increasingly pull them apart.
He is also the author of more than ten plays, two libretti as well as a couple of Chekhov adaptations.
Some birds have learned (or we might say adapted) to cope with changes in their environment.
"Indiana progressed from an agrarian state to an industrial state and is now slowly adapting itself to the age of technology and information.
It is a difficult thing adapting a book to the screen.
It's raised the possibility that a virus normally confined to poultry is adapting to humans.
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