Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
Released in April 1979, it was produced by Dallas Smith for the Interfusion label on Festival.
Yesterday Dreams - Interfusion (L36733) (1978)
White On White - Interfusion (L36074) (1976)
"Yesterday Dreams" / "1000 Different Ways" - Interfusion (K 7195) (October 1978)
Carroll released a number of singles with W&G Records and Interfusion during the 1960s and early 1970s most of which failed to chart.
It was in the conflict and interfusion of these races, and also through the absorption of certain chemicals from the new volcanic soil, that humanity at last recovered its vitality.
"White On White El Dorado" / "Longest Night" - Interfusion (K 6616) (1976)
"Skating On Thin Ice" / "Ol' 55" - Interfusion (K 7390) (April 1979)
"Very Very Very Long Time" / "Move Me" - Interfusion (K 7708) (May 1980)
There follows here also, after a period of amicable interfusion, a growing, half-conscious ill-ease, which next becomes acute and leads to new explosions, and so on, in a fatal round."
From the time of Hesiod and Sappho, Catullus and Li Po, lovers of literature as well as writers have known about and felt the interfusion of life and art.
YORKTOWN HEIGHTS - Lagond Music School variety show; Interfusion, Ophir Drive and others.
As Swelter moved his little eyes to the right following every movement of the other's body, he found that his vision was being impeded by so heavy an interfusion of ancient webbing that it would be unwise for him to remain where he was.
--But at the other end of the rainbow, where the gray rain was tempered along the grass and leaves by a tender interfusion of violet and gold in the meadows beyond Lambeth, what think you that I found instead of a mitre?
Fantasy also figures centrally in the work of Salman Rushdie, its interfusion with more prosaic material demonstrating Rushdie's incorporation into the novel in English of the exuberant magic realism, developed by South Americans such as Gabriel García Márquez.
The word was defined by its inventor, Milton A Smith, as "multiloquence characterized by consummate interfusion of circumlocution or periphrasis, inscrutability, and other familiar manifestations of abstruse expatiation commonly utilized for promulgations implementing Procrustean determinations by governmental bodies."