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Not everything off his drawing board, however, has resulted in instant swooning.
"He wrote about people swooning, going into a secular trance from the music, just being carried away."
Big Deal's swooning songs invite listeners to make assumptions about them.
But there was no swooning in that superheated room.
Her days of swooning and sighing were over.
There was a swooning, perverse satisfaction in it.
Swooning, Tuck noticed, looked very much like an asthma attack wheezed in slow motion.
The romantic heroines were a swooning, passive lot, while Emma is an aggressive, energetic woman.
Today she does less swooning.
The Lovers' Breakfast is €19.50 for two, but the inspired meat and vegetarian dishes may well have you swooning, too.
Frank Sinatra, who had famously inspired the swooning of teenaged girls in the 1940s, condemned the new musical phenomenon.
In the movie and in the movie theaters, Sam is the object of swooning fantasies on the part of the nation's single women.
The last was inspired by 19th-century romanticism, often characterised by an obsession with a swooning, anaemic (some might say plain silly) vision of death.
There is something obvious about the swooning, blaring unison melody that emerges from the murky grumblings that begin the first movement.
Two explorers of the river junction where swooning guitar emotionalism meets bookish lyricism join forces on this dreamy bill.
I confess, I much prefer the Lady Caitriona before me to the swooning, cow-eyed maid we have been seeing of late.'
The movie is quiet, modest and sympathetic almost to a fault; its scenes of emotional discord, accompanied by a swooning, sniffling score, seem best suited to cable television.
Mary took his arm, aware that Lizzie was close to swooning as they walked in single file along the White House roof to the trapdoor where steep stairs led to the interior.
When Rosalind is near to swooning over the vapid love sonnets that her beau, Orlando, leaves her in the forest of Arden, Touchstone pops up to enlighten her.
By way of unexpected detours - Jean Harris turns into the Madame de Sévigné of the prison world - he delivers up epistolary swooning, stroking, wincing, mulling, composting.
Similarly, the dashing art consultant about whom Mia dare not even daydream - until, of course, the point when they fall adorably in love - is turned into a bore by the book's relentless swooning.
Others said that the band were "assert a more serious side of their personality" "packs a pop punch" and complimented the "sheer swooning, girly drama of "Died in Your Eyes".
"Annum per Annum" (1980), a charming set of variations, begins with a sustained swooning - ultimately, wheezing - decrescendo and ends with a briefer opposite: a triumphant swelling statement of D major.
Lunch had been at the Spectator where the easy manners and bright efforts of the "hacks", as they called themselves, had entranced her as much as her directness and beauty had caused middle-aged swooning among them.