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Enframe

    0.05 sec.
En`frame´
v. t.1.To inclose, as in a frame.

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The reason, I believe, is that "book one" is largely based on studies that have focused on a conception of landscape that grew out of the English elite's desire to enclose and enframe the landscape as a frozen, pictorialized, and fundamentally illusory scenic object, to be contemplated and possessed as private property.
The company's design is said to produce patented single stage mixing with Inter-Swirl rotors on technical rubber compounds with water-cooled enframes giving enviable results, according to the literature.
The unfortunate dismissal of juniper as a signifier of identity could have unexpected consequences if followed elsewhere: Ginevra de' Benci's identity in Leonardo da Vinci's portrait in Washington, for instance, depends solely on the juniper bush (which curiously, Leonardo, unlike Pisanello, represented without berries) that enframes her head.
 
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