It was one of my biggest human-interest exclusives and, naively, I let it slip through my fingers. |
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But his sympathies were much more with Trotskyism and he naively thought he could change the Communist Party from within. |
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The Sheriff naively walked into the senate chamber, announced his purpose, and was promptly arrested by the acting sergeant-at-arms. |
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But I'd naively failed to notice that at least three members of the seminar were mature students. |
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Some people would have been naively hopeful that something of the truth would emerge from this. |
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By working less and staying at home more, I believed naively that my husband would come home to domestic bliss and a happy marriage would ensue. |
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Is it naively idealistic to imagine a British prime minister taking on such a Herculean burden? |
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In contrast to what we might naively expect, Sumerian societies were not governed by all-powerful despotic kings whose word was law. |
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He suggests that they may have believed, somewhat naively, that big business was whiter than white. |
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But to fair, this album is pretty depressing, precisely because it's so naively bright and rosy. |
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The avant-garde is to be understood neither as simply oppositional to dominant ideological structures nor as naively collusive with them. |
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Animal Farm emerged from and has generated political controversy, but it has also sometimes been naively misjudged as unpolitical. |
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If we theorize culture without considering the dynamics of fear or emotions, we naively underestimate the potential for social change. |
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We naively thought that by ionizing the ultracold atoms in our trap, we would be running the CERN process in reverse. |
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Maybe they naively believe that disputes among allies will quickly evaporate. |
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Kevin naively asks her at the beginning of their relationship to type a manuscript for him. |
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Interestingly, we are not offered a naively romantic picture of her mother's success. |
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This year's rising darlings Coldplay make sincere, earnest music, but appear almost naively accessible and unpretentious by comparison. |
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Then, as naively as if he were a bagman selling rubbish to a fool, Chullunder unfolded his proposal to the gravely nodding woman. |
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Those of you who might naively imagine that vitriolic historical disputation is a transient phenomenon of Australian academe should think again. |
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I went to the most sophisticated game, baccarat, and naively asked the burly pit boss what were the odds of winning at this game. |
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Is that not being naively ambitious given the slow machinery of bureaucracy? |
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Then it was naively believed that the west meant what it said about a new world order. |
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I also naively assumed that the schedules would help instructors plan classes for the various age groups. |
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The report naively gives the impression that if you have some sort of democratic control, all will be okay. |
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Yet the ancient paradigm of an empire was created east and west by peoples with a naively ethnocentric, Procrustean picture of the global community. |
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He has a sunny disposition and a well-developed, if naively natural, sense of morality. |
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Architecture seems to be entrenched in two equally unfertile fronts: Either naively utopian or petrifying pragmatic. |
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The Ospreys struggled to secure quality first-phase possession, naively throwing long at the lineout, which often yielded possession back to the enthusiastic Blues. |
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They ride en masse towards you, on what you naively thought was your side of the road. |
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To try to replace it with capital is as naively self-important as trying to plan and control how much toilet paper a nation will use in a year. |
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In my view, that would naively lead to the complete slaughter of many innocent people, both Afghan and Canadian, in that theatre. |
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The Russians naively think the Chinese view them as valuable partners in opposing American hegemony. |
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Mr Trung, who lived abroad at the time, wrote him a letter and, when he got no answer, naively published it on his blog. |
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Well, I naively believed that a layer will be enough to work on my first test. |
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The original novel caught the ingenuous babble of its protagonist, naively recording the happy circumstances of her household as her master closed in on her. |
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It is not a simple conversion issue, as was naively believed at the end of the Cold War. |
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I am wondering, perhaps a bit naively, why veterans would not have access to the long-term care provided in public institutions. |
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We have been at moments of opportunity too often before to be, if I may say so, naively optimistic. |
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But believing that prevention alone is enough to protect us would be naively optimistic. |
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After 1989, we hoped, perhaps naively, that the world, or at least a good proportion of it, could free itself from so much conflict. |
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He also naively insisted this whole controversy has gotten a little out of hand. |
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Once alighted, we naively succumbed to the temptation of leaning over the railway bridge at Haworth and got a well-deserved faceful of sooty filth along with many others. |
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That takes us back to many arguments that were already canvassed during the early select committee process on the previous bill, which I naively thought had been resolved. |
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Just as Ithaca came into sight, the greedy sailors naively opened the bag while Odysseus slept, thinking it contained gold. |
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Consumers seem to be neither generally cynical nor naively trusting. |
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Whether it did so naively or cynically, I honestly do not know. |
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People who listen to music naively, simply. |
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Some will naively argue that this is a coincidence, but I would like to point out that more objective observers will note the proximity of the European elections. |
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Of course, a policy-maker who recognizes that the information at his disposal is not accurate need not naively follow a rule that is efficient only in the absence of data uncertainty. |
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The minister argues, somewhat naively, that Canadians are acquiring assets at an equivalent pace while selling off Canadian assets, but this is where he is just so naive as to be almost dangerous. |
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I naively thought he just meant taxi companies. |
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To move beyond the principle of sovereignty without naively advocating the end of the nation-state: this is the crux of the problem in world governance today. |
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I was somewhat naively touched by the description of my answer being encouraging if a little unsurprised then to hear it described as disappointing. |
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They naively believe that the unpardonable sin of past eras was not having twentieth-century thoughts. |
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I was naively shocked at first and deleted any such message. |
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For example, Paget seems to decontextualize naively NSA-CIA actions in relationship to the military-force side of Pax Americana. |
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Those who did respond seemed wary of getting stuck with the label of biocentrism or being perceived as naively enthusiastic. |
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Which is not to say that he makes conspicuous use of a technology and naively makes the contemporaneity issue secondary to the technical apparatus. |
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The Zero Tolerance Policy is naively based on the presumption that women are not capable of subverting the intentions of the law, nor are they capable of lying or manipulation to further their own ends in a divorce dispute. |
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Our correspondent naively says that even Ellen Terry could not be so winningly attractive as some of these grubby-faced little children pretend, and even imagine themselves, to be. |
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The Commission has been naively optimistic in assuming that tomorrow's world will be free from the risk of supply shortages and will hold the promise of perfect supply-demand adjustment. |
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Client comments should be understood in light of the frequently expressed view that divorce almost always takes longer and costs more than the parties had perhaps naively expected at the outset-and it often hurts more, too. |
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During the years of violence, I never thought about leaving, and instead naively believed that we would move on to freedom and innovation, entering a Golden Age! |
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