But the earlier repudiation of the Geneva Conventions exposes such claims as lies. |
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Under the Geneva Conventions it is a war crime to target deliberately innocent civilians. |
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Conventions could be managed, but the party managers' mediation of these crowds was full of risk. |
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The Geneva Conventions make reference to those acts which constitute war crimes under the Conventions. |
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The Conventions also establish the criteria that must be met in order to qualify as a lawful combatant taking up arms for the state. |
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Please, point me to the references in the Third and Fourth Geneva Conventions sanctioning the use of unmuzzled dogs. |
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Well, that's a unilateral decision as to how the Geneva Conventions are going to be interpreted. |
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State officials would then be giving their formal imprimatur to actions that the various Conventions condemn without exception. |
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The Geneva Conventions impose on those that become hors de combat the obligation to cease all combatant actions. |
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When it showed more prisoners, the Australian Defence Department said that its failure to pixelate the faces of captives was an infringement of the Geneva Conventions. |
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Amendments made to the Geneva Conventions in 1977 specified that prisoners taken in internal and civil conflicts must still be considered prisoners of war. |
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I'm willing to dilate on this and any other interesting tidbit someone happens to dig up in the text of the Geneva Conventions tomorrow after I get some sleep. |
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The liberal policies of Presiding Bishop Hines and the General Conventions of 1967 and 1969 led to a conservative reaction. |
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Breaches of the Geneva Conventions is the most serious war crime that Bosniaks were convicted of. |
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The best example is the definition of narcotics in the United Nations Conventions. |
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Henry Dunant, a Reformed pietist, founded the Red Cross and initiated the Geneva Conventions. |
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All participants were supposed to abide by the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907, but this was found to be impracticable for submarines. |
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On 12 August 1949, further revisions to the existing two Geneva Conventions were adopted. |
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Even without having a mandate from the Geneva Conventions, the ICRC tried to ameliorate the suffering of civil populations. |
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These incidents often demonstrated a lack of respect for the rules of the Geneva Conventions and their protection symbols. |
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The legal basis of the work of the ICRC during World War II were the Geneva Conventions in their 1929 revision. |
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It gathers delegations from all of the national societies as well as from the ICRC, the IFRC and the signatory states to the Geneva Conventions. |
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All sides had signed the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907, which prohibited the use of chemical weapons in warfare. |
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Tahmina Janjua stressed the need for restoring balance in the implementation of Chemical and Biological Weapons Conventions. |
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Shortly after the German invasion in 1941, the USSR made Berlin an offer of a reciprocal adherence to the Hague Conventions. |
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Geneva is the birthplace of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement and the Geneva Conventions and, since 2006, hosts the United Nations Human Rights Council. |
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When referring to hydrography and nautical charting in Conventions and similar Instruments, it is the IHO standards and specifications that are normally used. |
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After the House of Burgesses was dissolved by the royal governor in 1774, Virginia's revolutionary leaders continued to govern via the Virginia Conventions. |
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Moreover, according to a directive ratified on 5 August 1937 by Hirohito, the constraints of the Hague Conventions were explicitly removed on Chinese prisoners. |
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A SHORTHAND typist who helped to record the ratification of the Geneva Conventions in the aftermath of World War II has celebrated her 100th birthday. |
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It said the decision violates international law, international humanitarian law and the Geneva Conventions which prohibit changing street names in occupied territories. |
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The naming conventions of Intel processors has kept me a bit fuddled for the last few years. |
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They may hold conventions, but these are mostly formalities to endorse a decision that the party bosses have made. |
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It is true that this general election does still adhere to some of the old forms and conventions of British democracy. |
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For a good number of them, prices and allocations occupied but the background, with institutions and conventions occupying the foreground. |
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I believe in the various covenants and conventions that the Government has entered into. |
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Under trade law conventions, that means the rate would go to zero, eliminating the countervailing duty, he said. |
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In 1990, Project A-kon in Dallas, Texas, was one of the first US anime conventions to feature a cosplay contest. |
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Some religious tenets and social conventions ban copulation between unmarried couples or limit coitus to certain postures or positions. |
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Football's violence, it is true, is contained within rules and conventions, and controlled by a punishment regime, but it is also irreducible. |
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His journey therefore ironises the assumptions and conventions of his Victorian dinner guests. |
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A poetic, provocative choreographer, her work continually challenges aesthetic conventions. |
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Contributing editor Angela Dodson reports on how black books are part of many expos, conventions, and other large convocations. |
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A conventionalist claims that scientific laws or principles are not empirical descriptions of reality but arbitrary conventions or stipulations. |
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The prize for both the Democratic and Republican candidates are some 60 percent of their conventions ' delegates. |
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Congressional nominees are selected in party conventions, unless no candidate gets more than 60 percent of the vote there. |
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For decades, reporters have both praised and skewered candidates during political conventions. |
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Huge as this number is, it is likely to rise even higher during the national party conventions and as election day nears. |
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The first national party conventions, in fact, were held in Baltimore in preparation for the 1832 election. |
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In July and August the Democratic and Republican parties hold their nominating conventions. |
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The killing, actually, starts with the surreal emptiness and manufactured optimism of party conferences and conventions. |
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Union meetings were held at night, and training conferences and conventions occurred on the weekends. |
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Promoters and managers attend these conventions in the hope of pleasing the right people to get the right ratings to get the right fights. |
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A lack of substance in party conferences and conventions means that they merely serve to bring rhythm to the political year. |
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Amongst other roles, which have always been people orientated, she has also worked in public relations organizing conferences and conventions. |
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A number of important meetings and conventions are taking place in the coming weeks. |
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National political conventions are historic events that promise to generate economic and tourism benefits to their host communities. |
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Be aware of ballet recitals, church conferences, conventions and club meetings. |
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Membership in these bodies imposes in the British Government a requirement to observe international law and conventions. |
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But as a country, we signed up to international treaties and conventions that we would treat refugees fairly. |
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It can but it won't, mainly because it is against the international commercial conventions. |
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But this is exactly what most international human rights treaties and conventions, and national laws do. |
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International conventions and treaties represent the greatest compromises of all. |
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You have been signing treaties, conventions and protocols for children but have never honoured them with genuine intention and political will. |
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Copyright is subject to international conventions, but in matters of detail it varies between countries. |
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Over the centuries, however, various laws, treaties, conventions, and protocols have attempted to shield them from harm. |
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If we are not restrained by conventions, traditions or rules we are all capable of grotesque cruelties. |
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I can go on and on about our numerous sins, the way we flout laws or conventions or acceptable behaviour without even thinking about it. |
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Mr Swinson formulated what he described as the accounting conventions as to the recording of receipts. |
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The rules and conventions which govern news, for example, are quite different from those governing drama. |
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Already in his mid forties by this time, his editorial and advertising photography broke with conventions of fashion imagery in radical ways. |
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I think a lot of market conventions and property rights come from norms that emerge through people's interactions. |
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Never mind that most of the conventions of modern personal computing got their starts on the Mac and migrated later to the IBM platform. |
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On the one hand, it can assist firms directly through the promotion of shared conventions and practices. |
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This person will be expected to learn the software development lifecycle practices, methods, conventions, and standards of the computer industry. |
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It is the last sport or activity where decisions and conventions are left to the good judgment of its practitioners. |
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The use of naming conventions is a programming technique which has many users, but also many detractors. |
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This is not a precondition but rather a logical position, in keeping with the rules and conventions of international diplomacy. |
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It overturns conventions and is taking on the global market leaders in a big way. |
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First, the rendered moment is contained within a larger narrative frame, one predicated on the conventions of reproduction. |
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Indonesia, so far, has ratified four of the existing 12 international conventions on terrorism. |
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But it also says that no law may contradict democratic principles and that the constitution accepts all human rights conventions. |
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Even more insulting, some critics said, was the fact that the conventions were being relegated to cable news networks. |
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Authentic existence is a breaking free from the conformism and conventions of the everyday that we are thrown into. |
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Kristin becomes insentient rather than sap her lover's creativity, thus upholding the conventions of the period. |
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The remainder of the protection is dependent upon insecure conventions and understandings. |
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His creative approach to the piano defied conventions and his retirement from concertizing was equally unconventional. |
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You do have major conventions in other cities and there's kind of an understanding among some cons not to invade one another's turf. |
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And not only should the conventions be covered, but they should be given free airtime to do their infomercials. |
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Are the laws of acceleration and composition of forces nothing but arbitrary conventions? |
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She was already using female sexuality to question the conventions of novelistic discourse where sexuality was traditionally inexplicit. |
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The felicitousness of a literary utterance might thus involve its relation to the conventions of a genre. |
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With all these commonplace conventions, what is it that makes the file outstanding? |
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This may mean the person gives up interests and hobbies or is indifferent to social conventions and to the opinions of others. |
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At most conventions, there takes place an in-depth discussion on party policy. |
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I love Japanese street fashion for its amazing ability to throw all conventions out the window. |
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His work constitutes a radical, far-reaching overhaul of the conventions of French poetry and drama. |
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That was innocent and harmless but as time went on more and more conventions were broken with more and more impunity. |
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In order to make code really, really robust, when you code-review it, you need to have coding conventions that allow collocation. |
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He exercised a pervasive influence on European drama by challenging the conventions of naturalism. |
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The recent Republican and Democratic party conventions were illustrative of big money's presence in the major parties. |
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This play probably would work better as a film, since it already uses conventions, such as fade-ins, that don't quite work on stage. |
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All are frontally oriented works that expose conventions of illusionism by carrying them off of the wall into real space. |
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It has been demonstrated that the iconography of the Del Sarto altarpiece reflects Franciscan doctrine and artistic conventions. |
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And finally the formal conventions present in Duala, Ijo, Ibibio, and Efik art probably dispersed in the same manner as they do today. |
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The social upheavals concomitant on the war and the class struggles that followed it tended to undermine such social conventions. |
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Transit passes are available to visitors attending meetings, conferences, and conventions. |
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Her art consistently involves an interrupting of aesthetic, linguistic, or social conventions, which is sometimes done humorously. |
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He added that in light of extradition requests and anti-terrorism conventions, the pardons were illegal under international law as well. |
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The first two conventions cover members of armed forces involved in a conflict who are no longer able to fight. |
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Each court reporter might use different conventions to represent homonyms or other ambiguous words. |
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It defies narrative conventions by its length, its metaphysical breadth and its visual sumptuosity. |
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In his early 60s, Luke was his own man and paid scant attention or heed to the conventions of modern day life. |
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Windhoek promotes it self as an African destination for meetings, conferences, summits, seminars or conventions. |
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The new arrival with an irreverent approach to the stuffy conventions and personnel of Parliament made an immediate impression. |
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In suburbs, one could make new friendships and associations without worrying about old social conventions and strictures and separations. |
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They are orderly, diligent and respectable within their own conventions, as in his two pictures of peasant weddings. |
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There are conventions and stratagems for achieving the effect, and these are used as necessary. |
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By examining the conventions of published private letters, he shows how they straddle the border between fiction and reality. |
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Western cartographic conventions began to displace indigenous traditions in most of Asia. |
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Jude and Tess contend with the stifling conventions of their society and are dealt with cruelly by it. |
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Some of these traditions are metric conventions, which are constitutive for certain genres such as Italian and French canzone. |
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The four-player game is not easily mastered, but at least you won't have to tackle a statute book of bidding conventions. |
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We need to look at the social conventions governing the status of the creator of an image or artefact. |
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The political history of ancient or medieval India and the conventions of statecraft unearthed by that history have influenced Indians even less. |
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Almost every culture eventually developed distinct conventions, from the fiery curries of India to paprika-permeated goulash in Hungary. |
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However much we treasure a belief in free will, social norms and conventions exist partly to reduce the need to make choices in the first place. |
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We must therefore fight against these limits and not respect linguistic conventions like grammaticality. |
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It brought home to millions the excitement of gavel-to-gavel coverage of the presidential nominating conventions. |
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Surveys and conventions are to be held on this issue to sort out differences and discrepancies. |
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In a way, it isn't too dissimilar to the intellectual property conventions that exist for video games. |
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Political conventions have become distressingly routine and disturbingly predictable. |
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International law defines this type of action as a war crime under the Geneva conventions. |
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This summer, Episcopalians, United Methodists and Presbyterians will take up the issue at their individual conventions. |
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Anyone who met him at the conventions can attest to how friendly and accessible he was. |
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Would Fitzgerald have been disappointed by the derivative script grounded in the conventions of the nineteenth-century realist novel? |
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Because the Acmeists broke with exhausted conventions and vague mysticism, Mandelstam is sometimes mistaken for a chilly realist. |
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Current stylistic conventions dictate that authors should use the active voice in most forms of writing. |
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This is fed by conventions used in a good many American mainstream films in particular. |
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His works are kinetic, pulpy and filled with the conventions of noir, fantasy, and sci-fi. |
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The rank and social standing of the subjects of portraiture are also expressed by conventions, which shift with time. |
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Continue to allocate kanbans to the highest valued cell using the same conventions as above. |
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Rooted in immemorial folk beliefs, ghost stories, as a literary genre, have their own conventions and are a comparatively recent development. |
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As surely as it was a prank, this work was also, like the other ready-mades, a calculated attack on the most basic conventions of art. |
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Levis hid behind the conventions and decorum of poetry to disarm his readers and plunder their hearts. |
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To an Alaskan, snow is abstract art, smashing all the conventions and everything in its way. |
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Patterns of traditional kinship still shape the social conventions of family life. |
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Chomsky's political writings are littered with violations of these conventions. |
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Complicating this whole exchange are incompatible data standards and business conventions. |
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It is also often very insular, lampooning specific ideas or conventions which even some SF readers may not be familiar with. |
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Stylistically, both bands remained just outside any standard indie rock and alt-country conventions. |
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The constitution, the penal code, and international and human rights conventions are the only guide to what is acceptable and what is not. |
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They are brutal and remorseless killers, undeserving of the legalism of international conventions, the U.S. government argues. |
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These political conventions are a real piece of Americana, a genuine bit of folk culture. |
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So why do we make such a fuss over the Democratic and Republican conventions? |
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Charlie's Angels is a film that never takes the requisite conventions and demands of traditional narrative film-making too much to heart. |
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Will their activities still be subject to the standards laid down in the laws of war, most particularly the 1949 Geneva conventions? |
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If they surrender, you must accord them their rights under the laws of war and international conventions. |
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It has been a convention, if we are talking about conventions, that members are allowed a lead-in to a debate. |
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Opponents deserved no respect and the conventions of war went by the board. |
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The film breaks with many narrative conventions usually associated with noir. |
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In his lede, Simon explains that presidential nominees once avoided the political conventions that picked them. |
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He quickly rectified that error by bowing to the conventions of hippiedom and restyled himself as Jeff Starship. |
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It's that Tharp has taken the rather tired conventions of the story ballet and retooled them for the twenty-first century. |
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Gardener could have easily become a tired spy movie retread, but director Meirelles gives it a major push above the conventions of the genre. |
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Fandom by 1972 had exploded into an international phenomenon with conventions and assorted gatherings taking place all over our planet. |
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It fostered a vigorous but conservatively minded fandom, which still flourishes and holds many conventions, large and small. |
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But it is tied into international agreements, conventions, and understandings. |
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Hard cases make bad law, but antiquated conventions make bad legal practice. |
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The whole point of the experience was to be liberated from social conventions, not to create new ones. |
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Informants lost to historical representation by virtue of the aporia or oversights of historical conventions were not my primary concern. |
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With regard to appellatives, it is only the use of capital letters that bears resemblance to German writing conventions. |
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The conventions of romantic comedy are parodied through the 'romance' between these two characters. |
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It prevents him from seeking freedom through social conventions and laws, from establishing a comfortable niche in conventional society. |
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Young people, as a rule, prefer novelty to conventions, breaking fresh ground to following the beaten track. |
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Competition was artificial, and took place according to codes of rules and the conventions of fair play. |
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Generally speaking, the presidential nominees from the parties choose at their party's conventions their vice presidential running mates. |
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Here is how this four byte sequence is interpreted as an unsigned integer under the two ordering conventions. |
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It makes free with cultural conventions in a way we find charming, funny, winsome and sometimes freeing. |
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The slate had to be cleaned of all bourgeois conventions, traditions and expectations. |
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He doesn't nudge and wink his way through, tee-heeing at the conventions of the genre. |
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If party managers had been looking to conventions as a process of crowd management it was soon clear that it was not such a simple matter. |
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Isn't it bad enough that everyday existence is bounded by laws and conventions, without art feeling that it has to follow suit? |
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After the national conventions, the two parties presidential hopefuls can concentrate on campaigning for the ultimate prize in American politics. |
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You remember the complaints during the Democratic and Republican national conventions in Boston and New York last year? |
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He pulled and pushed at the social and theatrical conventions of his day and constantly experimented with new dramatic form and technique. |
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The first was the birth or natal status of the child defined by social and canonical conventions, and the social status of the parents. |
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Although none of her duties are unwomanly, Enid's nursing threatens the conventions of small-town life. |
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Many reviewers recognized his talents but criticized his uninhibited use of popular fiction conventions. |
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A bowler, bowling a grubber to prevent a winning run being scored, defies the conventions of cricket, but not its rules. |
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But whatever your views on the serial comma, I hope you will agree that some conventions are more vital than others in forging a just order. |
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He didn't follow conventions, he took risks and created his own, making restlessness his metier. |
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In the early years slash was disseminated primarily via fanzines, which were sold by mail order and at fan conventions. |
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Both objections mean that Iceland is not bound by the terms of those conventions as they apply to those species. |
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They adopt the mores and conventions of the society into which they are assimilating. |
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As most of you know, I am often found at comic conventions moderating panels and interviewing the great and near-great. |
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He then traced the gradual erosion of the conventions that had supported religious practice in Ireland. |
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We highly recommend this gorgeous, briskly-told picture, which avoids all the usual conventions of the true-life disaster tale. |
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Other, more established artists who get marginalized at larger conventions got the star attention they deserve. |
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After three pieces of varyingly challenging ear candy, Ravel was refreshing in how he makes no concessions to the conventions of the listener. |
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Interpretation is a struggle between instinctive, untutored, untheorized modes of appropriation and institutional conventions, codes, practices, and doctrinal manipulation. |
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This year, both announced that they plan to give full gavel-to-gavel coverage of both conventions on the Internet and selected prime time television coverage. |
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They also serve to illustrate why it is easy to confuse the various geometric forms represented by sets of numeric indices unless one is aware of these conventions. |
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Yet it is a tragic irony that despite a plethora of prohibitive laws and international conventions, this abominable child labor system has been thriving uninhibited. |
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Even at the Commonwealth level, there were times when the Chief Justice thought he had a responsibility to throw the proprieties and conventions to the wind. |
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By poking fun at the bodies or habits of the powerful, comic cards could attack social proprieties and conventions without accountability or retribution. |
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The husky voice, the delivery, the winking humor, and the sly references to acting conventions gone by all suggested a bona-fide artiste, not just a painted gorgon. |
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But if all that is true, then why is ABC, like the other broadcast networks, devoting a mere three hours of prime time over four nights for these conventions? |
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It's important to follow the conventions of punctuation in a paper for school. |
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They say school is just as important for teaching children social codes and conventions as for teaching math. |
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The director's use of the usual romantic conventions made the film boring and predictable. |
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They are self-referential, sculpted by parody or subversive of conventions, and ambitiously re-inventive. |
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He flouted so many conventions of what the West regards as good taste that he seemed to be angling for a role as Dr. Evil. |
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Though her work discords with the conventions of American medicine, she sees herself on the side of an older tradition. |
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Also, she was tall and thin, too, further adding to the ways she met the physical beauty conventions. |
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Years, months, and days can, at least in theory, be based on celestial realities, but minutes and seconds are mostly conventions. |
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He uses various comic conventions such as satire, farce, absurdism, and irony to attack widely divergent cultural philosophies, politics, and ethics. |
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Reformists say the amount of public funding limits for the conventions and the campaigns need to be raised so candidates won't have to turn to private interest money. |
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It has killed over 200 people on screen, plenty of cinematic conventions regarding good taste, and at least one movie theater. |
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To reclaim it, he had to move beyond established conventions about how a literary career should be conducted. |
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They were simply seen as easy, wealthy targets, confounding local conventions of the time. |
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Growing up, I started to attend comic conventions and to be aware of the cosplay world. |
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Although Banalata is not formally defined as a widow because she never married, she is still subject to social conventions that make her a second-class citizen. |
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From the outset, the picture signals a definite genre tradition, and from it flows hommages to the form, to old masters, and to the conventions and themes of wuxia. |
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The involvement of women in directing teen comedies has expanded cinematic depictions of gender through negotiating the reinvention of generic conventions. |
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Tris refuses to conform to societal conventions, both in terms of her divergence and her sexuality. |
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It was an era when politics had passion and party political conventions could be dramatic, world-changing events rather than media-manipulated yawns. |
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One wonders what such commentators would make of the recently developed notion that local laws should be ameliorated not by local sympathies but by international conventions. |
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Unencumbered by stylistic restraint, the paintings, prints and drawings present a visionary social realm, freed from the conventions of naturalist description. |
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Vernacular and academic orthography are therefore often sharply contrasted, the latter having strict conventions for transliterating Arabic into Roman script. |
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I'm fascinated by the period of early romanticism, when the composers of the time continued to inhabit some classical conventions but work outwards from within those. |
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If we have spent several class periods introducing conventions of reasoned evidence in argumentative writing, we usually look for such features in student papers. |
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A given film adheres to enough conventions to make you feel comfortable, to make itself easily locatable when your mood dictates the search through movie listings. |
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Some of their public meetings and conventions were recorded, but I have been unable to locate minutes from any secret meetings of individual lodges. |
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He is making the rounds of all the mystery conventions, taking bows for his long and prosperous career, which may be winding down a bit after all these years. |
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You'd hope it would be used for rather more interesting events than the usual run of annual trade and professional and party political conventions. |
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However, it is indeed possible to devise a system of differencing based on tanistry, which could be completely compatible with Gaelic conventions of inheritance. |
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He had taught them about Nietzsche and his philosophy of the overman, a superior man who did not have to obey conventions and morals made for inferiors. |
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By 1952 the conventions were designed for the visual medium of television. |
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The drama uses conventions of televisual reality, grounding the drama in the real world, making it more accessible for the viewer and more easily appropriated by them. |
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It also refuses to join chemical and bacteriological weapon conventions. |
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There have been other conventions that fell dutifully into line behind the standard-bearer without an excess of affection. |
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The book is fascinating partly for its illumination of the origins of current conventions. |
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The Robin Hood created by the ballad-mongers was an adaptation of the medieval outlaw figure to conform to the general conventions of the street ballad. |
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These methods would be inculcated at lively revival-style sales conventions. |
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It began, for them all, with the urge to seek some form of liberty and escape the stultifying conventions of Regency England. |
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She extols conventions that make civilized society possible. |
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Teenagers admit they have no interest in voting, while, outside the Republican and Democrat conventions, protesters face serried ranks of armed police. |
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He could compose in a metrical pattern that followed strict conventions. |
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But, your Honour, what we submit in relation to the conventions is that here you have a vessel which is flagged, crewed and owned by foreign people and foreign companies. |
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The show revels in mocking pop culture conventions with tongue-in-cheek humor and action figures. |
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While Mycenaean frescoes were derived from representations and conventions of Minoan and Cycladic painting, the Mycenaeans adapted these for their own purposes. |
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An obscure process of country, district, and state conventions exists to appoint these delegates to the National Convention. |
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Because otherwise social conventions and inequalities would be unbearably stifling and irksome, and terrible things and events would remain festering in our minds, unaired. |
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Despite its subject matter, the film is unsentimental and avoids the conventions of melodrama, with some of the most intense scenes being quietly underplayed and restrained. |
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The action in the Bond films is tired, the jokes are unfunny and the scripts rarely more than a hackneyed series of conventions and foolish plot twists. |
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The governing idea was that the agency for distributing the money should ordinarily be the Baptist unions or conventions in the recipient countries. |
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There are now eight unratified ILO occupational and health conventions. |
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Today, gays participate in the national conventions of both major parties. |
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There are unwritten conventions governing professional bar conduct. |
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The piece opens by acknowledging the popularity of breadlines among bourgeois urban explorers, and their status as sociological and literary conventions. |
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The initial chapters begin with feature by feature analysis and include explanations of the conventions and constraints on dealing with vector image creation. |
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Normally there'd be a longer primary campaign, there'd be a little bit of a lull before the conventions, and some speculation about the veepstakes. |
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Hazardous cargoes will be identified mainly through existing conventions and codes and will cover bulk and packaged cargoes, liquids, solids and gases. |
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Non-religious colonial art, which was mostly restricted to portraiture, echoed European styles and conventions although, due to the distance, prototypes were hard to come by. |
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Orlando itself, that is, is a form of escape from novelistic conventions, perhaps even a gypsylike text in that it is adventurous, marginal, playful, and defiant. |
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The observance of conventions, traditions, and institutional norms permits purposeful choice and action within a frame work that sets limits to possible outcomes. |
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The vulgar language was a way of signalling to the voters that he was one of them, not speaking in political officialese or respecting the conventions of polite society. |
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If the primaries are killed in these states, the parties will use caucuses or state conventions to decide which candidate's delegates will go to the national convention. |
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Just as a name must conform to the phonological system of the language, so the way it is written must conform to the orthographic conventions of the language. |
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One of the stumbling blocks is that the Indian government has not signed any international conventions dealing with children abducted by a parent. |
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I can deal with a film that has plot, but at times, it seems like the director's desire to break Hollywood conventions clashes with amateurish writing. |
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Language is a good example of the coercive nature of conventions. |
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Eight men were gathered around a black-tinted, glass, rectangle table in the middle of an unlit commodious hall that was suitable for conventions. |
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After all, if the wealthiest, advanced industrial nation can commit crimes, why should the rest of the world have to abide by human rights conventions? |
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His is an odd, disjointed book, but is also an amusing screed aimed at the Times itself, its greatest stars, and many of the conventions and hypocrisies of journalism. |
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The first priority of those papers, it appears, is to apply the conventions of journalism and record history, thereby creating an account readers may trust. |
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This is an internationally recognised human right, enshrined in a number of human rights treaties and conventions that Australia has pledged to uphold. |
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As a trade Minister involved in all sorts of issues to do with conventions overseas and signing treaties, he has a better understanding than most. |
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Because most countries are signatories to international copyright treaties and conventions, most works authored by U.S. citizens are protected abroad. |
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The job may have felt dirty, but it taught him that if he wanted to be a successful artist, he'd have to learn how to navigate comic-book conventions as a businessman. |
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The department has been effective in marketing the program though the web, at conventions and university activities, and through advertisements on campus. |
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Delegates are selected to the political party nominating conventions through a series of primaries and caucuses held in the winter and early spring of the election year. |
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While states have different methods of choosing their delegates, most come up with their final list of delegates following state conventions in May and June. |
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Party conferences, like American party conventions, have increasingly become stage-managed for the televised projection of the positive party image and strong leadership. |
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In Renaissance Italy, he became a student of Titian in Venice, liberating himself from the conventions of icon painting and developing a new fluency with brush and color. |
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Nor can we dismiss as trivial the part that gastronomy and other social conventions associated with feasting play in the civilizing of the human animal. |
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Davies avoids the trap by eschewing the conventions of drama altogether. |
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By the conventions of the time, Constable's picture was entirely unexhibitable and could only be regarded as a sketch. |
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Whilst it replaced conventions regarding the role of the House of Lords, it also relies on several others. |
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Rights in this way stem from social conventions that concretize and shape the values that underlie them. |
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Social conventions of the time compelled Sullivan and Ronalds to keep their relationship private. |
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If there's one thing I can't stand, it's a Babbitt. Say, there's nothing more wonderful than defying middle-class conventions. |
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But finally to return to literary conventions, it is plot, more than anything else, that came to seem antireal. |
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Amendment making power rested with the legislature in three of the states and in the other five it was given to specially elected conventions. |
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In 1880 black state conventions united in the national Foreign Mission Convention, to support black Baptist missionary work. |
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Then followed an arduous process of ratification of the Constitution by specially constituted conventions. |
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It means the Constitution of Australia is uncodified, it also contain constitutional conventions, thus is partially unwritten. |
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As well as the direct issue of money Bills, it set new conventions about how the power the Lords continued to hold would be used. |
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However, as conventions are merely convention and not law, the House of Lords would not be taking illegal action if they were to act otherwise. |
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