Access to city spaces should be guaranteed by virtue of citizenship, but it is increasingly becoming a privilege conferred by status. |
|
Most blog software imbues the end result with a blog format purely by virtue of its use. |
|
In reply he claims that he and his fellows hold their elevated position by virtue of a number of qualities which they enjoy simultaneously. |
|
As the recitals to the Policy make clear, the appellant by virtue of the Policy is entitled to be a member of the Society. |
|
Tattersall's has been able to withstand severe pressure on costs by virtue of a blessed business environment. |
|
Well, we are a world power, by virtue of history, and by virtue of our military power. |
|
On the contrary, it is only by virtue of the irrational and anarchic nature of the profit system that such a development could take place. |
|
An existing use simply exists, by virtue of long user or the implementation of some past planning permission. |
|
One says that our rights come by virtue of our humanity because we are created in God's image and likeness. |
|
Informants lost to historical representation by virtue of the aporia or oversights of historical conventions were not my primary concern. |
|
Pop music is attractive to advertisers by virtue of its popularity with the audience. |
|
Because when we're emotionally bankrupt by virtue of having burned ourselves out, then we have nothing to give. |
|
The 'masstige' brand commands a premium by virtue of sound branding and mass appeal. |
|
Heat, or thermal energy, is transferred from one body to another by virtue of a temperature differential. |
|
He was easily recognisable not merely by virtue of his profound bass baritone voice, but because of his girth. |
|
With this approach, only particles visible by virtue of their tinctorial characteristics were counted. |
|
When immigrants express such extremist views, they feel the land belongs to them by virtue of their ethnicity. |
|
He picked up four late wickets by virtue of keeping the ball up in the blockhole. |
|
And Shaitan will be left miserable and alone by virtue of both our prayers and our actions in the way of Allah! |
|
For a time, he simply continued by virtue of the powers he had won as a triumvir. |
|
|
The obtained data are particularly convincing by virtue of the bioscope's simplicity in design. |
|
Her book, by virtue of its sheer muddle-headedness, raises extremely important issues about the way science is viewed and taught in our society. |
|
Those woods with brown forest soils maintained mull humus, probably by virtue of their mixed floristic composition. |
|
New insurers are, in effect, partitioned off from the higher value plans by virtue of the uneconomic pricing this would entail. |
|
He provides a degree of unity to the piece, by virtue of his repeated appearances. |
|
It's only by virtue of the fact that there's not a whole lot of traffic that the complete unnavigability of the forums does not become an issue. |
|
And by virtue of the concrete connection to Silicon Valley via Highway 101, his brokerage had quick access to leading technology. |
|
It's less about creating minimalist abstract objects that, by virtue of their existence, speak to formal concerns. |
|
The Wigan game was always going to be a tight one and as it turned out the one goal that won the game came by virtue of a disputed penalty. |
|
Diana was a non-entity who achieved greatness through marriage, and by virtue of her beauty. |
|
The 64 runs that took him to 103 came by virtue of 14 fours and a six and a six and two singles. |
|
We felt kinda out of place here by virtue of not wearing polished shoes, smart pants and a designer shirt. |
|
He has a contract with the Jockey Club, both as a registered owner and by virtue of having entered his horse in the Oaks. |
|
It is made all the more objectionable by virtue of the fact that it offends not only the sense of hearing, but the sense of sight also. |
|
Sadly the bottom line is that she spends a lot of money with us and by virtue of that we have to accept her obnoxious visits. |
|
There is a notion that the world owes us a living by virtue of our creativity. |
|
As of February 1996, some 6 months after separation, he became entitled to superannuation, by virtue of that disability. |
|
It can be by virtue of a hit, a putout, an error, a forceout, a fielder's choice, a passed ball, a wild pitch, a balk, or a stolen base. |
|
He is a past master at supply chain management by virtue of its immense buying power through its enlarged customer base. |
|
The Lord would have us know that many are called to inherit eternal life, but few are chosen by virtue of believing in Christ. |
|
|
People recognized as white by other folk often don't notice the silent privileges we're given simply by virtue of our skin color. |
|
Jenni's pho, by virtue of its unusually heady, deep-toned broth, stands as a serious soup on its own. |
|
The result turned out to be so hard to understand that the novel acquired an aura of profundity by virtue of its sheer incomprehensibility. |
|
The work of art is true by virtue of uncovering or bringing out of concealment. |
|
All of these, by virtue of the information age, are characterized today by rapid change and often instantaneous awareness. |
|
Then there is also the visible issue of having inside access to another MP by virtue of traditional cousinship. |
|
Although resembling monks by virtue of their cowls and heavy draperies, the majority of the mourners are laymen. |
|
It would be lighter, and it would seem that it would shift faster, by virtue of short-cage derailleurs. |
|
Finally, everybody thinks that you are a good person by virtue of your job. |
|
The dilemma, like all ethical dilemmas, arose by virtue of a conflict between values. |
|
On the other hand, students taking the elective course do so by virtue of a preference, and generally ability, for the subject matter. |
|
Corynebacterium diphtheriae is the sole member primarily pathogenic for man by virtue of its capacity to produce diphtherial exotoxin. |
|
Every entrant had already picked up a prize by virtue of entering the tournament. |
|
Surely humans have the ability to intervene in any number of moral and ethical issues purely by virtue of their sentience? |
|
Marxism is Jameson's privileged hermeneutic by virtue of its breadth and its resolute exteriority to postmodernism. |
|
The music-hall song was a mass-produced article, with a select few numbers achieving immortality by virtue of an inspired tune or a good catchphrase. |
|
Perhaps the Germans dodged a bullet by virtue of their refusal to compete. |
|
Now, it seems, in order to cease being politically led nonentities, councillors aspire to become politically led somebodies by virtue of paying themselves more and more. |
|
The challenge of reading proprietary logs is immediately solved by virtue of the semantic ontology, so it's no longer necessary to examine each console separately. |
|
It is a group that formed naturally, without external intervention but simply by virtue of their involvement and expertise acknowledged by the community. |
|
|
Bears, coyotes, and pine martens, for example, frequently ingest berries when available and then move the seeds considerable distances by virtue of their large territories. |
|
They will not have a vote by virtue of having a crofting tenancy. |
|
In my judgment, a court which grants provisional measures is not by virtue of that fact alone definitively seised of jurisdiction on the merits of the dispute. |
|
They lived in what we called satya yuga which is the age when beings were in exalted state, by virtue of their exaltation they had spiritual powers. |
|
Although it has been widely assumed that ruminants, by virtue of rumen bacteria, do possess adequate phytase activity, there is evidence to the contrary. |
|
On the contrary, these things took on their nobility and their splendor by virtue of their character as our attempts to respond faithfully to our callings or vocations. |
|
The condition differs from the other forms of amaurotic idiocy by virtue of lack of fundal changes and the presence of significant cerebellar dysfunction. |
|
Thus by virtue of her humility she was raised to a higher rank. |
|
The model, in selling the image of her body, sells at the same time, by virtue of her exemplariness, the image of the body of Algerian women as a whole. |
|
His summaries of the world's problems are so well put that one feels they have been solved merely by virtue of the fact that he has described them. |
|
He postulates that cbd, by virtue of its ability to silence ID-1 expression, could be a breakthrough anti-cancer medication. |
|
But the military can mitigate the risks simply by virtue of its enormous logistical reach. |
|
Penicillin was first used in the early 1940s and by 1950, most Staphylococcus aureus organisms were resistant to the drug by virtue of elaboration of a penicillinase enzyme. |
|
When one is weak and the other strong, when one is coercible by virtue of this weakness and the other holds all the cards, competition inevitably becomes exploitation. |
|
Of course, by virtue of association, your friend's shameless ogling makes you look just as desperate, most likely to the very people you might otherwise have had a shot with. |
|
Although they are the only defendants who might, by virtue of their occupations, have had access to state secrets, they received comparatively mild sentences. |
|
Iran will be strengthened in the region by virtue of the mere fact that it was able to bring the great satan to the table. |
|
Every one of these detainees was either inadmissible to the United States or was deportable by virtue of immigration violations, and 505 of the 762 have in fact been deported. |
|
Fourthly, the contract may contain exclusion clauses by virtue of which one party seeks to exclude or restrict a liability which he would otherwise owe to the other. |
|
Photography, by virtue of its ability to capture an instant on light-sensitive paper is one that lends itself to a diversity of issues, some ethical, some aesthetic. |
|
|
Musical refrains differ by virtue of the score or the performer. |
|
Note that this includes George H.W. Bush as a southerner by virtue of his Texas residency. |
|
All outward signs suggest that catatonics have ceased being subjects by virtue of having transformed themselves into veritable objects. |
|
His form is comparable to that of his source text, if only by virtue of being stichic, but also significantly different. |
|
Club drugs also contribute to the circuit party culture by virtue of their pharmacological effects. |
|
Rather, they may see themselves as homogamous by virtue of similarities of class, educational level, values, and so on. |
|
An automatic stay by virtue of posting a supersedeas bond is only available when the injunction is mandatory. |
|
This leaves the question of what continuants are, if they exist at a time by virtue of something else. |
|
Similarly, Searle acknowledged that ostension, by virtue of the intentions of a pointer, fits the descriptivist thesis. |
|
Too many judges were either partial or incompetent, acquiring their positions only by virtue of their rank in society. |
|
Heteronymies, or propositions false in S by virtue of the meanings of the terms entering in them. |
|
As the chest wall and lungs hyperinflate, they progressively resist further inflation by virtue of their elastic recoil characteristics. |
|
She focused on other aspects of the government, but was a feminist by virtue of the fact that she was a woman working to influence the world. |
|
Brittany stands out in the distribution of menhirs by virtue of both the density of monuments and the diversity of types. |
|
Great Britain won their third World Cup by virtue of having a better qualifying record. |
|
The Hoge Raad der Nederlanden is the supreme court of the Kingdom by virtue of the Cassation regulation for the Netherlands Antilles and Aruba. |
|
Elizabeth II reigns over the Channel Islands directly, and not by virtue of her role as monarch of the United Kingdom. |
|
Members of the House of Lords who sit by virtue of their ecclesiastical offices are known as Lords Spiritual. |
|
Before the passage of the Act, Parliament could be dissolved by royal proclamation by virtue of the Royal Prerogative. |
|
At that time, the Saxons grew strong by virtue of their large number and increased in power in Britain. |
|
|
In the latter number will be my uncle, by virtue of his own and of your compositions. |
|
The periphrastic forms are periphrastic by virtue of the appearance of more or most, and they therefore contain two words instead of just one. |
|
This was done under the various Northern Ireland Acts 1974 to 2000, and not by virtue of the Royal Prerogative. |
|
In the United Kingdom, ex post facto laws are frowned upon, but are permitted by virtue of the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty. |
|
Only a small number of PRC laws apply in Hong Kong by virtue of stipulations in Article 18 and Annex III of the Basic Law. |
|
Caesar, by virtue of his military victories over the raiders and bandits in Hispania, had been awarded a triumph by the Senate. |
|
Aristocratic families became very important, by virtue of their ancestral prestige wielding great power and proving a divisive force. |
|
Fifteen years later he retired, and by virtue of his conversation and qualities, became a leader in society. |
|
Saint Simo is, of course, the patron saint of palindromists, or of simolarity by virtue of reversal. |
|
It's background radiation, it's not there by virtue of any particular event. |
|
We plan to take these sites to a much higher level by virtue of our alliance with Interlucent as well as our experienced health professionals. |
|
The Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Justice is Richard Heaton, who is by virtue of his office working for the Lord Chancellor, also Clerk of the Crown in Chancery. |
|
He told of his power in the prison by virtue of his being trusty in the Warden's office, and because of the fact that he had the run of the dispensary. |
|
The Senior Lord of Appeal in Ordinary historically was the Law Lord who was senior by virtue of having served in the House for the longest period. |
|
These cyclotrons will focus on isotopes used in Positron Emission Tomography, Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography and Therapy by virtue of their respective energies. |
|
For studying, analyzing and manipulating a macromolecule, the site-specific incorporation of reporter molecules, by virtue of ligation reactions, is a key factor. |
|
A group of unusual RNAs, small nuclear ribonucleic acids, is required for eukaryotic cell life by virtue of the activity within a larger complex called the spliceosome. |
|
A communion of autocephalous churches, each typically governed by Holy Synods, its bishops are equal by virtue of ordination, with doctrines summarised in the Nicene Creed. |
|
The company escaped a similar fine to that levied on British Airways only by virtue of the immunity it had earlier negotiated with the regulators. |
|
Certain privileges, such as residency of 10 Downing Street, are accorded to Prime Ministers by virtue of their position as First Lord of the Treasury. |
|
|
The other aspect of menhaden not covered in the excellent article is its unique ability to clean up harbors and estuaries by virtue of its filter feeding. |
|
The Act provided, as a measure intended to be temporary, that 92 people would continue to sit in the Lords by virtue of hereditary peerages, and this is still in effect. |
|
The Community later became the European Union in 1993 by virtue of the Maastricht Treaty, and established standards for new entrants so their suitability could be judged. |
|
Common cyanide salts of gold such as potassium gold cyanide, used in gold electroplating, are toxic by virtue of both their cyanide and gold content. |
|
For example, that females are different from but equal to males is oxymoronic by virtue of the nouned status of female and male as kinds of persons. |
|
Using whatever equipment the vassal could obtain by virtue of the revenues from the fief, the vassal was responsible to answer calls to military service on behalf of the lord. |
|
All matter originates and exists only by virtue of a force which brings the particle of an atom to vibration and holds this most minute solar system of the atom together. |
|
However, this type of economy cannot usually become wealthy by virtue of the system, and instead requires further investments to stimulate economic growth. |
|
But constitutional traditions are fully respected by the insertion in it of a section providing that it shall come into force only by virtue of an annual act of parliament. |
|
The third branch of God's authoritative or potestative power consisteth in the use of all things in his possession, by virtue of his absolute dominion. |
|
The Dutch came to dominate the map making and map printing industry by virtue of their own travels, trade ventures, and widespread commercial networks. |
|
Evolutionary theory states that organisms that, by virtue of their defenses or lifestyle, live for long periods and avoid accidents, disease, predation, etc. |
|
One would assume bikers to possess a modicum of common sense by virtue of using smogless and gasless devices for transportation, but that may be overly hopeful. |
|
The other two defendants could have been convicted by virtue of common purpose given that the death was an accidental departure from the general plan of the affray. |
|