Since the story centers on a disabled woman's body, revulsion is a culturally supported reaction. |
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What are the implications of historically and culturally informed findings for strategies of educational reform? |
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Although the present top leadership is not culturally inclined towards extremism, turning the tide may no longer be easy. |
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The company is possibly the most culturally significant publisher in Britain in the twentieth century. |
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Civilizations ranging from the Canaanite to the Ottoman have left their mark on an ever-growing, culturally rich and sophisticated city. |
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She was neither a child of the ghetto nor a culturally or educationally deprived person. |
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We provide resource persons for our students from culturally diverse backgrounds. |
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On a day for women, culturally taboo subjects like female sexuality can be openly acknowledged. |
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The Melbourne architect has quietly earned an international reputation for his environmentally sensible and culturally sensitive work. |
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It was accused of being culturally irrelevant, economically unviable and technologically defunct. |
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This declaration proclaims that all individuals are equal and entitled to certain freedoms and rights, both socially and culturally. |
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Each country has and does borrow culturally from each other but each does maintain unique cultural traditions. |
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The bridge unites the countries economically and culturally and connects southern Scandinavia to central Europe. |
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These opening messages were warmly received by the 7000 ethnically and culturally diverse attendees. |
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Thailand often is portrayed as a culturally homogeneous country, but there are approximately seventy-five distinct ethnolinguistic groups. |
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The project brief required that a number of culturally specific design features be incorporated to suit remote Aboriginal lifestyles. |
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For Jah to be God, God cannot be a culturally specific desert god from the near east. |
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We assert that it is culturally ethnocentric and logically absurd to relegate a universal phenomenon to the pathological domain. |
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The king, leading princes, and government ministers often are seen on television performing their culturally prescribed roles. |
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Run-DMC and LL Cool J had made the sequined glove and Jheri curl culturally irrelevant. |
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Indigenous peoples in the Americas and Australia are not culturally isolated and homogenous. |
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It reveals that in freakishness, broadly defined, there resides something beyond the possibility of subverting culturally enforced norms. |
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This regards the two spouses as juridical equals and assumes, but does not ensure, that they are also equal economically and culturally. |
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The Black feminist perspective generates an underlying primary theory for moving to a culturally appropriate or Afrocentric model. |
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It also has brought together communities that are worlds apart to enrich each other culturally, socially and economically. |
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Leung went for broke, recognising that he was in probably the most culturally diverse suburb in Auckland. |
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Whe then Spanish had conquered the Dutch for over 400 years they left their mark racially and culturally. |
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It does so by offering a set of methodologically reflexive, culturally nuanced and socially-located studies of gendered knowledges and practices. |
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The Kuna and their islands are undoubtedly vibrant, colorful, culturally rich and unforgettably hospitable. |
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This country's southern states have always been more culturally and politically conservative than other regions. |
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The next option is to attempt to rebrand himself as a culturally relevant force. |
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The term is an antiquated yoke of oppression, politically, culturally and socially. |
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The 25,000 residents are culturally mixed and renowned for their friendliness. |
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Salvadorans wear the same Western-style clothing worn by most Latin Americans who are not culturally Indian. |
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This lack may be projected onto their culture, particularly if the lack is due to a culturally driven repression. |
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This very fact places the results at the mercy of culturally insensitive marketers. |
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Some within these movements understand that they have to study, to know more, to decentre themselves from the culturally dominant ideology. |
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Educating a culturally and linguistically diverse student population poses new challenges to America's school systems. |
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When the person loses the capability to derive and create meaning in a culturally significant way, he or she becomes less, not more, literate. |
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This depends on the interpreter's culturally specific understanding of the social significance of the locution. |
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The river itself was suddenly becoming the conduit to a culturally thriving and artistically rich environment. |
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This questions the validity of using culturally or geographically specific terms to define bodies of work. |
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These books reach multi-ethnic audiences by emphasizing the universal within the culturally particular. |
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The difference culturally has also been very interesting, and at times we would have to admit that African food has been at best a bit samey! |
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The fact the film tanked at the box office is likely an indication it's out of its time, culturally speaking. |
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I'm not so sure about the differences between the two events, historically or culturally. |
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The most central region culturally and economically is the lowland flood plain of the Mekong River and Tonle Sap Lake. |
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Binary coding is culturally salient because Andean social organization and conceptual systems are primarily structured in dualisms. |
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To that extent they become momentary warriors, taking on in the act some culturally masculine qualities. |
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He or she will hope to explore his or her full potential in every way, not only materially but also culturally, sexually and spiritually. |
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Nevertheless, stringers perceive of A Team life as culturally distant and materially ideal. |
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Written in Tibetan and English, this striking, culturally rich tale is dedicated to Tibetans born in exile. |
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Flexibility has to be a core competency, both culturally and skill-wise, and it has to be written into the agreement. |
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So far as I can see, the old classes, working, middle and upper, are drawing ever closer together culturally. |
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Sara adds that the most culturally and geographically isolated communities in South Africa are Asian. |
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Companies are ill-prepared to manage middlescence because it is so pervasive, largely invisible, and culturally uncharted. |
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Intricately decorated and culturally rich, the 15 drums are native to the Ewe of southeastern Ghana. |
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All of our interventions are comprised of both transcultural and culturally specific ingredients. |
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This finding has implications for our distinction between transcultural and culturally specific aspects of interventions. |
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These are culturally biased statements of opinion, not scientifically supportable propositions. |
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There is general agreement that being bilingual and bicultural are positive attributes in an increasingly culturally diverse country. |
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In these culturally sensitive times, the film is quick to point out that Hoodoo is not Voodoo, a West African religion practised by millions. |
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The building is in the forefront of the great art of the future, all the while staying in touch, culturally speaking, with the recent past. |
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Not everyone recognizes how lucky we are to be a bilingual nation, it's culturally extraordinary. |
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So there's good and bad and a lot of it boils down to if the magistrate's understanding and culturally aware and all that sort of bizzo. |
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As a white kid from a working class family I felt very culturally deprived. |
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Doreen says culturally and economically, she has proved that polygamy more than monogamy, compartmentalises women into the class of minors. |
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Companies suffer from a provincial and culturally blinkered approach to the repertoire and with dire performance results. |
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This reminds us that Elgar was culturally a Victorian who flourished under the reign of Victoria's son. |
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But the bank yesterday said it would only support those that are urban, culturally diverse and support multi-faith religious education. |
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Anzaldua targets paradigms representing culturally determined roles imposed on individuals and peoples from the outside. |
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I've tried to unpick what the strange and fantastic phenomenon of Morrissey might represent psychologically, musically, sexually, and culturally. |
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The neoconservatives consistently misrepresent the right as culturally open and committed to equality of opportunity. |
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Young, educated, and culturally sophisticated, he is a stereotypical Nethead. |
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Civilizations ranging from the Canaanite to the Ottoman, have left their mark on an ever-growing, culturally rich and sophisticated city. |
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Not that versioning is culturally insignificant, but the split in accessibility recast lines between editors and readers in important ways. |
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Now I find more than a few Brisbane sophisticates similarly look down on culturally deprived bushies such as myself. |
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In short, they engage in activity that is unacceptable to a culturally and politically more aware and, perhaps, mature hacker. |
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Rhodes has spoken of how her work has its parallels in her own history of being culturally off-centre. |
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This is a clear attempt to scratch the itch of racism, homophobia and bigotry and pander to the culturally insecure in order to grub for votes. |
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His relationship to his legally native, but culturally adopted, country is an area of complication he leaves aside in this self-portrait. |
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Communication barriers are increasingly common in healthcare today as the population becomes more culturally diverse. |
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Where I'm from, we're known as pie eaters by the rest of the UK, so I've got a background in pies just culturally. |
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We mention finally that the people closest related to the Celts, linguistically and culturally, were the Indo-European Italics. |
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Bahamians are stultified intellectually, emotionally and culturally by the medieval religious environment that politicians have encouraged. |
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A culturally homogeneous society whose members subscribe and adhere to one system of beliefs and practices is in the realm of fiction. |
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Yet her cultural frame of reference is also much broader, as the art satisfies the senses of a panchromatic, culturally diverse audience. |
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The young Francoise, sent to continue her schooling in Holland, culturally and climatically a world apart from Java, was devastated. |
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Critical reflection is the type of processing that is crucial to the concept of culturally relevant pedagogy. |
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Although a natural sexual act, coitus is culturally regulated by legislation, custom, and religious belief. |
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Producers and directors are continually heard whingeing that Hollywood is too culturally imperialistic. |
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Much of this research, either explicitly or implicitly, touches on the culturally constructed nature of infancy. |
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Western culture is assaulting them, not militarily, but culturally. |
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Though it may have been somewhat culturally insensitive or politically incorrect to use the phrase, the expression won't qualify as a racist slur. |
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In fact, the question, though provocative and culturally important, may not even be new. |
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They are culturally aware enough to understand our stories of Shiva, and laugh at the comic moments and be moved with emotion when Shiva protects his bhaktas. |
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The Bushmen, or Khoisan, or hunter-gatherer Khoi, were a physically similar but culturally distinct people who lived contiguously with the Khoikhoi. |
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And because the pillory of a bad book is as culturally stimulating as the lauding of a good book. |
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Banjo, rattle, gong, xylophone and balafon, drum, flute, and over fifty-five others are described technically, musically, physically, culturally, and often historically. |
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Once a musical form is created, it diffuses geographically and culturally. |
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When they are here we would like to make sure they are orientated and mentored both culturally, linguistically and also into the system in which they are working. |
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Underlying all this new cultural activity is the question of how it integrates into a town where most residents are not culturally attuned and many have low incomes. |
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The increase in the number of medical students will open the door to a medical career for students from deprived or culturally diverse communities. |
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How has a couturier whose name is rarely recognized remained culturally relevant? |
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We cannot resent modernism and continue behaving in the culturally reactionary way we do now. |
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The primary language is Bangla, called Bengali by most nonnatives, an Indo-European language spoken not just by Bangladeshis, but also by people who are culturally Bengali. |
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It is that time of year when the sun sinks lower in the sky and thoughts of the culturally cognizant turn once again to the 17th Annual Vancouver Fringe Festival. |
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The Roma, who are scattered throughout the country, mostly in small camps on the outskirts of towns and cities, are in many ways culturally unassimilated. |
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But I've never felt the urge to convert anyone, feeling that everyone must clothe the formlessness of God in the form that best suits them, culturally and temperamentally. |
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America's eating habits have altered the national landscape and have had a global impact, dietetically, culturally, politically, and economically. |
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He thought art was organically based, but also culturally situated. |
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Critics aren't inclined to slam these culturally unique cinematic efforts. |
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Beckett shows what it is like to be aware in a single moment, rather than drifting in the slipstream of culturally mediated discursive patterns of thought. |
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In her piece she generally laments culturally perpetuated generalizations. |
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One book notes that people tend to naturalize differences between men and women, but that the form that naturalization takes is culturally viable. |
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By definition, a world religion extends itself geographically over ethnically and culturally distinct groups of people, and it persists over relatively long periods of time. |
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The dividing line between the languages we call Swedish, Norwegian, and Danish is linguistically arbitrary but politically and culturally relevant. |
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Globalization socially and culturally at very practical levels relativizes national identities and loosens the links between the individual self and nation. |
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That the emotions have a history implies that subjects are historically contingent and open to the possibility that they are hence culturally determined. |
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Most inhabitants of the titular nation consider their Moldovan identity as their central political one but their Romanian identity as culturally essential. |
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But Florida is kind of an outlier, because culturally, only the northern half of Florida is Dixie. |
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Individually and culturally, we are preposterously nostalgic for it. |
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Programs were under-funded and culturally restrictive, with policies favouring the nuclear family model against the cultural preference for extended kin groups. |
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An estimated 40 per cent of the southern Sudanese are Dinka, while 20 per cent belong to the culturally and linguistically related Nilotic Nuer and Shilluk ethnic groups. |
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The Tempest is a text which in its canonicity culturally institutionalizes a false history of Africans and emburdens them with a false sense of cultural inferiority. |
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Educational materials can be made more culturally and economically meaningful in a modern sense by recognizing contemporary and historic aspects of Pima culture. |
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To prove that wrong, facility officials are constantly coordinating activities that while culturally and intellectually engaging, are entertaining too. |
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George was, most now agreed, a Good Thing who was determined to be different to his culturally undistinguished and intellectually challenged Hanoverian predecessors. |
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One obvious barrier is that healthcare systems are culturally, politically, economically, and socially bound in a way that cardiological interventions are not. |
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We have to want the process of the management of Australian life, politically, corporately and culturally to change and we have to have the engagement and will to do it. |
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These are successful Americanizations of the culturally unique ancestors, and they augment what American cinema prizes. |
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In addition to establishing caring, respectful relationships with students, culturally responsive classroom managers work to create a sense of community. |
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We need a center-right that is culturally modern, environmentally responsible, and economically inclusive. |
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It will instead avow a Republicanism that is culturally modern, economically inclusive, and environmentally responsible. |
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The program assigns students certain culturally based classes, connects them to professors, requires mandatory study hall and houses them closely with peers in freshman dorms. |
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Every now and then the scientist and anthropologists discovers new evidences, which fortify India's claim of being culturally most advanced in the ancient times. |
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The public display of the tortured body terrorizes through the depths of horror implied in its calibration of pain witnessed by a culturally informed public. |
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Peter attempted to modernize and westernize the country militarily, administratively, economically, and culturally, often through the use of force. |
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The first clear mention of the Chuvash by that name comes from a Russian chronicle dated 1521, when they were already well-established as a culturally distinct group. |
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For as long as Homer remains culturally vital, every correct philological finding, incorporated into the apparatus criticus of his texts, will stay alive. |
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In this discussion jural and cultural facets are intertwined, to explain the specific character of the Tolai adoption process, culturally and psychologically. |
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Finally, the culturally mediated selection process changed through time, coincident with changes in social organization that characterized the late Mississippian period. |
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These heroes have served culturally and historically to personify and embody Manifest Destiny, the best of America's imaginary frontier in the flesh. |
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Housed near the Uffizi Gallery, in one of the most culturally rich cities in the world, the museum has some highfalutin neighbors. |
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In a culturally plural world, subjectivity and intersubjectivity have an accommodating, juxtapositional complexity that binary distinctions misrepresent. |
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Mestizos are culturally, linguistically, and often racially mixed people. |
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The three groups differed both culturally and linguistically. |
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The voice heard in Peter Handke's journal, Das Gewicht der Welt, epitomizes the counterexample to Skwara's culturally ponderous discourse. |
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The advertising slogans, once linguistically and culturally translated, lose none of the corporatespeak inanity that they convey in English. |
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Two culturally distinct areas, an eastern and a western zone are generally recognised. |
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The Britons had been overrun or culturally assimilated by other Celtic tribes during the British Iron Age and had been aiding Caesar's enemies. |
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Scandinavia has, despite many wars over the years since the formation of the three kingdoms, been politically and culturally close. |
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However, English is used routinely, and although considered culturally important, Scottish Gaelic and Welsh are much less used. |
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The relationship of women to the opposite gender is culturally that of gender subordination. |
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The Channel Islands are considered culturally and historically a part of Normandy. |
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The jurisdictional complexity of the Ottoman Empire was aimed to permit the integration of culturally and religiously different groups. |
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Much of the historically and culturally significant portions of Mandalay were burned to the ground. |
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Though culturally and physically similar to the Hebrides, it is separated from them by the Kintyre peninsula. |
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They regard themselves as culturally and especially linguistically distinct from their surrounding neighbours. |
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Following World War II, large parts of Europe that were culturally and historically Western became part of the Eastern bloc. |
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Language is an important element of Bengali identity and binds together a culturally diverse region. |
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Some are not geologically part of the Outer Hebrides, but are administratively and in most cases culturally, part of Comhairle nan Eilean Siar. |
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Woodstock has been regarded as culturally significant, but the Who were critical of the event. |
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However, the Southern Netherlands had been culturally separate from the north since 1581, and rebelled. |
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Canadian whiskies are available throughout the world and are a culturally significant export. |
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Yemen is a culturally rich country with influence from many civilizations, such as the early civilization of Sheba. |
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Since the 1990s some Spanish companies have gained multinational status, often expanding their activities in culturally close Latin America. |
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All subsequent migrations did leave an impact, genetically and culturally, but the main population source of the Portuguese is still Paleolithic. |
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Because of its numbers, ubiquity, and association with human settlements, the house sparrow is culturally prominent. |
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The region is culturally and ethnically diverse, with hundreds of languages spoken by different ethnic groups. |
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Scientific investigation has resulted in several culturally transformative shifts in people's view of the planet. |
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They are geographically, genetically, and culturally distinct from indigenous peoples of the mainland continents of the Americas. |
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It seems that they were culturally conservative maintaining simple technologies and foraging patterns over very long periods. |
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In Cherokee society, persons of African descent were barred from holding office even if they were also racially and culturally Cherokee. |
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Lower Saxony has clear regional divisions that manifest themselves both geographically as well as historically and culturally. |
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The court in Dijon outshone the French court both economically and culturally. |
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As these new immigrants were already culturally French they needed little time to adjust to French society. |
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A current view is that humans have an inborn but culturally affected system for detecting certain forms of genetic relatedness. |
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At the time, that was a monumental thing for the era, culturally. |
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It is said that Celtic Austria became culturally Romanized under Roman rule and later culturally Germanized after Germanic invasions. |
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After the fall of the Mongol Empire, the great political powers along the Silk Road became economically and culturally separated. |
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However, there are many recreational drugs that are legal in many jurisdictions and widely culturally accepted. |
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Of these, Kallai river that runs through the southern part of the city has been the most important culturally and historically for Kozhikode. |
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The southern Tungusic Manchus influenced the northern Tungusic peoples linguistically, culturally, and religiously. |
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Excavations that overlap the alleged time period of the Xia indicate a type of culturally similar groupings of chiefdoms. |
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For example, archaeological findings at Sanxingdui suggest a technologically advanced civilization culturally unlike Anyang. |
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An idiom is a common word or phrase with a culturally understood meaning that differs from what its composite words' denotations would suggest. |
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Interpretations of both the harm and offense limitations to freedom of speech are culturally and politically relative. |
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Previous intervention strategies may have been largely ineffective due to not being culturally sensitive or practical. |
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Under the British Mandate, the country developed economically and culturally. |
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The yeet began, culturally, with a Vine of a kid affectionately nicknamed Lil Meatball doing the dance on his school's track. |
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Known as OLittle Tibet,O the region is culturally and anthropologically tied to Tibet. |
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It is important to resist the pressure to jettison IDEA's present requirements for periodic, multifaceted, culturally unbiased evaluations. |
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Iran is a demographically young country and a culturally venerable one. |
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Individually, culturally, our reach may be exceeding our grasp. |
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Other elements may include the use of culturally significant and medicinal plants and trees, as well as the four colours of the medicine wheel. |
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They addressed the historical trauma of Native Americans and incorporated culturally specific images, medicine wheels, and circles. |
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Lilliput, with its ads for toothpaste and breakfast cercal, was as culturally and politically unpretentious as an intelligent magazine can be. |
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As such, counselors and clinicians should provide the intervention in a culturally congruent context. |
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And here in Oaxaca, one of Mexico's proudest and most culturally rich states, the ambience is distinctly Oaxacan. |
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The language of the treatment should be culturally appropriate and syntonic. |
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This insightful understanding is a necessary first step for culturally competent care. |
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However while diasporic imagining might be homogenizing the diaspora has not been formed by a singular process, are not culturally very similar. |
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Our staff is trained in the Picture Exchange Communication Program, but our pictures are Indianized, making them culturally relevant. |
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Interculturality transforms the isolated cultural interactant into a culturally related one. |
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Our research was guided by the Medicine Wheel, a culturally appropriate model of health and well-being that was recommended by our community partners. |
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Because masculinities and femininities are socially and culturally constructed, they often play significant roles in constructing identities and distinguishing one another. |
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Nevertheless, almost all of the participants identified the culturally expected female role of looking after their extended families as a major responsibility. |
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All three constellate around written and oral accounts, whether genealogies of royalty, idiomatic and culturally specific sayings, or positively drawn maxims. |
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Another problem noted by Dianne Johnson in the opening chapter of her noctuary relates to the western tendency to impose culturally familiar patterns on to sets of stars. |
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Today BTWHSPVA stands as one of Texas's premier arts magnet schools, noted for its blend of arts and academics and its culturally diverse faculty and student body. |
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Newfie is a Canadian term for a person who is culturally a Newfoundlander. |
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This region is one of the most beautiful and culturally wealthy regions of the UK and includes the Chiltern Hills, Oxfordshire, Warwickshire and Shakespeare's England. |
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Published in conjunction with the European Association of Social Anthropologists, this volume would be suitable for courses on culturally competent medicine. |
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It is thus probably inevitable that culturally influenced ideas of bodily integrity and health from time to time are at odds with so-called vaccination technocracies. |
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Naturally, Majaj's firm answer to all the irreconciliations of her culturally diverse and divided life is a humanistic approach to them to a greater extent. |
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Already some harm may have been done as the eighty feet long and sixty feet wide stage is being built right on what is considered archeologically and culturally sacred. |
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Apart from the culturally rich Konkan countryside, Culture Aangan has recently introduced its home stay ventures in Rajasthan, Rann of Kutch and several other Indian villages. |
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The program addresses the need for a more culturally diverse nursing workforce as well as employer demand for more nurses prepared at the baccalaureate level. |
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Intermarriage, he apparently thought, would produce racial upliftment, biologically as much as spiritually and culturally, through generational enhancement. |
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The kind of kho'los that comes from unfair dealings, culturally unacceptable practices that bring rewards to the underhanded can, on Odysseus's terms, be set aside. |
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Although it lacks a unified cultural identity, the Northeastern region is the nation's most economically developed, densely populated, and culturally diverse region. |
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The Connecticut River Valley includes parts of Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Connecticut, linking numerous tribes culturally, linguistically, and politically. |
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Today Atlantic Canada is a culturally distinct region of Canada, with the original founding cultures of Celtic, English and French remaining strong and vibrant to this day. |
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Broad Hindi is a large dialect continuum defined as a unit culturally. |
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It never refers, for instance, to the culturally Western nations of Australia and New Zealand, which lie even farther to the east of Europe than East Asia itself. |
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However, Alexander also was a pragmatic ruler who understood the difficulties of ruling culturally disparate peoples, many of whom lived in kingdoms where the king was divine. |
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As the Empire entered its final decline, the Empire's citizens became more culturally homogeneous and the Greek language became integral to their identity and religion. |
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A region may be in some ways strongly culturally connected to the neighbouring country that shares its language, the country itself being rooted in western European culture. |
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Kievan Rus', although sparsely populated compared to Western Europe, was not only the largest contemporary European state in terms of area but also culturally advanced. |
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During the early Middle Ages up until the Dutch Revolt, the Southern regions were more powerful, as well as more culturally and economically developed. |
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According to the City Brands Index, Rome is considered the world's second most historically, educationally and culturally interesting and beautiful city. |
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The Danube region is not only culturally and historically of importance, but also due to its fascinating landmarks and sights important for the regional tourism industry. |
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The 6th century Byzantine historian Procopius noted that the Goths, Gepidae and Vandals were physically and culturally identical, suggesting a common origin. |
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Now, more tools are recognized as culturally and historically relevant. |
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Panama, situated in the southernmost part of Central America on the Isthmus of Panama, has for most of its history been culturally linked to South America. |
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Following the conquest of North Africa's Mediterranean coastline by the Roman Empire, the area was integrated economically and culturally into the Roman system. |
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Java dominates Indonesia politically, economically and culturally. |
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Starting from the early 1980s, until then a linguistically and culturally homogeneous society, Italy begun to attract substantial flows of foreign immigrants. |
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The Indian climate is strongly influenced by the Himalayas and the Thar Desert, both of which drive the economically and culturally pivotal summer and winter monsoons. |
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Eastern Bangladesh and the Seven Sister States of India are culturally part of Southeast Asia and sometimes considered both South Asian and Southeast Asian. |
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This dominance creating what is now England and leaving culturally British enclaves only in the north of what is now England, in Cornwall and what is now known as Wales. |
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The new Norman rulers were culturally and ethnically distinct from the old French aristocracy, most of whom traced their lineage to Franks of the Carolingian dynasty. |
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It was believed that the barbarian could be culturally assimilated. |
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Culturally integrated but politically separate, the United States Territory of Guam lies thirty miles farther south at the bottom of the chain. |
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Culturally and historically, those who identified themselves as Hongkongese or Chinese both felt proud of their Chinese heritage. |
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Culturally adept viewers will also enjoy the celebrity cameos and inside jokes, none of which I will spoil here. |
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Culturally and juridically, cities were always associated with special rights and liberties. |
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Culturally and ecologically, this region is the South, a country of turbid waters flowing beneath white oak, bur oak, Shumard oak, and ash. |
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Culturally speaking, it saw the beginning of the slow decline of the Cornish language. |
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Culturally there was a transition away from the rationalism of the Georgian period and toward romanticism and mysticism with regard to religion, social values, and arts. |
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