Alice Moyle was present at the births of the new discipline of ethnomusicology and the new field of Australian Aboriginal music. |
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The secretary of the Footballers' Association said there were already heavy punishments available to discipline footballers. |
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The outcome of an act of discipline is closely bound up with how a child experiences that relationship. |
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Which is perhaps why she has the discipline to hang tough, befriend the enemy and leave revenge to the future. |
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And of all the worst teachers, we had to be found by our discipline mistress, the strictest teacher in our whole school. |
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Finally, he upheld patriarchy while delegating ministry and discipline even to women and children. |
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His attempts to redress the financial crisis and restore discipline soon aroused hostility from the guard. |
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They bowled with discipline on a surface lacking in bounce, and fielded with a tigerish resolve to win by eight runs. |
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Anthony has brought a bit of structure and organisation and a bit of discipline to training. |
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Management as a discipline made sense only its 21st century social context, about which he wrote incisively well into his ninth decade. |
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Elsewhere, this choice of discipline might have attracted derogatory remarks. |
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That is not to say that with effort and discipline humankind cannot manage some amazing achievements of thought. |
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Creativity education must seek the delicate balance to whatever discipline it is attempting to creatify. |
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In general, discipline and unit cohesion require a regular and dependable supply of food by the army itself. |
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Even flyovers and ring roads have not helped because of the lack of lane discipline by most vehicles. |
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It may have been better to discipline him for his repeated misdemeanours rather than let him off. |
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There was no discipline to impose itself on this clowning, and no parental authority to reprove it. |
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Such an austere destination was, he warned, far more elusive, demanding severe discipline and total renunciation. |
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At the same time, Becker notes, the discipline is broad in theory and application, including a wide range of experimental and applied work. |
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But in the last analysis discipline is a crucial part of the cement which binds armed forces together. |
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Here, the battle commanders had been able to maintain a semblance of discipline and control. |
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In this sense, meanings control us, inculcate obedience to the discipline inscribed in them. |
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She said schools were reminded in 1994 that behaviour and discipline codes should include measures to counter bullying behaviour. |
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This year an ankle injury confined her involvement in the championships to the discipline of the uneven bars. |
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Institutionalization of discipline and dress codes is another strategy used to curb violence. |
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One child, abandoned years earlier at hospital by his mother, has attached himself to Nancy, who mothers the orphan, discipline and all. |
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He was the tangible symbol of the Baby Boom, its conceits, its self-absorption, its lack of discipline and failures of responsibility. |
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It amazed him how much these people had to discipline themselves to stay that way. |
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It is the job of supervisory departments and public prosecutors to discipline and punish the relevant departments. |
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If anything, I called for the reinstatement of teachers' powers to discipline students, including the administering of corporal punishment. |
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There is no reason why creative writing, while encouraging experimentation, cannot also promote structure and discipline in writing. |
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As her conventual discipline requires, she yields to the pain, accepting it as what God is asking of her. |
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We lack the religious dogmatism and discipline of the other religions who are posing a threat to the very fabric of our religion. |
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The Catalan region taught me a lesson in sobriety and discipline but also to love its freedom. |
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Already showing off his remarkable combination of discipline and delivery, he drew 114 walks while fanning only 75 times. |
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Bernard's over-rigorous pursuit of ascetic discipline adversely affected his health. |
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This intellectual travelogue takes readers on a tour through ethology, the scientific discipline focusing on animal behavior. |
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Many of the authors seem to consider ethnomusicology as a scientific discipline whose goal is to objectively record and notate music. |
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The obedience experiments had a profound impact within academic social psychology, altering the central message of the discipline itself. |
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Since 1962, the government has used an array of slogans urging discipline and support for the regime and the military. |
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Demonstrated expertise in any complex discipline commands some authority among the non-expert public. |
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So they went for a Cardinal, a hardedged enforcer with a Germanic preoccupation with discipline and order. |
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Some officers and other ranks may be drummed out, and the more sadistic aspects of discipline and training modified. |
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That meant tight budgetary discipline to control inflation, reduce the deficit and moderate the volume of public debt. |
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Most accidents occur due to a lack of discipline and a leader's failure to enforce standards. |
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The charges against them include public indecency, inappropriate behaviour, behaviour to the detriment of military discipline and assault. |
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The newspaper offered only a grudging apology for its reprehensible victimization of Lee and did not discipline any of the reporters involved. |
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But there is a growing scientific discipline based around the study, known as cereology. |
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What's especially interesting is how many enjoyed the discipline of having to finish their main course before having pudding. |
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History had become a thriving discipline in nineteenth-century Germany, and philosophy of history followed in its train. |
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Kids do need a healthy balance of love and discipline if they're going to grow into happy well-adjusted adults. |
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As it happened, neither discipline represented a noticeable difference in the final marks. |
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It is by self discipline and clean moral life that man can unveil the divine qualities in his personality. |
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As if that weren't enough, she is a former national champion of the Chinese martial-arts discipline of wushu. |
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Surgery or pharmacology may make it possible to develop muscles to any level one desires without the discipline of workouts. |
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His core topic was whether discipline should be imposed on teens for their own good or whether decisions should be justified and explained. |
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But the thing is, a website is not a therapy session, and I lost a little discipline there for a bit. |
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He was famous for using maximum discipline whenever possible, just to keep the quavering Ivans in line. |
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See, there's a reason I discipline myself to be faithful to electronic media. |
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Set your clock a half hour earlier and discipline yourself to arrive early for work or appointments. |
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To effectively discipline a child, parents must have set rules and reasons to reinforce them. |
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It is also a dishonest campaign, since most of its proponents object to any form of punishment that parents use to discipline their children. |
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Yes of course, in the name of discipline a lot of indiscipline is being created. |
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These will include points for offences such as running a red light, poor lane discipline and non-compliance with stop and yield signs. |
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Funding should focus on interdisciplinary teams and avoid narrowly focused discipline research. |
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I think this neglect of graphic design as a serious discipline is the fact that it is seen mainly as based on aesthetic indulgence. |
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The former playgroup leader has been practising the discipline for 13 years and is now a professional Tai Chi teacher. |
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It is a romantic faith, and he observed it with the discipline of an eremite monk. |
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The two debates engaged major personalities in the discipline and a similar degree of enmity and venom. |
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He then restated the party's pledge to tackle poor discipline in the classroom. |
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I was aware that the school had a culture of discipline and an ethos of personal improvement. |
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You're a big advocate of jeet kune do, the martial arts discipline created by Bruce Lee. |
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You need discipline to get results in your social, sporting and professional lives but too many individuals here take a soft option. |
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Socialist realism was sometimes wielded arbitrarily as a tool of discipline by the party. |
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Underlying this system is an ethic that seems to value discipline and sacrifice for their own sake. |
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Chen must act like a CEO who insists on tough discipline among his team, for the partially reorganized Cabinet acts as his policy executor. |
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I want to argue that the discipline is constitutionally fated to suffer from a quiet melancholic malaise. |
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Most students who graduate enjoy the two years of creative freedom, lax discipline and reasonable workload. |
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He sought to use military drill and discipline for the religious and moral improvement of the boys. |
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However, it will take discipline and imagination, as well as some pretty crude and unsubtle politics. |
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We harmonize like the brass section of a band, and we need discipline to do that type of music. |
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Mommy isn't strong enough to protect the family and is too soft-hearted to discipline the children. |
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Reorganisation, forays, drill and discipline marked the ensuing winter months. |
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The SPLA claims the raids were an attempt to defame and vilify teachers and demanded that the government discipline the inspectors involved. |
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The latest incident came on the day Ministers announced teachers would be given a legal right to discipline unruly pupils. |
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Free from the strict discipline of military training, she threw herself into university life with abandon. |
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Managers have to discipline themselves to set clear goals and measurable outcomes for teleworking employees rather than acting as timekeepers. |
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Like all people given to the life of the mind, Kant was in need of the discipline that he imposed on himself. |
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A second possible interpretation emerges when parents' discussions of discipline practices are considered. |
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Alongside the obsession with test results goes an insistence on discipline and harsh punishment of bad behaviour. |
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Moral discipline also strengthens mindfulness, which is the life of concentration. |
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Judges are well schooled in their discipline but are not computer scientists. |
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Using this framework the final section optimistically considers how the economics discipline is likely to rise again. |
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During the flight the production manager spoke of how he had had to discipline one of his staff for lateness. |
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Whereas bad weather, bad calls, and bad luck are completely uncoachable, a lack of discipline can be solved. |
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On the day when it begins to discipline itself with a self-denying ordinance we shall know it has begun to grow up. |
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Yet the aural discipline plays a major part in poetic meaning, in ways that go far beyond mere onomatopoeia. |
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This decrease in quality will have a cascade effect on discipline within the ranks, degrading combat effectiveness for these units. |
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The absence of any semblance of discipline is to blame for this descent into moral turpitude. |
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The reasonable restoration of discipline requires a renewed vision of the very purpose and mission of the church. |
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Thus, discipline is really a process by which adults teach children and convey knowledge about appropriate behavior for various situations. |
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People from every biological discipline you can imagine would come and present their papers. |
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When I was a child, when school was education was much better, we were taught discipline both at home and at school. |
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It shows that prisoner discipline is the worst in any Scottish jail and that violence among inmates is rife. |
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In order to instill the necessary discipline in a novitiate, all emotion must be eradicated from the master's side of the equation. |
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In that discipline he thought he had found the key to the secrets of the universe. |
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Helpful skills such as reflective listening or the techniques of positive discipline can be taught and learned. |
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Neither could speak the language and they struggled to embrace the discipline demanded by Italian clubs. |
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The organization issued a patronizing and insulting non-apology and have done nothing to discipline the stupid bigot. |
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Dictatorial, militaristic discipline robs the person of self-control and leaves them without responsibility. |
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Well look, discipline is certainly part of the process, and perhaps that's a cue for me to take a move from the news desk over to the lectern. |
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We were watching an undercover investigation into school discipline filmed by a supply teacher. |
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His monopoly, they say, was threatening to kill off any semblance of competition in a discipline that used to thrive on it. |
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The wet Liberals are a pathetic and spineless bunch who are wholly subservient to government discipline and their own ambition in equal measure. |
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Engineers responsible for the pranks may also be facing academic discipline from the university. |
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Peter's exercised the discipline and fitness that we have come to expect from them, but were also forced to rely on fortune. |
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He was chosen because of his international reputation of applying the science discipline of biomechanics to elite sports performance. |
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The recent discipline of bioethics has grown up largely outside medicine and has developed principles of its own. |
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All military forces require a code of laws and regulations for the maintenance of discipline and good order. |
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They would be able to bring some cost discipline to the production of their key raw material. |
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Arranging regular practice with a group of skaters is a great way to discipline yourself to work on technique often. |
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Read something you disagree with and discipline yourself to analyze why you disagree. |
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Not everyone is a self-starter and has the discipline to follow-through on assignments without a supervisor or co-workers to cheer them on. |
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Even teachers are reluctant to intervene and often feel it is not their responsibility to discipline young people. |
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Lack discipline and organization and you will fall hopelessly behind in your work. |
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Since the government banned corporal punishment in schools, teachers think they cannot discipline the children. |
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Most of our politicians cannot discipline themselves to spend other peoples' money wisely. Starve the beast! |
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The school's attitude towards the buses is part of its positive discipline policy introduced three years ago. |
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Core agroecosystem courses are team taught by faculty from more than one discipline to integrate material into a systems perspective. |
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His discipline is literary criticism, that strange melange of critical theorising and textual criticism. |
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The Commissioner's powers to approve, audit and discipline recalcitrant players are uncertain in the Bill. |
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Whatever it comes to be called, we know it as the discipline devoted to the theory and practice of writing and teaching writing. |
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Gehry was breaking free, blurring boundaries, importing ideas from another discipline into his own. |
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Whatever hobbies you had, you are now free to pursue any discipline you craved whether it is bird-watching or travelling. |
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The Bramley discipline was in danger of completely collapsing at this stage which led to Cooke converting two penalties for foul play. |
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Having practised the discipline since the age of 15, Rebecca is used to gruelling training routines. |
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At the same time, farmers should display a greater sense of discipline by listening to government suggestions while deciding what crops to grow. |
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He feels that graduates from any discipline can do a course in gemology as long as they are truly interested. |
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I recall quarrelling with Mrs. Look, our dumpy discipline mistress, because I technically didn't break any rules, and she didn't allow me in. |
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While maintaining discipline he should be able to relate to his kids and empathise with them. |
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After the success of its gridiron coverage, Channel 4 turned its attentions to the subcontinent and the ancient Indian discipline kabaddi. |
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The president had an opportunity to exercise fiscal discipline by vetoing a farm bill that many people, including myself, felt was excessive. |
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Nigeria will never make any economic progress if we do not discipline ourselves so as to always cut our coat according to our cloth. |
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Censure and discipline are a matter between the employing commission and the chief executive officer. |
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Academics usually plough a narrow disciplinary patch, whereas intellectuals of his kind roam ambitiously from one discipline to another. |
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At one time, God was more than a hypothetical abstraction, and faith in his providence and design buttressed every major discipline of study. |
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Hara kiri developed as an integral part of the code of bushido and the discipline of the samurai warrior class. |
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Fisher's perspective on the discipline was molded by quite distinct intellectual influences. |
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One of the bitter ironies is that many of the finest financial brains lost in the carnage were in the discipline of risk management. |
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In fact, after psychology, linguistics is probably the cognitive discipline par excellence. |
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The Gallic charge complete with battle cries was famous, but the discipline of the Roman legions was more effective. |
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The merger stood out as a model of discipline among the industry's increasingly expensive couplings. |
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These researchers draw their inspiration from the discipline of psychology and study behaviour in a quite detailed way. |
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Training for the Olympics is a discipline that only the dedicated and staunchly committed can do. |
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Adolescents from intact families and stepfamilies reported similarities and differences in the discipline they had experienced. |
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Each class must have a queuing discipline to determine how packets are enqueued and dequeued. |
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If parents are not there to discipline their youngsters, then who are next in line to discourage lewd behaviour? |
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As already suggested, modularity is a discipline that requires close functional identification with a pattern or configuration that will change. |
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Listening to Kyan talk about all the ancillary benefits of relaxation and mental discipline piqued my interest. |
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They taught me the importance of discipline and the difference between right and wrong. |
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A decline in party discipline and of members' willingness to obey the whips, is one means of restoring influence to the backbenchers. |
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But at some point the dedication, discipline and thrill of competition stuck and he was hooked. |
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In stifling heat this was never going to be a vigorous or vibrant game, but we stuck at our task with discipline and brave reserves of energy. |
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But it is not the usual type of textbook that presents how a discipline currently sees itself and introduces its subject matter to beginners. |
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It's about the contemptuous glances, angry passenger rants and abusive bosses who rack up discipline slips and are stingy about sick days. |
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The schools were known for their harsh discipline and for treating students like virtual prisoners. |
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We all have different sensitivities, social backgrounds, families and different experiences of discipline and violence in real life. |
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The harsh discipline of the free market was offered by conservatives as more than just a path toward greater prosperity. |
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However, race-walking isn't the first discipline that springs to most minds when contemplating the schedule of track and field events. |
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Industrial design is, by convention, not a discipline given to flamboyance. |
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These players were risk gluttons and there was absolutely no protest or discipline from the marketplace, until recently. |
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Reversing the traditional discipline of the external surfaces, he paints internal dimensionality coming from within. |
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Votes on items such as the budget are legitimately votes of confidence in the government and party discipline should prevail. |
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Buddhist monks observe a strict code of conduct in order to discipline the body and mind. |
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For poets and those who read poetry, the poetic form can be relatively obscure as a discipline and as an art. |
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Hindrances to revival were sloth, unbelief, lack of discipline and a spirit of controversy. |
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Behind his casual attitude lies the strict discipline a teacher asks of a pupil. |
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Topology is the mathematical discipline concerned with surfaces or manifolds in higher dimensions. |
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She would initiate moves designed to bring more financial discipline to the municipalities' budgets, she said. |
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Chutzpah and discipline more than muscle built the Empire on the subcontinent. |
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In this sense, discipline can carry a sadomasochistic connotation of role-play in the interest of pleasure. |
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But the imposition of authoritarian control and discipline creates exactly the opposite of the effect intended. |
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The running of a school relies on discipline and for any student to be querying instructions given to him is completely unacceptable. |
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Sandboarders compare the feeling of flying down a dune to anything from surfing to snowboarding, depending on which discipline they come from. |
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This is obviously much easier than traditional forms of meditation that took much practice and discipline to tame the mind. |
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Soldiers are detailed for duties concerned with the maintenance of discipline and upholding the laws of war. |
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Earlier this year there were claims that discipline had slipped and staff morale was at rock bottom. |
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This is a discipline which studies and seeks to explain natural phenomena scientifically. |
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This ancient discipline is both spiritually and scientifically based and universally applicable. |
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In the past the members of strict religious orders took the discipline as a matter of course. |
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The Musketeers' life in Paris was often tumultuous, even if strict discipline continued to reign back at the casern. |
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Carey's victimisation provides a case study of how the discipline unit operates. |
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That discipline involves punitive measures, which may be either real or mentally exercised. |
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It instead violates a prophylactic rule intended to help discipline police and deter coerced confessions. |
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Gabriel, who suffers from cerebral palsy, will represent his country in the discipline known as boccia. |
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But beneath this razzmatazz lies a sporting discipline full of high-energy moves and world championships. |
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This was done purely to bring about discipline among the players and maintain its dignity. |
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She displays all the skills of her craft with discipline controlled by passion. |
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As a result, what this recording lacks in kinetic excitement it gains in discipline and controlled wit. |
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This joint consideration of Darwinian adaptationism and ecology has, in fact, produced the discipline of behavioral ecology. |
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More than ever before, the working men of Chicago had to conform to new standards of industrial discipline and self control. |
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It all becomes a matter of control or discipline or regard for other's situations despite your own wants. |
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They believe in instilling a deep sense of self-respect and discipline among students. |
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Traditionalists see crime and poverty as largely the result of a breakdown in social discipline or self control. |
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In fact, the Roller Skating School has endeavoured to popularise this all-year sport as a physical training discipline in schools and colleges. |
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Though meditation is the main religious discipline practiced by convert Buddhists, chanted liturgies are an important part of many meditations. |
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However, to be continuously successful at any physical discipline requires that you be sincere to yourself and dedicated to the game. |
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The government has also arrested thousands of practitioners of a spiritual discipline that primarily involves physical exercise and meditation. |
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Yoga as a means to mental and physical discipline and well being is also taught. |
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Shinto reinforced already strongly-established national notions of spiritual discipline and physical fitness. |
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Yoga, you might be interested to know, is the oldest physical discipline in existence. |
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This new series explores a traditional spiritual discipline that offers sound guidance to help you cultivate the qualities of your soul. |
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Nevertheless, morality is intelligible only as a social discipline based on general rules impartially applied. |
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Though it offers some of the most striking recent samples, history is not the only discipline in which scholarship has been put at risk. |
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Anthropology is a social science discipline whose primary object of study has traditionally been non-Western, tribal societies. |
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Historians of psychology frequently grumble about the marginal status of historical scholarship within the discipline of psychology. |
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Although similar to other inductive processes, this methodology differs in that it emerges from the discipline of sociology. |
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The project is even a little ironic, considering the history of the discipline of geography. |
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In turn, oral history has become more integrated into the discipline of history. |
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Others he taught important things like rugby, teamwork, discipline and respect. |
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A state's truant officers can also discipline the parents of delinquent students if they either aid or condone their children's misconduct. |
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The slant-eyed boy took a little longer, but showed the same obstinate behavior and the sheriff had to discipline him accordingly. |
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I am determined to use my national responsibilities to launch a concerted attack on truancy and ill discipline in schools. |
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The new journal grew out of the general disaffection that had been floating around the discipline for years. |
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Hawick were also made to pay for some ragged discipline on 20 minutes when their captain Roddy Deans was sin-binned for a late tackle. |
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Surely this calls for a return to physical discipline to halt the endless slide into an unmanageable society. |
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The classes will help improve coordination, self discipline and confidence. |
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At least for secondary school teachers, you could crowd all the education stuff that you need on lesson planning and discipline into one class. |
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To the extent that Puritan discipline is derived from scripture only indirectly, some form of interpretation is occurring. |
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Obeying the guru required discipline and self-abnegation, an exercise that was always beneficial to the spiritual aspirant. |
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He had been forced to discipline her for grabbing a fellow worker by the throat. |
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This man, whom we irreverently called Alfie, attempted to enforce military discipline on all of us. |
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But, as usual, the message discipline and sheer volume of the conservative echo chamber allowed it to frame the pseudo-debate. |
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Karate is no longer just a pastime for a select few, as young and old discover the discipline of martial arts. |
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But they also need discipline in the negative sense of correction and punishment for wrongdoing. |
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A little more discipline in thought would be appropriate before we castigate the bird colonels and stars. |
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First, there were the relatively recent advances in the development of wildlife management as a scientific discipline in its own right. |
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Whatever discipline you compete in, whether it's showing, show jumping, dressage or eventing, it's important that you both look your best. |
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When faith and discipline are seen as the essential ingredients of Methodist piety, there is no mystery about the twentieth century collapse. |
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How many parents cannot muster the determination to discipline their children because they cannot bear inflicting the suffering it will require? |
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Positive discipline is a mutual problem solving approach in which the supervisor and employee try to reach agreement on how to resolve the issue. |
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But both systems relied upon a bell-ringing regularity to inculcate discipline and order. |
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Higher real wages were therefore achieved at the cost of tighter work discipline and an increase in the workload. |
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Little by little, discipline yourself to meditate at the same time each day. |
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You must discipline yourself to eat properly, with what is available where you live. |
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Children need discipline and clear boundaries but when parents resort to physical punishment they give out the wrong message that might is right. |
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In the first three decades of the twentieth century the discipline of economics assumed its present shape. |
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It must thus be proper to punish the parents by calling them from work so they can discipline their child to ensure compliance with the code of conduct of the school. |
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Older people overwhelmingly feel that children have less respect for the older generation and older people are unable to discipline their children and grandchildren. |
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Total awareness is a discipline beyond the ken of us ordinary mortals. |
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The discipline required for martial arts fed into the psychology of the character, who approaches everything mission by mission. |
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John Paul cannot be expected to police every pulpit in Christendom, of course, but the decay in catechesis and Church discipline that has occurred on his watch is undeniable. |
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He could remember being told great stories about the chivalrous knights in his grandfather's time, those whom had fought with honour, discipline and great skill. |
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Few public figures who wish to be taken seriously in any scientific discipline are still trying to discount Darwin's theory of evolution and natural selection. |
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Four, the recruitment by the Republicans of affable-seeming candidates who had some discipline drilled into them. |
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The militia were a body of drilled troops, conscripted by law, and subject to military discipline inclding court martial. |
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The city is a place of discipline as well as a place of cheerfulness. |
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You have to counteract it with something, and I guess discipline was the mark. |
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Bullhooks, whippings, and electric shocks were used as the main methods of discipline and training for their exotic animals. |
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It is in our interest to participate fully in the ongoing conversations and debates that give shape to art history as a discipline and keep it interesting. |
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We used breakout groups by grade level for student discipline issues, budgets, curriculum issues, and the use of technology to improve professional efficiency. |
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He envisions a system of discipline imposed by independent overseers, inside and outside the corporation, with the power to say no and make it stick. |
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Hawking's idea of science is that of a rarefied discipline far above the heads of ordinary people and definitely superior to all competing forms of knowledge. |
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The idea of obedience to a discipline struck him as mildly revolting. |
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The amount of discipline and perseverance that it takes to train for a fight is incredible. |
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In fact, the Indian Roller Skating School has endeavoured to popularise this all-year sport as a physical training discipline in schools and colleges. |
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The narcissistic quest for health through austere regimes of diet and exercise, abstinence and discipline reflects a denial of the inevitability of death. |
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These studies are overdue and of importance to our discipline if we are to be able to understand the significance and the role such awards play in our cultural development. |
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Credit has been given to an accused for nine months in which an accused under the YARC program was required to live in a halfway house under strict discipline conditions. |
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The traceurs' passion for the discipline helps to spread the PK word. |
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By submitting themselves to rigid discipline and by projecting guilt onto other people, they can keep at bay their own overwhelming need to be naughty. |
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It succeeded because it matched discipline with self-denial. |
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If you're one of those souls who is blessed with gym discipline or a YMCA membership, then you know how satisfying the lingering burn of energized muscles can be. |
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Regardless of the age of the husband, the relatives give themselves the right to discipline him, scold, restrain, monitor, and embarrass him in public. |
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A scheme that draws young tearaways back on to the straight and narrow with a taste of military discipline is to be expanded nationwide, it was announced yesterday. |
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Mothers were torn between their need to support the discipline of their sons and their desire to provide a refuge from the harshness of that discipline. |
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The problem seems to be less the availability of the drug than the fact that society has lost confidence in its ability to educate and discipline children. |
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This film presents a compelling slice of life whilst interrogating with extraordinary discipline the formal predicates which encase both the film and its protagonist. |
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So great is the concern for discipline that some parents will even be insistent that their child receives harsh, practically militaristic, discipline. |
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On the other hand, if one wants their child to be obedient, thoughtful to others, discipline them at the time of their disobedience and not half an hour later. |
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Equally, while a parent cannot be made to love his child, he can be limited by the law in how far he can use physical punishment to discipline his child. |
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It was her role as a graduate trainee at Reuters, the first female to be taken on in this post, that provided Anne with the discipline necessary for writing a book. |
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If you are intelligent and disciplined enough to read dense books, then why do you lack faith in your own abilities to show discipline with a television set? |
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At the same time, he did not mind appealing to the council to discipline recalcitrant citizens who played tennis in the town square while he was preaching on Sunday. |
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His lack of discipline when he jumped into the race is what caused his implosion in the first place. |
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It must be noted that, in 1709, Jonathan Swift found little discipline at the universities and little learning amongst the gentlemen of high quality. |
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If kids don't know the difference between right and wrong by the time they are 15 there's something seriously wrong with them or they need discipline not tea and sympathy. |
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It takes discipline or self control on the part of the trainer to make the horse into a disciple or follower, to cause the horse to willingly follow your lead. |
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In particular, his robust stance on discipline is very welcome. |
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She paints a portrait of a young, 31-year-old woman who was bright and strong-willed and who chaffed under the discipline imposed on a first lady. |
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He will need the popular support of his caucus to oust or severely discipline and demote Jones and do it in such a way as to keep Jones from jumping waka. |
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Badiou insists that philosophy is the discipline concerned with truth, and that any effort to detract philosophy from this concern is tantamount to sophistry. |
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He established choreology, the discipline of dance analysis, and invented a system of dance notation, now known as Labanotation or Kinetography Laban. |
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Instead of a bunch of layabouts smoking glue and cracking charlie's horse with LSD, we could have good, fit criminals with discipline and firearms skills. |
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One of the secrets to his success was the martial arts discipline tae kwon do, a form of unarmed self-defense that requires intense training of the body and the mind. |
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Law and order went to the dogs after the Whitlam social experiments of excessive welfare, booming populations of single mothers, poor discipline in schools. |
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The necessity for clarity of meaning for his listening public imposed a new discipline on both his poetry and prose pieces and this improved his work, exposing obscurities. |
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Indeed, from the battlefields of WWI came the entire discipline of cancer chemotherapy. |
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For example, there was more corporal discipline in all the schools back then, less medical care for the average family, poorer housing in general and so on. |
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They've also threatened to discipline people for an alleged go-slow. |
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