A lot of that's just an assessment of his general medical condition and not necessarily germane to the melanoma itself. |
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The concept seems very germane to the original post and is explained succinctly. |
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As I explained in my last e-mail the first e-mail exchange we had is no longer germane. |
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At this stage, however, the more germane question is what consumers will actually do with the incremental cash. |
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It is therefore necessary that certain points germane to the subject be discussed in detail. |
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Professor Crout delivered his remarks, which were certainly germane to the subject. |
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This is a highly germane consideration for an economy on the threshold of emerging market style debt trap dynamics. |
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It would have been more germane to ask, How do we know he's not still there? |
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A number of determinants were considered germane in the selection of mediation for commercial disputes. |
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If the health service is to make progress towards such a goal, a number of considerations are germane. |
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The show reads as a who's who of the contemporary South African art family with germane examples selected from dozens of possibilities. |
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A different resemblance between the two occupations, however, is now dismayingly germane. |
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Spatial ability is especially germane for efficient performance in some occupations, such as that of an air traffic controller. |
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The distinction casts light on Coleridge's prosodic jottings in his notebooks, but is not directly germane to the present concern. |
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It is germane to consider what observations might actually require, or provide support for, this scenario. |
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It deals with a subject inherently germane to every military officer, no matter the service. |
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Unfortunately, many of the most interesting and germane points appear in the endnotes. |
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The judge interrupted the complainant only when he made remarks that were not germane to the jurisdiction of the court. |
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The evidence of the POI could be germane to the credibility of the claimant. |
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Frankly, they backed into their mollusc caves round about May and emerge only when I manage to procure a germane species of earth worm from my back yard. |
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Another participant noted that whether the material, in this case, canola, is transgenic is not germane to the question. |
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It's probably not germane, but I would imagine that in terms of acceptance of this service it could become a major issue. |
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In some respects, comparisons with Canadian-trained engineers are not germane. |
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Recognize when a proposed commitment is not germane to your overall mission and turn it down. |
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The following section of this chapter notes that these questions are germane to any efforts at management reform. |
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If the issue is not germane to the matter being grieved, the initial or final authority do not have to address it in their decision letter. |
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Taking our cue from our clients, we eliminate elements that are not germane to the issue, since this could drive up costs. |
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One particularly germane research area has been the co-authoring of a book on the use of experimental techniques in ethics. |
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It has been used for purposes not germane whatsoever to the employment insurance program. |
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Mr Parseghian describes the sale as prudent diversification, which is true, but not necessarily germane. |
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Therefore, extensive effort was made to restrict the review to the most useful and germane work and to organize it meaningfully. |
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What is germane is an understanding that the advocacy of a trade-union-based party was the American analogue of the united-front tactic. |
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While that kind of rhythmic systole codifies processional nobility, it is also germane to baroque performance practice, particularly in a chaconne. |
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If that be so, the material contained in the affidavit is material which would be germane to the question whether the Court would or would not adopt that course. |
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I think they're germane and they help explain what's going on here. |
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We, on the other hand, believe that the comparison is highly germane. |
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All of us in the House feel too many issues are being dealt with that are not germane and not important to the average person on the street. |
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The other, far more germane to the matter at hand, is to avoid romanticizing, glamorizing or simplifying the reasons for the suicide. |
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They marked off segments of the sentence that were not germane to the meaning. |
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As expected, the chamber's Democratic leaders ruled the amendment not germane to the sales tax bill. |
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What is not germane to the job of being Jermain Defoe's personal assistant? |
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The Chair is of the view that this is a matter of debate and not germane to the point of order itself. |
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While not germane to this derailment, this means that some track inspections are carried out during periods of darkness during winter months. |
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Certain to avoid talking politics in front of the hypersensitive cameras, Boehner opted for the more germane. |
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This section provides guidance on implications particularly germane to the use of qualitative approaches for the ethics review process. |
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In fact every age has its own list of the things most germane to it. |
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Your exemption from property taxes is not germane. |
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That the employer owns the computer system is not germane. |
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Its original purchase price, while of historical interest, is not germane. |
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That question is not germane to the purpose of this presentation. |
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We agree with the argument of Ms. Crane that the possible immunity of A. G. T. is not germane to the issue here, as the telecommunications facility is not a party to this complaint. |
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They are not germane to the remainder of this report. |
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It was not germane to the story being told and it was inaccurate. |
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Moreover the debate on pension reform has been frustrating. It has often focused on issues that are not germane to either the purpose of pension plans, or the central concerns of trade unions. |
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This chapter seeks to provide specific guidance on some issues that are particularly germane to qualitative research although such guidance may also be applicable to research using quantitative or mixed methods. |
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Which was germane to Judge Scheindlin's case? |
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Distortion is germane to a discussion of Schulz. |
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Neither point is germane to the portrait's accuracy. |
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Other snippets seem pointedly germane to their new context. |
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If those members are proud of that initiative and that effort, tabling the list of those consulted would be most helpful and germane to the debate. |
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However, it is very germane to the parallel process that we wish to put in place and which has had buy-in from the national aboriginal organizations. |
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Other contexts are germane to the study of food buying. |
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These monitoring programs are as germane to managing Canada's aquatic resources as monitoring of expenditures would be to the management of any budget. |
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Although helpful to define and differentiate competencies germane to specific professional groups, it is imperative that the competencies of interprofessional learning and practice are taught. |
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The specific suggestions about what to do with an unanticipated windfall are more germane to the no-deficit target case, where success in achieving the goal is determined annually. |
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Within the context of this need for an overall anti-poverty strategy, we would like to draw attention to several particular issues which we believe are germane to the employability issue. |
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As such, the first general results indicate that improvement efforts should deal mainly with the drivers related to communications and service offered by staff, rather than the drivers germane to access to services. |
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Some organizations note that the executive summary tries to be germane to all United Nations agencies and consequently does not highlight the best practices already existing in certain United Nations agencies. |
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However, the report does deal with an issue that is germane to forecast accuracy even though not directly linked to the specific processes of budget projections. |
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Beck's is also an import whose most germane attribute is its Germanity. |
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The procedures of the House of Commons require that members cover only points germane to the topic under consideration or the debate underway whilst speaking. |
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Germane and relevant in their way, but wielding a different methodology. |
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