From Taipei to New York, hundreds of thousands laud his efforts to spread Buddhist dharma, or teachings. |
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As a reward, I will mention your pasta-sauce-making attempt on the mainpage and laud you and revere you for all to see. |
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Following these banquets of culinary delights, in poetry and prose, guests would laud the host and the pleasures they found in his food. |
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I have now been three years in my humble home and continue to laud the day I decided to come to the open house. |
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She went on to laud Cape Town for being the first South African city to adopt an outstanding piece of contemporary art as a public monument. |
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The awards laud achievements in commercial, dramatic, and documentary film and television. |
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The liberals of the nation rallied to laud her and condemn those who professed to defend their inalienable right to continue with this practice. |
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Powerful, well-acted films are easy to review, with no end of superlatives to string together to laud the acting, directorial genius, and so forth. |
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Despite the setback, those involved continue publicly to laud the project's green credentials. |
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We laud them and aspire to achieve the same kind of success, working with our distribution partners. |
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I will say that I have to laud the CBC, particularly in radio, for doing that job. |
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That may not be reflective sometimes of what comes out the other end, but I know that all of us laud the work you do. |
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We cannot but laud this staunch effort to further the cause of Education for All. |
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We laud the courage and commitment of all women and men around the world who have devoted their lives to promoting and protecting human rights. |
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Mr. Speaker, on the question of undocumented workers, I think we would all laud the temporary foreign workers program. |
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While government policy statements laud neo-liberal policies, increasing poverty at the community level follows in their wake. |
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I laud the theatres programs in our schools and regularly attend their theatre performances. |
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The findings should be constructively critical and should not aim to embarrass or laud a service providers performance. |
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Holbrooke then used a Karzai visit to Washington in May to laud the Afghan leader with pomp, circumstance, and attention. |
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If the claims are indeed true this time, expect al Qaeda to laud its martyrs publicly. |
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Devoted to her faith, she attended both laud and vesper masses daily whereas the king avoided religious duties, delegating them whenever possible. |
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After all no-one needs past heroes when there are new idols to laud. |
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While some praise the tranquil fluidity of Koité's style, others laud these aerial flights of acceleration, although all are agreed that Mali's guitar prodigy is a first-class act. |
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In this, the latest of our round-ups, we pay tribute to title-winning exploits in Egypt and Belgium, highlight a landmark achievement for Germany's elder statesman and laud Uruguay's leaders for a Lazarus-like comeback. |
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Many Egyptians laud Sisi for rescuing the country from ex-president Mohamed Morsi, an Islamist whose opponents felt was trying to rob Egypt of its moderate character. |
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I think we need to identify the ones that are successful, and we need to describe them and describe what's working and laud them, commend them, and give them medals, because that's what we need to see more of. |
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Two front-runners are Ibrahim Babangida, a former military ruler, who annulled elections in 1993, and Atiku Abubakar, Mr Obasanjo's estranged deputy, who was quick to laud the Senate vote. |
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My patients laud qigong as a stressbuster and cure for pesky chronic symptoms that baffle doctors. |
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I think the questions I am raising are all legitimate, but I would welcome the changes that I have talked about and would laud them from the minister. |
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He adapted to this purpose whatever could upbuild and stimulate people to laud and praise God in Christ Jesus. |
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Even now, the great and powerful of these countries and of the world gather at seaside villas, where, turned out in their finery, they laud each other surrounded by body guards. |
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I would like to laud the constructive spirit that the Maltese and Italian Prime Ministers favoured when they intervened to solve the Pinar situation. |
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I have never met her, and I am inclined to laud her chivalry. |
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In an earlier spot, Elizabeth Furse and Avel Gordly teamed up to laud Smith as an early opponent of the war in Iraq. |
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The minister went to great lengths to laud the qualifications of the members on marketing panel, and I am not going to challenge or dispute those remarks. |
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Since its inception I've road tested a Pilot every year, and every year I find many reasons to laud this desirably conservative offering but 2009 has changed that. |
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He runs Tunisia as a police state, where the country's large, Soviet-style press does little more than laud the despot and his tight-fisted regime. |
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Some of the most moving moments in the House have been the times we have had the Olympic athletes come in on the floor of the House where we could laud them and give them their due. |
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The religious experiments of Archbishop Laud reactivated Puritan militancy. |
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Instead, the Parliament quickly proceeded to impeach William Laud, the Archbishop of Canterbury, of high treason, on 18 December. |
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Later that same year, he was baptised by William Laud, the Anglican Archbishop of Canterbury. |
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This affected his appointments to Anglican bishoprics, in particular the appointment of William Laud as Archbishop of Canterbury. |
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Augustine of Canterbury and Lanfranc, to Thomas Cranmer and William Laud are represented. |
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King Charles I and William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury, met with a reverse in their efforts to impose a new liturgy on the Scots. |
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In 1633, Charles appointed William Laud as Archbishop of Canterbury. |
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He supported high church ecclesiastics, such as Richard Montagu and William Laud, and failed to aid Protestant forces successfully during the Thirty Years' War. |
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The inclusion of illustrations in the edition raised accusations of Popery from opponents of the religious policies of Charles and William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury. |
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In 1633, Charles appointed Laud as Archbishop of Canterbury and started making the Church more ceremonial, replacing the wooden communion tables with stone altars. |
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However, few if any genuine Geneva editions appear to have been printed in London after 1616, and in 1637 Archbishop Laud prohibited their printing or importation. |
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To prosecute those who opposed his reforms, Laud used the two most powerful courts in the land, the Court of High Commission and the Court of Star Chamber. |
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By Continental standards, the level of violence over religion was not high, but the casualties included King Charles I and the Archbishop of Canterbury, William Laud. |
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