The researchers chose to monitor three specific hormones because of their links to nurturing behavior in human mothers and in animal fathers. |
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My philosophy is to create a nurturing environment where all students feel confident and self-assured. |
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The nurturing role of mothers is represented and celebrated as a mother cow cares for her newborn calf. |
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This was a label that dominated musically as well as attracting and nurturing top-shelf vocal talent. |
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The parent fish would be given neither any pre-intensively nurturing nor release from stimulation. |
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I was a very happy and healthy baby and had a normal upbringing, in fact, with lots of nurturing. |
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Louis was in his shirtsleeves, utterly absorbed in one of the rare plants he was nurturing. |
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Mary Tyler Moore, after years of nurturing that chipper television identity, had transformed herself into this cold, unloving matron. |
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Our profession attracts highly educated, creative, hard-working and nurturing individuals, yet most of us are underpaid. |
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Are its collective community and environmental values consumed or produced in the process of nurturing turf grass? |
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So it was to their mother, Margaret Marie Bragg, that the Bragg boys clung for emotional and physical nurturing. |
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It took Vyaas 25 years to grow his moustaches, nurturing them with almonds, curd, ghee and lemon every day. |
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How can you be supportive, nurturing and loving if you are competing with your own children? |
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But experts think British universities should be paying more attention to nurturing home-grown talent. |
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In general, there is more focus on nurturing, support, and connection, and less on issues such as boundaries and enmeshment. |
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Parents discouraged their daughters from nurturing such ambitions, and employers considered young women to be temporary help at best. |
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However, late summer and early fall is the time we need to be planting and nurturing our jonquils to make sure they are bright and healthy later. |
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In order to raise judoists in this manner, nurturing the attitude of study and resourcefulness in dojo Judo training is of first importance. |
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This kiwi kook, and I use the term kook advisedly, is taking nurturing to a whole new level. |
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Each cereal has its own needs, an individual moment of nurturing before the spoon starts scooping. |
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Thirdly, politicians and managers must rethink organisational roles, nurturing the principle of subsidiarity. |
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As a teenager, Kureishi responded to the racist taunts by immersing himself in rock music and nurturing his rebellious streak. |
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On the other hand, womanhood is associated with the characteristics of being sensible, tender, nurturing and caring. |
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In this shift, the living nurturing relationship of man with nature as earth mother was replaced by the idea of man as dominating over nature. |
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We should be nurturing leadership at a much earlier age and developing skills within people in their thirties. |
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The ants are duped by chemicals into accepting, nurturing, and protecting the butterfly caterpillar as one of their own. |
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This could actually undermine brand equity by nurturing a negative brand attitude. |
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Suddenly, for a brief, sweet moment, I realised I was the sort of nurturing yummy mummy I'd always dreamt of being. |
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Are you one of the thousands of businesses who get stuck into the task of nurturing the next generation of wealth creators? |
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The key to producing consistent and predictable sales numbers is creating, growing, and nurturing a healthy sales pipeline. |
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Those in Rho Chi and Phi Lambda Sigma share common interests in attaining and nurturing meritorious academic achievement. |
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For those with artistic pretensions, he advises on how to stay sane while nurturing creative flow. |
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Conversely, women who do not conform to the caring and nurturing feminine stereotype could encounter gender discrimination in the workplace. |
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Henry VIII, while somewhat impertinently nurturing his own little spiky number, attempted to ban beards as part of his break with the Pope. |
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He had spent his life always being there for me, pushing me to new heights, nurturing great ambitions. |
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In reality, both soldiering and nurturing children are vital forms of public service. |
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The assistance these support services provide can help institutions create a more nurturing learning environment. |
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When a famous person promotes a foodstuff, their public persona acquires a nurturing, human edge. |
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Handling clay is an important means for developing and nurturing the faculties of imagination and originality in children. |
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This energy emanated from a medium traditionally associated with nourishing food and nurturing femininity. |
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You are practical and nurturing in chaotic situations where order and maintenance is needed. |
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But for soldiers, getting tattoos has for many years been a way of nurturing a sense of solidarity with their fellow troops. |
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We have a protective nurturing mother who has been deserted by her no-good husband. |
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He needs some nurturing as he got in a fight at work last night and now has a smashed nose and busted up lip. |
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East London is generally seen as a backyard dorp with little or no talent, but it's competitions like these that give you a good indication of what a nurturing ground we are. |
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Robin Williams, as I knew him, was warm, gentle, expressive, nurturing, and brilliant. |
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I like the nurturing aspect that tucking a seedling into warm soil brings. |
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On the opposite end of the spectrum are two other standout works, which depict Mary as a loving, nurturing mother. |
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The earth was no longer the nurturing mother of the ancients. |
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What with all my pop-culture Anglicisms, I don't always do a terribly good job at nurturing an overseas readership, so it's good to form bridges across the water. |
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This can radically upset her possibility of ovulation, fertilization, implantation, and even nurturing of a pregnancy. |
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This can radically upset her possibility of ovulation, fertilization, implantation and even nurturing of a pregnancy. |
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One of the strangest fish you might encounter in spring is the male lumpsucker, which is left in shallow water guarding and nurturing his egg clutch after mating. |
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The children's mother, Lisa, an accomplished lyric soprano with a degree in vocal music, provided a musically nurturing environment for the siblings to study piano. |
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Being a stressed-out single mother can lead to this critical lack of nurturing. |
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Traditionally, the food industry has taken a rather unadventurous outlook, nurturing secrecy and marketing based on the classical avenues of flavour, price and predictability. |
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It has been argued that the traditional view of the Earth as a nurturing mother was replaced, after the Renaissance, by the scientific, atomistic and reductionist paradigms. |
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But among pedophiles, this trend is skewed, with sexual, as opposed to nurturing, emotions burgeoning. |
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The responsibility of nurturing these never-dying souls is great. |
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The workshop would go a long way in nurturing female talent, she avers. |
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How am I going meet a responsible, nurturing woman, who isn't a caner? |
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Not only is he identified as a nurturing caretaker, but he literally refocuses our attention away from the politics of Chartism toward the concerns of domesticity. |
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He was a pacer, particularly when nurturing an idea in its embryonic form. |
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To utilize power in the corruption of life is to deem oneself a demigod, to remove oneself from the nurturing fluids of consubstantial human interaction. |
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The mission of the Presbyterian Homes in the Presbytery of Lake Erie is to provide the best care for seniors and older adults in a nurturing, secure, home-like community. |
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In most cases, infection is localized to the bronchial anastomosis, where devitalized cartilage and foreign suture material create a nurturing environment. |
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Those who believe in nurturing, finding fitting consequences for behavior, and disciplining through mutual respect believe in an equalitarian type of family values system. |
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Will developers put real money into programs nurturing and exhibiting local artists as well as supporting the stimulation that artists from elsewhere bring? |
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This is done by gently drawing the oocyte into a thin micropipet to shear off a few of the nurturing corona cells from the outer membrane. |
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He was also responsible for nurturing a passion for rugby in young Richard. |
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He said in his family, the traditional roles of nurturing and breadwinning are shared. |
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A summer camp environment may allow children to learn new skills in a safe and nurturing environment. |
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However, even with a sophisticated parental nurturing, young crocodiles have a very high mortality rate due to their vulnerability to predation. |
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At the end of the breeding period males disseminate for food and rest while females remain for nurturing. |
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Other papers have discussed the influence of nurturing in the formation of gender identities. |
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For instance, the kestrel is a type of falcon in which males are the primary providers, and the females are responsible for nurturing the young. |
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Those with more feminine and nurturing traits are more likely to pull their Oreos apart before eating them. |
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The synaesthetic frenzy of youthful play is though, again, followed by a narration of the arduous seasonal nurturing of crops. |
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These remarks would seem to imply a shift for the nurse from autocentric controlling, to allocentric controlling, then to allocentric nurturing. |
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But he credits coach Cavin Johnson for spotting his potential, nurturing it, and then eventually helping sort his move to Europe. |
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He wants the government to focus on nurturing the primary sectors before investing in information technology centres, for example. |
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Nowadays, one of the problems in sheep nurturing industry in Iran is bronchopneumonia that several agents involve it. |
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And after a relaxing break at Blackener, I have a feeling I could be nurturing three more young candidates for the caravan world. |
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Santa is not only a moral authority, like a strict father, but he is also like a nurturing parent, traditionally, a mother. |
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But, instead of wallowing in bitterness, she has spent her life nurturing young astrophysicists and encouraging women into science. |
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Cats are active and playful, therefore entertaining to play with and watch. A lap cat provides nurturing and affection. |
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The business was a hotbed for the nurturing of emerging engineering talent. |
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Mathen, a motivated nephew of Abraham Malpan by his uncle's guidance and spiritual nurturing, went to Antioch and returned after two years. |
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The predominance of stereotypical views about women as emotional, maternalistic and nurturing also prevent women taking up senior roles in the accounting profession. |
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The downside, though no one seems terribly worried about it, is that with new programs springing up every year, a lot of costly nurturing of nontalent takes place as well. |
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It's a tad rockier, while also nurturing a more intimate sound. |
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With the goal of nurturing a vibrant category, Gottschalks Inc. |
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He saw the fun and affection between Kate's parents, watched their leg-pulls and warmth, realised family life worked wonderfully with nurturing and concern. |
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Three oddballs who were never meant to be parents suddenly find themselves exploring their nurturing side when they accidentally discover an abandoned baby. |
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The science of neuroplasticity gives clues for nurturing confidence. |
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Sloppy kissers are seen as inexperienced and in need of nurturing, while aggressive kissers give the impression that they might be selfish in bed. |
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Crafternoons have been a way to connect with my crafty womenfolk once a month that is both nurturing for the spirit as well as for the creative mama in all of us. |
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Davis, plush as ever, is a little whiny and underwhelming as Murray's girlfriend, who spends much of her time nurturing Quaid, doing his familiar sweet-natured lummox. |
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The club has been a nurturing ground for players who have made the grade to professional level to such clubs as Northampton Saints and London Wasps. |
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