They meant, of course, to say that our souls outlive us, that we are more than blood and bone and corporality. |
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To inherit dominant status, a subordinate must outlive all those above her in the queue. |
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She explained that a bonsai tree could easily outlive its owner if properly cared for. |
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The demographics of participants in this study reflect current population demographics in which women outlive their husbands and then live alone. |
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They may outlive their friends who can give insights into their achievements and character. |
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There is Latin itself, which ultimately failed to outlive the imperium and which slowly transmuted into the vernacular Romance languages. |
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The trees overshot their expected height and girth, and have now begun to outlive their lifespan. |
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There was talk of deporting her but somehow I suspect she'll outlive us all. |
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After death, our lives can be reduced to a heap of junk, yet our possessions actually outlive us. |
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Women outlive men just about everywhere in the world, but in Russia, it's by 14 years. |
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Perpetual foundations, he pointed out, frequently outlive their initial purpose and usefulness. |
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You know, I have to believe that this particular character will outlive me. |
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But as Regency exuberance yielded to Victorian gentility, his style did not move with public taste, and he began to outlive his popularity. |
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Given an adequate supply of water, air and light, a properly maintained bonsai should outlive a full-size tree of the same species. |
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Most wives outlive their husbands, partly because women have greater life expectancy, and partly because many women marry older men. |
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Its principal leaders are intelligent, media-savvy and convinced that their ideology will outlive them. |
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She wants to avoid the additional reduction because she has a smaller pension than her husband, is younger, and will probably outlive him. |
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Plenty of tannin is still evident, but the overall balance and depth of fruit suggest that the tannin will clearly outlive the fruit. |
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I used to throw cans and bottles anywhere, and they'll outlive us, they'll harm future generations. |
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Every study ever performed has shown that the fit and lean outlive the dumpy and diffident every time. |
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The dicynodonts as a whole lasted some 50 million years, and the only group of therapsids to outlive them were the cynodonts, which were the direct ancestors of the mammals. |
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It has often been emphasized that the west coast has had a racialist background, that it's got a history to outlive, and indeed, it does. |
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I have them resoled occasionally, polish them regularly and see no reason they won't outlive me. |
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The argument, which is likely to outlive us all, has been made elsewhere, and rebutted, and made again, and rebutted. |
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It is a fact that many women outlive their partners and many of those women are living in poverty. |
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In addition, women traditionally outlive their spouses so they often end up single and relying again on substantially reduced pension plans. |
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Parents, health care providers and society, in general, have the expectation that children will outlive their parents. |
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In addition, I feel it is irresponsible to breed cats that will outlive you. |
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It is often the simple things that outlive generations or even entire development cycles. |
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For the same reason, the region has the potential to overcome and outlive the dangers and threats created by the nuclear era. |
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The truth is that we will outlive every one of our disappointments, no matter how great, and come out the better for it. |
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The policyholder may outlive the life expectancy as shown in the original illustration. |
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The Global Commission was not an organization and was not intended to outlive its allotted time span. |
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She laughed, being the oldest, she never thought she would outlive her brothers. |
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Moreover, as his case shows, the longer a pontificate lasts, the greater the likelihood that a name chosen in good faith will outlive its aptness. |
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With our junk food, lack of exercise, self-indulgences and self-imposed stress, many of our old folk will outlive their sons, daughters and even grandchildren. |
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Sadly, Paul the Octopus did not outlive his impressive but unpopular World Cup predictions by long. |
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Because given her genetics and ability to kick cancer in the shins, she is now surely going to outlive me. |
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Actually there was a body of popular superstitions and observances which came from a deeper and older source than Druidism, and was destined to long outlive it. |
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So many people outlive their friends and their contemporaneous family. |
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It's difficult for my parents to think they might outlive their son. |
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They should be open to change as and when they outlive their utility. |
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Women outlive men in almost every country. |
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How many more generations must outlive it? |
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If, without solving any problems, we simply manage to outlive them, 50 years later people will start saying that the United Nations accomplished great things. |
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Individuals often outlive their life expectancy by quite a lot, he says. |
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For that, other technologies will need to be invoked. Stemming time's tideOne way that might let people outlive the limit imposed by disposable somas is to accept the machine analogy literally. |
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They're fitter and happier and they'll outlive the rest of us. |
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Anime might outlive television as we know it. |
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At 73, he is one of just two potters left in this village famous for its clayware,, and he knows his art will not outlive him by long. |
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The concept of juridical personality is useful in that it enables the entity to exist above and beyond the individuals who lead it, and in particular to outlive them. |
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Only 12 per cent worry they will outlive their money. |
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The pension that was paid to Mr. Wilson was not in the form of a joint and survivor pension, which would provide a continuing, although reduced, pension to Mrs. Wilson should she outlive Mr. Wilson. |
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And, in terms of personal financial planning, we constantly remind them that women generally outlive men and that they don't want to be poor as they grow older. |
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The power of the court itself did not outlive Wolsey, however, since no serious administrative reform was undertaken and its role was eventually devolved to the localities. |
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Although several other species are known to live in captivity for up to 20 years, their greatest recorded ages are underestimates because the birds can outlive their rings. |
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Male titis outlive their mates by 20 percent, the researchers said. |
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However, for Pakistan to ever entertain a similar layout of exhausted social and political monopoly, it has to first outlive its dated fixation with deniability. |
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