In the facing of this offensive against the working class, the trade unions have demonstrated their complete prostration to the powers that be. |
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Unable to match the Indians' enviable capacity for keeping themselves cool, the animals died of heat prostration. |
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It also can present as severe prostration without characteristic signs and symptoms. |
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Blairs apparent stature can be accounted for by the prostration of his ostensible opponents. |
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This prostration is symptomatic of the present social dynamic in American bourgeois politics. |
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There is usually an abrupt onset of high fever, chills, dry cough, headache, myalgia, and prostration. |
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In these scenarios, scientists move in a flash of inspiration from prostration in the face of disease to triumph. |
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Generally, those of the lower orders abased themselves through prostration in front of those who outranked them. |
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How does God begin and carry forward his submissive prostration of the soul, before his awful justice? |
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But Gephardt's campaign essentially collapsed, demonstrating the utter prostration of the trade union bureaucracy. |
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That it did is the outcome of the organization's and its affiliates ' political prostration before the Labour and trade union bureaucracy. |
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I am your Imam so do not precede me in bowing, prostration, standing or leaving. |
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Its support for the war and its prostration before Bush are not only a matter of cowardice. |
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The second salam occurs outside the prayer and so there is no reasonfor prostration. |
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It is not necessarily a bad thing to just do a prostration or a mantra mouthing the words. |
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The word in Arabic is masjid, you know, which means place of prostration, in fact. |
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The point is to do everything, beginning with the first prostration, for all forms of life. |
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This outlook is not merely the ideology of Bush and his inner circle, as was made clear by the prostration of the Democratic Party. |
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The second kind of prostration is done out of the sincerity of your heart, not with a seeking mind. |
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The prostration of the Democratic Party has encouraged the Bush administration to accelerate its attacks on working people. |
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The prostration of the Party has been amply demonstrated in the California recall election. |
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The mark of their Faith is on their faces from the traces of prostration during prayers. |
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The eruption tends to become bullous and systemic symptoms, including fever and prostration, are present. |
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Doctors found that the panda was affected by lung fever together with functional prostration on some organs. |
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Between June 6 and July 18, forty-seven people were found dead of thirst and heat prostration on the Tohono O'Odham lands. |
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This inflated conception of the strength of the Republicans is indicative of the despair of many ex-radicals and their prostration before political reaction. |
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They asked him after the prayer was over about his long prostration. |
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The prostration of the New York Times is the rule, not the exception. |
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This concession to polytheism greatly pleased the pagans, and when Muhammad reached the last verse of the Sura, they joined in the prostration enjoined there. |
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This is a formula for the utter prostration of the working class. |
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The Soviet working class paid for this by enormous physical and moral decline and was thrown back to the conditions of primitive want and political prostration. |
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Such is the shallowness of contemporary liberalism, and the gullibility and prostration of its representatives in the face of a government determined to go to war. |
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Daschle, who epitomized political cowardice and conciliation, was a fitting symbol of the Democratic Party's prostration before the Bush administration and the ultra-right. |
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A sudden pale complexion with cold sweat is the sign of sudden prostration of yang qi due to febrile diseases caused by exogenous pathogenic wind-cold. |
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Instead, they sought beautiful scenery to adorn their lives and therapy to soothe the cares and nervous prostration brought on by their intense work habits. |
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When I found him suffering from general debility and nervous prostration. |
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Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and prostration usually occur within 15 minutes after ingestion and subside within 24 hours. |
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Adoration is generally considered the most noble form of prayer, a kind of prostration of the whole being before God. |
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On arriving in the chapel the new Master performed a prostration, and then was led to his seat. |
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We know full well that the notion of collective guilt has led to universal conflagration and to the extermination and prostration of peoples. |
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Inside the main church of the Salesianum, the Master performed a prostration, and was then led to his seat. |
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Rats treated with acetic acid alone showed hypomotility, prostration and piloerection. |
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The symptoms, following an incubation period of five to eight days, are fever, chills, and severe headache, pain in the joints, sweating, and prostration. |
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At the end of the Relatio, in which the Master reflected on his nine-years of service of the Order, and which was in a sense his last word to the Order, he performed the 'venia', a prostration on the ground. |
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Matgamna states openly what is in fact the real program of all the revisionist British ex-Trotskyists: opposition to new October Revolutions and prostration at the feet of the British Labour Party. |
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This insecticide causes a rapid excitation of the insect nervous system, leading to involuntary muscle contractions, prostration with tremors, and paralysis. |
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If the current trends maintain themselves, a great majority of the 53 countries of the continent will find themselves in a state of prostration that is incompatible with the most basic standards of the human condition. |
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Two psittacine birds presented a history of prostration and died 18 hours after manifestation of clinical signs. |
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This reaction could be a path of return after prostration. |
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Of nervous prostration following a great loss or waste of blood. |
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Those who have been endowed with innate knowledge and make use of it, recognize its glory and fall down upon their faces in prostration as soon as it is conveyed to them. |
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Devotional practices include ritual prayer, prostration, offerings, pilgrimage, and chanting. |
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Every weekday in Great Lent there are specific liturgical services which includes prostration or profound bows a number of times. |
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The actual and possible prostration of a majority of the 53 African countries constitutes one of the biggest scandals, challenges and risks of this new century. |
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Firehoses were sprayed on the crowd to avoid heat prostration. |
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With progressive prostration and with a tone to the cry which is a sort of a thin, crowing, quacky sound, points to the existence of retropharyngeal lymphadenitis. |
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