An introduction sketches the book's key terms and thereby adumbrates its themes, especially the principal pair of beauty and the infinite. |
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Taking a moment to come to terms with what had just happened, I recomposed myself and returned to my candelight supper, dazed but undaunted. |
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There is still a major issue in terms of managing all of the remnant vegetation. |
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The next generation of Black leaders will need to address agendas more in economic terms than social or political. |
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Under the terms of the agreement, it will produce and market men's and boys' active wear and hats. |
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Showmans Guild will not be allowed to change terms and conditions of membership. |
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Both terms were applied in all the arts in a neutral sense with no necessary implication for beauty or aesthetic value. |
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At the time this was unbelievable, but I am coming to terms with this amazing detail. |
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He said, yes, we must remember that Democrats have a very spotty record in terms of their history on this, as well. |
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The second film in the trilogy is a towering achievement which actually surpasses the original in terms of spectacle, scale and emotion. |
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We all know that console add-on devices usually perform VERY poorly in terms of penetration rate into the actual console market. |
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Our diligent investigations reveal serious alteration to the terms of the document. |
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Where possible we tabulated results in terms of means and standard deviations for consultations and proportions for prescribing and referrals. |
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Teaching as a profession calls for a lot of sacrifice in terms of remuneration and other perks compared to other fields. |
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On many occasions they have demanded information on the terms of the deal, but met with a flat refusal. |
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On the terms of this encyclopedia, art historians are implicitly aestheticians without being consciously aware of it. |
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In the case of cuneiform text, trying to look at language use in terms of oral/literate dichotomies only obscures our understanding. |
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Moreover, in social terms he has had to bear a burden the others could not even remotely contemplate having to carry. |
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He's also near the top of the offensive rebounding charts and is among the NBA's biggest workhorses in terms of minutes played. |
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In terms of finance alone, last night was the difference between digging gold or iron pyrites. |
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We have arranged banking terms on the same terms as we did for the takeover of Arnotts. |
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Half-term was mind-numbingly unproductive in terms of writing, perhaps because I'm still shagged out after the house move. |
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The judge said last night that he expected the terms of the new control orders to be very similar. |
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Poetry then embraces the failure of communication in terms of masses, but not between individual readers and writers, addressees and addressers. |
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This setup should provide as close to apples to apples in terms of hardware configuration. |
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The doses were very small and were calculated to be small in terms of actual virus particles. |
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Will they ever come to terms with what was done in their names and, for the most part, with their tacit approval? |
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Business Link says the ICT marketplace is full of confusing acronyms, terms and ever-changing technologies. |
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The glossary is especially beneficial in the era of ever-increasing medical terms and acronyms. |
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The item accepted Hayward entirely on his own terms as the victim of a merciless witch-hunt. |
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Our experience in Ireland is that the only thing that really works in terms of drivers keeping the law is fear. |
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Scots and Russians are very similar in terms of how open and friendly they are. |
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Democratic culture is far richer and more diverse, Stout argues, than the terms of Rawls's etiolated rationalism can capture. |
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These are costs which are not recoverable in terms of the prices we obtain. |
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Though he was low on cash and feeling squeezed, he didn't like the terms the banks offered. |
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The proposal that he receive backdated remuneration on flotation or disposal makes sense in terms of timing. |
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After negotiation, we agree a set of terms under which the autopsy will be performed. |
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Speaking in terms of culture, not advocation, I find myself wondering about the center and its place in society. |
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It's just repetitive or uninteresting in terms of what already appears in the film. |
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One of these phenomena is the redefinition of the authority of sacral status in terms of professional expertise. |
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It certainly took everyone by surprise in terms of the scope and magnitude of the devastation. |
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In technical terms the Colorado River is antecedent to the Edwards Plateau and consequent to the Coastal Plain. |
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In the last issue, we reviewed the terms and definitions for bowling balls, lanes, and lane play. |
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In a place like downtown Atlanta, where it is near wall-to-wall concrete, you do not get a sense of the place in terms of the landscape. |
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You said to the committee that the speaking slots were allocated in terms of proportionality. |
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The shell itself is a little disappointing in terms of build quality, with stickers misaligned, one wheel arch rubbing on a tyre etc. |
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The Dodge is the closest to the Titan in terms of macho styling and tough attitude. |
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Moreover, if the bank had not advanced the money to the council, it would have employed the money on similar terms in its own business. |
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Even some of the cases that are explicable in ideological terms reveal subtle shadings just beneath the surface. |
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We developed a new method to determine the amplitude of flickers in terms of millivolts of depolarization. |
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Your argument seems to suggest that people everywhere measure worth primarily or exclusively in terms of monetary value. |
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Contrasts in the imagery, then, reflect contrasts in sexual politics, although their terms and figures share common elements. |
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We need partners to fulfill other aspects of actualizing our digital plans, specifically in terms of information distribution. |
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Another indication that this is the case comes from the terms that credit card companies give e-tailers. |
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In terms of leading a political life, she's doing the absolute best thing for herself by keeping on as a surprisingly low-profile junior senator. |
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That is why we need to get our act together in terms of organisation and resources so people get the best possible treatment. |
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Cleave is left facing a tragedy and having to come to terms with things failed and half done. |
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In terms of being at the forefront of gaming culture and, quite possibly, pop culture as a whole, it is. |
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The reason why I want others to contribute is that I haven't fully come to terms with what it is about, but I'm sure it pays repeat viewings. |
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Are you intimidated by such terms as Download, Hyperlink, Online, Homepage, World Wide Web? |
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The terms under which a student councillor can be removed from the council, because of absenteeism, were clarified. |
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Figures, tables, and glossaries of terms promote an understanding of the materials presented. |
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In terms of pregnancy, each additional act of unprotected intercourse increases risk. |
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People who see the world in terms of evil and sin will tend to devalue the material world. |
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In terms of mood, this room is rustically casual, but you'll notice that doesn't mean it's messy or unkempt. |
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Suddenly, the real core of what this gala event signified in musical terms came majestically across. |
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The Soweto Students' Congress and the Azanian Co-ordinating Committee are restricted in terms of emergency regulations. |
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But what about the suggestion that event causation is instead reducible to, or analysable in terms of, agent causation? |
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Ivory seems to be the colour most brides-to-be are favouring as white may be a little stark in terms of matching accessories. |
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Different terms and words have different affectivity depending on the market. |
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But last week in testing we made some steps forward in terms of tyres and aerodynamics, so we should be strong here. |
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I mean, we bring in millions of dollars in terms of research money, huge amounts. |
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Thus, it does not seem possible to explain the price increase in terms of demand factors. |
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I think he's done very well in this series of speeches this week, in terms of refining and redefining this mission. |
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People are attracted to the quality of life, particularly in terms of homeownership and real estate. |
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Other terms for this ontology are pluralistic realism and transcendental realism. |
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This programme is to help people to come to terms with loss through bereavement or separation. |
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That was the point that I was going to raise, not only the lapse of time but the cost in terms of both anxiety and financial cost to Mr Mond. |
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Probably the biggest benefit of variable-rate technology is that it lets us sell in terms of agronomics rather than just economics. |
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In terms of the epidemiology it is getting wimpier, but I don't know whether it is in terms of severity of disease. |
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If you're not on friendly terms with them, you could print out The Monday Garden article on ailanthus and stick it under their front door. |
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It is still a spillage and by the terms of the sign even the spillage of one atom's worth of petrol should be reported. |
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The first obvious effort is to try to stabilize the situation in terms of the security situation on the street. |
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Bosses want to end all the workers' contracts and re-employ them on worse terms and conditions. |
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The savings bank collapsed after the owners and regulators couldn't come to terms on a recapitalization plan. |
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In terms of exercise, I do a lot of walking and have been known to go for a run. |
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He loves terms of art, slang, botanical names, the names of foodstuffs and fabrics, rare words, proper names and place names. |
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Both ultrasound and resonance measurements in crystals are very demanding in terms of sample size and preparation requirements. |
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The terms fluorescence and phosphorescence refer to specific characteristics of luminescent transitions. |
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So pat yourselves on the back while Geoff and I whomp up a few terms for that equation. |
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They cover terms that provide the beginnings of a viable working vocabulary for describing meter. |
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She is keener to discuss life in philosophical terms than the specifics of her new novel. |
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Like the ponderer of a Zen koan, the viewer must come to terms with this paradox. |
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When asked to provide a breath sample she replied in robust terms that she was going to do nothing of the kind, said Miss Bramley. |
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Furthermore, much jurisprudence had accumulated regarding the interpretation of the offences punishable in terms of the new Statute. |
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We'll be looking at what we can do in terms of mail-outs and pamphlets to our members and to the wider community. |
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In a culture that measures everything in terms of size, success, and influence, we have to say no to these worldly values as well. |
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However, this slump was the smallest in percentage terms since March of last year. |
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I think that this is going to have a snowballing effect in terms of shaping public opinion in the developed world. |
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It, in the first place, in express terms declares the office of macer to be hereditary, and the acting macer to be merely a deputy. |
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The game offers players the chance to get ahead of the curve in terms of leveling up and character customization via microtransactions. |
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Prior to the most recent malaise, some stock market cheerleaders had been talking in terms of a rally. |
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I can see this in terms of the weekly web server statistics that I monitor. |
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Since the two owners were not on speaking terms they would simply repost any wrongly-delivered mail in the pillar box half way down the hill. |
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In terms of conventional physics, the grouse represents only a millionth of either the mass or the energy of an acre. |
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They are competing in terms of business but will join together when it will help to bring about benefits for retail across the board. |
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These terms are thrown about to create a mindset that justifies the actions of some nations. |
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I find myself sat despondently at my desk, trying to come to terms with the fact that I actually have to work for living. |
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We are used to measuring things in terms of various systems of weights and measures. |
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Check the terms and conditions of sale to ensure that your copyright is not infringed in any way. |
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The spiralling cost of houses means that a home is a huge outlay in terms of borrowing and ready cash. |
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The rest of us know this is just propaganda and the terms are just hollow buzzwords that do not match reality of living here. |
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In terms of graphics and audio performance the DS is at least half a generation behind. |
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And what does a report like that put into action, in terms of an investigation? |
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The cost of housing will fall in real terms if the CPI exceeds the rate of house price inflation. |
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Am I talking as a way of coming to terms with the past, attempting to clarify the present and readying myself for the future? |
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The Green Party has been supporting the unions in terms of getting cabotage, where local freight is carried by local carriers. |
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Manufacturers usually represent the energy efficiency of windows in terms of their U-values or their R-values. |
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That high conservation value land is also likely to be worth more in terms of millable trees. |
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The specifics of the onerous terms of release were not apparent in the unreported decision. |
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A hike in interest rates could have an adverse effect on house prices and in terms of consumer wealth. |
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Area Whitley Councils discuss issues affecting the terms and conditions of staff within the particular Area. |
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These terms might not exactly trip off the tongue, but they could stop you putting your foot in it. |
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Can you foresee a time when gaming tournaments rival sports championships in terms of audience interest and ratings? |
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It will certainly offer some protection in terms of sheep being worried by dogs that escape from hunters. |
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Still, union workers have fared better than nonunionized employees in terms of their layoff conditions. |
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The chances that Congress is going to adopt five-year renewable copyright terms in this political context are zero. |
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Also, the Annapolis Conservancy Board will monitor the easements each year to ensure that their terms are being observed. |
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He served two terms in prison last year, for dangerous driving and then for breaking a curfew order. |
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In terms of wildlife, you find elephant, buffalo, hippos, baboons, chimpanzees and over 600 species of birds. |
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Plenty of thought has gone into the design of this room, and not just in terms of electronic wizardry. |
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I do feel that they are getting a bad deal in terms of coverage and I was glad that I was able to do a little bit to put that right. |
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Borrowers can choose from fixed or variable rates, with terms ranging from five to 30 years, with the longer time frame proving most popular. |
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In terms of my personal priorities, clients come after my family, football team, friends and colleagues. |
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This short, readable book outlines with exemplary clarity the philosophical terms of the issue. |
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Exercising moderately for 30 to 45 minutes seems to be just right in terms of recruiting the maximum number of lymphocytes. |
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The Finns had been told the precise terms the Russians wanted on February 23rd. |
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I don't think of our show in terms of music theatre, because it's original, fairly serious and it isn't kitsch or camp. |
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The tenant shall have the option to purchase the reversionary interest of the property on the terms set out in the Schedule hereto. |
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The lowlight, in terms of competitiveness, was at Daytona, home to NASCAR and its flagship track. |
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They conceived of ethnicity only in terms of the Other, as if there were no ethnicity to whiteness. |
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Outlines may be captured as rectangular coordinates or Fourier coefficients and, even when non-fractal, analysed in terms of fractal dimensions. |
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Manchester is one of the most user-friendly towns in terms of getting around and making a day of it. |
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This early redemption is simply a must, considering the terms of issuance and sale of these bonds, he said. |
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But it might be another story when it comes to bygones in terms of his relationship with this White House. |
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So it took me some time to come to terms with the fact that he supports fox hunting and his son is a whipper-in. |
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In terms of linear systems theory, the point spread function and the modulation transfer function become invariant with respect to defocus. |
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When B2C searchers do use generic terms, there is often less variance in the terms they use. |
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This sounds a lot of money, but in real terms it will support just eight schemes. |
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In real terms members are thus receiving less benefits for paying higher contributions. |
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So the future is very wide open I think in terms of outcomes for this presidency. |
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However, in terms of real estate prices and land availability, Mr Koch views the council's role as limited. |
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And in terms of religious education is atheism or humanism ever given equal balance with official religions? |
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Indeed one of the other fashionable mistakes of the moment is to blur the distinction between the terms atheism and secularism. |
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The Protestant public also wielded the power to obscure their influence in the public sphere and redefine the terms of public debate. |
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This behavior is interpreted in terms of a loss of protein internal water, so-called lubricant water, induced by the co-solvent. |
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What do the allied coalition members plan to do in terms of changing their strategy? |
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In days gone by we were able to explain wars in simple terms of good and evil. |
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If the proposal does go ahead, officers and developers will be held to account in terms of this agreed policy. |
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These terms were agreeable to the Magyar aristocracy, but could not satisfy the revolutionaries or moderates among the lesser nobility. |
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They concluded in terms that she would not be prepared to attend any meeting save for the purpose of her reinstatement. |
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In terms of car set-up, we try to spring the cars quite stiffly in order to get a responsive change of direction through the chicanes. |
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If the balance sheet comes out ahead enough to indicate a decent profit, the comic or in broader terms the company is healthy. |
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The Aussie admits that he left Essex on bad terms with several players, and they were surrounding him yesterday and willing him to fail. |
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However, Celtic quickly reasserted themselves and were back on level terms following an Alan Hosey header from a great John Reid cross. |
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It should also have a strong historical track record in terms of growth and profitability. |
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Some of their stories may be better than others in terms of whether they are winnable in a courtroom or not. |
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The squatters settled in the flat part of the ravine, on top of the cemetery, but did not build a good city in terms of urban development. |
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Decisions are made that affect New Zealanders' daily lives in terms of their money, jobs, prices, and services. |
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The higher minimum wage will induce some employers to reduce their workforces, others to change nonwage terms of the contract. |
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In terms of geography, both Panama City and Port of Spain are almost at the centre of the American continent. |
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The more concentrated in terms of time and space an airdrop was, the more probable success was. |
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As an added bonus, their contributions need to be letter-perfect in terms of spelling, punctuation, and legibility. |
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But Zu would know how to reduce fractions to their lowest terms by dividing top and bottom by the greatest common divisor. |
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Such findings can inject a sense of process by seeing social life in terms of streams of interdependent events and elements. |
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This will not only limit the level of grip on the track but, in terms of the engine, the air filter will play a more crucial role. |
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His silence is a matter which is neutral in terms of providing positive proof of his guilt. |
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The effectiveness of a search can be measured in terms of recall and precision. |
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The losses and sacrifices suffered in terms of academic advancement had been construed to be the destiny of life. |
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It means you have to leave home and that requires a big sacrifice in terms of leaving your family behind. |
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The Tamil original is sprinkled with evocative and lovely terms like poongkuttigal for goat kids. |
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The Algerian experience led the French government to recast its African presence in terms of a new political role. |
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In terms of character, although Robert takes the lead in seducing Francesca, his longing is reciprocated throughout. |
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By contrast, in other societies both sexes are, in principle, treated equally in terms of educational opportunities and attainments. |
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But, we are well situated in terms of out attempt on the mountain and in our camp. |
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If hired as a runner, always, always get a signed contract with your working terms and conditions. |
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This will also guarantee the principle of reciprocity when relaxed travel terms are negotiated with other countries. |
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She failed to comply with the terms of her release by failing to comply with the conditions of her recognizance. |
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It's a recipe for good decision-making in terms of the speed and alacrity with which you can make decisions, of course. |
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The terms of the transaction meant that the tickets are non-transferable and non-refundable. |
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All war is asymmetric in the sense that states engaged in conflict seek to fight each other on terms least conducive to their opponent's success. |
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In terms of legal analysis, you can argue plausibly that all I have done is to apply in large measure well-established jurisprudence. |
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Oil exporters have become financial kingmakers as real oil prices have leapt 170 per cent in real terms since 2001 to 25-year highs. |
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In 1904 he gave axioms for a boolean algebra then later, in 1933, he showed that a boolean algebra could be defined in terms of a single binary and a single unary operation. |
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He has taken to tannoying terms of endearment to his publicity officer. |
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I probably bought at the right time, but in terms of paying for a converted apartment and then reconverting it, I probably didn't make a good investment decision. |
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In terms of organized protests heading off campus, they would have to obey singaporean laws. |
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An increase in body rigidity of 112 per cent compared with the outgoing cabriolet will also bring benefits both dynamically and in terms of safety. |
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Their terms are staggered, and the vice president does not automatically become president following the death or removal from office of the president. |
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European culture and values indelibly shaped the urban and rural landscapes, particularly in terms of the use of space, and the structure and practice of government. |
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Little Ray and Caz uncover some uncomfortable truths, and Ray and Jim have to come to terms with the prejudices of ageism, family loyalty and love. |
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The relationship between those two companies was one of support in terms of loan advances, right throughout the history of that 20 year operation. |
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It only affected what I chose to write afterwards in terms of the other three books in the lonesome Dove tetralogy. |
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Not only in terms of the politics on the ground, but in terms of material and hardware. |
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Why the crowd took against him at the Stadium of Light is an old story now that doesn't matter to him any more beyond what it added to him in terms of character. |
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Nine years on, let's look at what the authors of the plan had in mind for Sligo after the road is built, particularly in terms of traffic flow and pedestrianisation. |
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Researchers noted the difficulty of adequately conveying terms such as these to people who were not fully conversant with the latest Western intellectual buzzwords. |
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If we look at the relation between narrative and linguistics in terms of langue and language, we will see how Metz overlooks the principle of the image. |
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We will be running a very small deficit, much of which will be used to finance such things as, for example, student loan advances, which are an asset in terms of net debt. |
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He argued that these policies were of dubious benefit in terms of economic development and represented to some degree an unsanctioned redistribution of wealth. |
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So he stands supreme in terms of a sportsman not acting his age. |
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I was very careful and very concerned about taking care of everybody in terms of sexually transmitted disease. |
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In high school we are taught the quadratic formula which provides the roots of any quadratic equation in terms of radicals involving the coefficients of the equation. |
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A modification of the absorption spectra observed upon a self-association can be explained in terms of either localized or delocalized excited states. |
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The men, middle-aged and raddled by the inevitable broken roads they have travelled, struggle to come to terms with their lives and damaged relationships. |
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So defined, the fin-limb transition has to be explained in terms of the evolution of the digital arch and the derivation of digits from radials in fins. |
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Nowadays he is on first-name terms with at least half of his audience. |
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Just in terms of carbon trading between countries, there will be a complex web for translating trading rules into every different country's legal system. |
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It is also in recognition of the importance of Namibia's fisheries sector in terms of GDP contribution, balance of trade and employment opportunities. |
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There is no doubt we went mad in terms of exposing ourselves to increased debt as we dramatically caught up with the EU average on that score in jig time. |
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The University will provide accurate and timely acquittances to granting bodies in accordance with the terms and conditions specified in each grant contract or agreement. |
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Others have jibbed at this categorisation, but I remain of the opinion that this would be the effect in legal terms of the view that no further resolution is required. |
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Its general manager says the flexible displays are far more advanced than other bendy screens in terms of size, resolution and the complexity of the organic electronics used. |
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In terms of this law, public officials who exhibit a lifestyle above their official means are prosecuted unless they can prove legitimate possession of this wealth. |
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In terms of imagery I am really attracted to the intricacies of weaving. |
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In terms of performance he doesn't disappoint, from miming along to a solo on his guitar to shooting at members of the audience with his plastic axe. |
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I'd wager if you did this, you list the super welters on down as being far superior then those above, at least in terms of providing the fans the best experience. |
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But under the terms of the NBA constitution, he has no chance to succeed in litigation over punishment. |
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The government has been very weak in terms of clarifying the case. |
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The terms have become buzzwords for coffee drinkers around the world. |
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I have to say I don't think it's ever been any easier for me in terms of match action than it was in San Marino, but you have to keep your wits about you. |
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Under the terms of her admission to the United Kingdom, she is not allowed to rent space in her room to anyone else or to engage in paid employment for at least six months. |
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Please keep the terms of the argument at least vaguely on-target. |
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A glossary of Malagasy terms and the bibliography at the end of the book are a gold mine for anyone wishing to learn more about the material culture of Madagascar. |
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Not in terms of units moved but humans moved has Yeezus blown ARTPOP and Magna Carta Holy Grail out of the water. |
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A year into the job and still stuck in what he terms a transitional period, he is hamstrung by the need to offload several players before he can add to the squad. |
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The pair fought furiously through Churchill's long stretch and were on nearly even terms at the wire and needed the photo finish camera to separate them. |
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Thus deleterious recessives had not been eliminated from the population to the extent that consanguineous matings were harmless in terms of offspring viability. |
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This might sound like a contradiction of terms or simply lunacy. |
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Computer forensics is a very labor intensive business in terms of accessing the abuser's computer and getting sufficient evidence of robustness that will stand up in court. |
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I will now consider how the Promethean myth is recast in terms of modernity in the story of Frankenstein and the issues regarding male power this raises. |
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And we should realize that while this would involve material sacrifices, in terms of quality it would actually make our lives more happy and meaningful. |
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It's worth bearing in mind, however, that regular savings accounts tend to have a raft of terms and conditions attached, so read the small print carefully before signing up. |
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Well, throughout the campaign we did hear him talk about recalibrating the peace negotiations in terms of coming in with a more balanced approach. |
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Men increasingly justify their existence in terms of their workloads. |
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As for the houses which used to be on Clevelly Close, heaven knows how much they would be worth now, both in monetary terms and to the area's self-esteem. |
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In terms of photography and airbrushing, this ad is excellent. |
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Features include advanced hydraulic controls and impressive power in terms of rated operating capacities, tractive effort, bucket breakout force, and the like. |
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Nonetheless, usage often views these terms as interchangeable, so that persons not yet tried are pardoned and prisoners serving sentences are granted an amnesty. |
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Like many former mining towns in north-east England, Easington is still struggling to come to terms with the sudden loss of the major local employer. |
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The Simpsons really does defy all expectations in terms of the normal lifespan. |
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A demand curve for the stock can then be generated by ordering the market participants in terms of the maximum they would be prepared to pay for that stock. |
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All of these punishments were performed in the presence of the offenders' military unit and were seen simply in terms of minatory retribution and deterrence. |
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It's measured in terms of young lives whose potential can be realised. |
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Another helpful feature on the site is a glossary of terms that delineate the various stages of mall decrepitude. |
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A further implication of the suspension is that meat exporters to South Africa might be required to renegotiate the terms of export with South Africa. |
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In Hollywood, a friendship with a movie star, especially a close friendship, requires its own terms and definitions. |
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In addition to his nature-based theory, the author blends the traditional roles of women and ideas of hard core feminism into what he terms womanism. |
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Uto-Aztecan is one of the largest language families of North and Central America in terms of population, linguistic diversity and geographic distribution. |
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In terms of how we expanded and deepened our exploration of the characters. |
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Like most of the terms that refer to major conceptual anchors of the western intellectual tradition, its origins may be traced to classical antiquity. |
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This was one of those days, one which is still hard to come to terms with. |
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Some were lynched and many others brought before the courts where they were convicted and sentenced to long terms working on county chain and highway gangs. |
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Modern Indian history is riddled with sheet anchors, which must be a contradiction in terms if sheet anchors are meant to exist only in the singular. |
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Based on simple limit equilibrium and an elastoplastic interface shear relation, pull-out test results are predicted in terms of the relative interface bond resistances. |
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He was the outsider who was on intimate terms with them, communicating through comic mime with expressions and gestures that became a well known code. |
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Therefore, the chemical composition of an odorant will determine the attractiveness of the odor to the searching organism in terms of its identity and quality. |
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It may well be that interpreting the first in terms of the latter motivates a doctor to bury his patient's existential despair under a heap of tranquilizing drugs. |
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So it is that, while Faldo outnumbers him six to five in terms of majors won, it is the man from Pedrena whom history will anoint the more significant. |
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When we meet thus, when we do honor to the dead in terms that must sometimes embrace the living, we do not deceive ourselves. |
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There are matters relating to the level of recruitment for the armed forces at the moment, both in terms of the regular forces and the territorial forces. |
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The organisations pay out a big tranche of money getting hundreds of people off their payroll on enhanced retirement terms and three months later, guess what? |
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East of the School of Forestry is what Peter terms a West Coast garden with rimu, kanuka, mountain beech, coprosma, nikau, wineberry, native fuchsia, pohutukawa, and ferns. |
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We are dealing with a relatively small sum of money in terms of recovery. |
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Her method, then, is not a propaedeutic of the destruction or the destructuration of two terms in order to establish a synthesis that is neither one nor the other. |
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The campaign failed to define the man and his agenda on his own terms before the media and his rivals defined him, on theirs, as a one-note ranter. |
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On Sunday they did not do themselves justice tactically or in terms of conviction, but they are extremely lucky to have a chance of making amends so quickly. |
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But I do not see the future in terms of the couture that will come out of it. |
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The settlement was subsequently renegotiated on more favourable terms on 10 November 1998 and approved by the court in the form of a consent judgment. |
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Charles is 52 and a great-grandfather, which in terms of simple mathematics is quite a feat. |
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One is to say that when we are thinking of our lives as wholes, we should think in terms of flourishing or welfare or well-being rather than happiness. |
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It's worth noting that in today's American food service world, probably none of the Spanish language terms used in the above paragraph are unfamiliar. |
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The university that you are attending is virtually one of the best in the nation in terms of satisfying the needs of students from a wide variety of cultures and interests. |
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Protection of an insignia in terms of trademark law requires registration by the trademark authorities. |
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Scottish use of latin terms provincia and comitatus makes the difference clear. |
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These terms still apply even when the other guy is in the oval Office. |
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Over time these terms acquired distinct connotations leading to the present difference in definition. |
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Modi'in also rates higher in terms of average salary and graduation rates than the national average. |
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Trelleborg is the busiest ferry port in Sweden in terms of weight transported by lorry. |
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In practical terms then, I was unharmed by this latest strike. |
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And hence the Britons accepted terms there, on the first day of the month of August. |
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As a social class generally, freed slaves were libertini, though later writers used the terms libertus and libertinus interchangeably. |
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With the economy poised for collapse by the mid-1990s, terms like karoshi entered the vocabulary, and travel became a luxury. |
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In terms of intercultural communication there are language barriers which are effected by verbal forms of communication. |
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In terms of socio-economic impact, it appears that the water mill was an oppidan development in the Roman possessions, including Dacia. |
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Coordinates on a map are usually in terms northing N and easting E offsets relative to a specified origin. |
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And this is not because they aren't on good terms but because he won't have any money he hasn't earned. |
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Doyle, however, found it too difficult to understand the German medical terms at the classes in Vienna and quickly quit his studies there. |
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The terms folk music, folk song, and folk dance are comparatively recent expressions. |
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This would mean that a new Scottish state would go it alone on the global stage, renegotiating terms of entry into every international body. |
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