Today, we are told, is a time to sing the praises of all that is great about being part of the historic county of Yorkshire. |
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Since, according to the legend, she retired as a hermit, her example could be employed to sing the praises of the contemplative life. |
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Some now sing the praises of electoral politics. The outlook is much blurrier in Sunni territory. |
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Once there they'll hear the powerful voices of men and women griots filling the courtyards of villages as they sing the praises of Soundiatta. |
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We are not here to sing the praises of a Constitution that is not without its defects. |
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They use government advertising dollars to sing the praises of their own political platform. |
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And so, as I said at the beginning, we must sing the praises of the choices which your education has given you. |
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Often there is a great fanfare as pundits sing the praises of the next revolution that will change our lives. |
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It's time to sing the praises of all those unsung heroes of Swindon! |
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Today I sing the praises of the female form, sexist old porker that I am. |
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While the supervisors and other interested parties sing the praises of this approach, its impact is difficult to assess. |
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Other New York personalities have stopped by to sing the praises of high school sports. |
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Some people outside North Korea sing the praises of the remarkable successes that have been publicised by its regime. |
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A philosopher like P. Sansot may sing the praises of slowness and encourage us not to let ourselves be devoured by the race against time characteristic of modern life, but his book has been only moderately successful. |
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On the stump Mr Bush never ceases to sing the praises of lower taxes. |
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He should have taken the opportunity to sing the praises of a cross Canada system to regulate securities, but instead he took the opportunity to deliver, once again, his miserable budget. |
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Regrettably, many of the States that sing the praises of human rights abstained in the voting on the resolution, while one State chose to vote against it. |
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Nowadays we all sing the praises of the euro and the economic data, but we have forgotten that the euro should also be seen and presented as beneficial for Europe's citizens. |
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And that's what makes me different from the griottes, whose role is to sing the praises of a particular person in a particular song or vaunt the prowess of a noble family. |
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Mr. Acorn used the same popular approach in writing a total of 17 books, including 13 field guides that feature his own photographs and sing the praises of various native insects. |
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Others sing the praises of Pret's perennially sunny staff. |
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In Africa musicians are still very much treated like griots, that's to say, people who are paid to sing the praises of the rich, the powerful and the political classes. |
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These Member States particularly sing the praises of the proposal's proportionality in the reasons presented for it, without demonstrating in any way whatsoever that the proposal is genuinely proportional and necessary. |
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At the same time, an association of large, mainly American, companies, the International Communications Round Table, is obligingly writing to the Convention and to the Commission to sing the praises of the majority rule. |
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They like to attend all sorts of meetings to sing the praises of Canadian federalism as part of the government's only strategy, which is to be visible on the eve of a new election. |
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Early in his career he composed in the tradition of the Poets of the Princes but he was among the first to sing the praises of the nobles and others using the cywydd meter. |
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