Both Martens and Cocca have found that education generally allays the public's fears. |
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And any idea or thought that allays this fear is likely to have a huge influence on human conduct. |
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The Commission has come to the provisional conclusion that the new arrangement allays its concerns. |
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But what about pre-emptively dealing with death, in more general terms – is it a good idea, or one that generates more anxiety than it allays? |
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I hope that this speech not only answers the honourable Member's questions, but also allays any fears that Parliament is not duly involved. |
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It certainly allays the fears of those who may have questions that are unanswered in this debate. |
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Do men of intelligence and genius allays draw their ideas from their own minds? |
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It certainly allays fears that the company is stagnating under Tim Cook, too paralyzed to make decisions without its founder. |
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Our long association has taught me that confiding in others allays pain. |
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Only a comprehensive rescue plan, which allays such doubts, will quell the euro crisis. |
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In outlook a European-style social democrat, he has no appetite for an exercise that promises to foment more Euroscepticism than it allays. |
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I hope, therefore, that our statement allays and provides a response to the concerns which the honourable Member expressed. |
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However, the text which we are being called to vote on allays my initial fears. |
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Consequently it also allays concerns about future difficulties relating to new investment. |
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In its view, the legal framework laid down in the Commission's communication only partly allays these concerns. |
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And from a security standpoint the act raises as many fears as it allays. |
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While it allays the patient's pain and the physician's anxiety, the fuselike appendix smoulders. |
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I believe the rapporteur has found a compromise that allays fears held by some Member States, yet recognises the importance of the role cabin crew play. |
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But it's Mr. Sullivan's casually electrifying turn that allays any potential stolidness to a definably well-made play that confines the action to the domestic arena even as it aims a poison dart squarely at society. |
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Clarity allays people's fears and helps them feel more committed. |
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