I do not think we should chastise unions or put a black mark against them because they want to have a stronger power base. |
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None may chastise him for deviance, nor catechize him about the path to take. |
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This irks me to no end and I sometimes chastise him about buying the kids' loyalty. |
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She stopped to chastise her audience, telling them to treat local hotel employees and restaurant workers with respect. |
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Begone, or shall I be required to chastise you with the whip and the scourge once more? |
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It seems ironic that some would criticize the military for providing that opportunity when they chastise other departments for failing to. |
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He said he would not chastise his brother for not returning home to visit the family or contact them. |
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For instance, they don't hesitate to chastise a colleague, even if he is a personal friend, for incompetent work. |
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But critics from Connecticut and elsewhere chastise his embrace of nuclear power. |
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It is important that you don't chastise or admonish yourself for your feelings. |
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He could not have done more, except score, and being as self-critical as he is, he might reflect on his one chance and chastise himself again. |
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How dare this miserable excuse for a Federal Government chastise any other country over pulling their troops out of Iraq. |
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Society would chastise him and he would never be able to show his face in public again. |
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We cannot chastise her for what she does, because, ultimately, he had us fooled as well. |
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Even animals chastise their offspring with a little nip of pain to teach them to behave. |
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The NDP itself continued to chastise the Liberal government about those broken promises. |
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For those who love Me, My extended hands signify My mercy, but for unbelievers, they are there to chastise. |
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When it appears it is largely used to chastise transsexuals and to promote celibacy. |
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We ask our celebrities to pour their hearts out, and then chastise them if they stain our buttoned-up shirts. |
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Various social-media sites and platforms have begun to chastise the new sports darling for, of all things, the upkeep of her hair. |
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He was in shorts, like one of the errant schoolboys he used to chastise, clutching a sheaf of papers, or hastily-composed homework, shaking his general defiance. |
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But it is in his character to occasionally chastise people who he thinks are behaving inappropriately. |
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To chastise the director for fictions and anachronisms may be to miss the point. |
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Had I done so, I can assure the hon. member that I would have taken appropriate steps to chastise the member involved. |
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I have had occasion to chastise members in the past who have left their telephones on and indeed some whom I have caught speaking on them. |
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I know that the opposition loves to try to chastise the government when it comes to questions of rights. |
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I did chastise him and he indicated to the House at the time that he had erased the pictures and destroyed any that were printed. |
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We have no desire to chastise Russia, as it is a country with which we wish to cooperate closely. |
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Those who used to chastise America for acting alone in the world cannot now stand by and wait for America to solve the world's problems alone. |
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And Hebba pays the price, when her husband sees fit to exercise his traditional right to chastise the wife who has, in the view of this toadying timeserver, sabotaged his career. |
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They chastise the government for trying to rush pieces of legislation through this House without proper debate, yet when we give them the opportunity to engage in meaningful and fulsome debate, what do they do? |
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This is something to celebrate I think, not to chastise. |
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One lady in her 70s said that old people in China are very good at saving energy and water, but that her children and grandchildren chastise her for doing so. |
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The Old Testament prophets did not chastise their people only for such sins, but also for day-to-day lapses like tolerating poverty, bribery and corruption. |
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As a yellow-dog Democrat, a cringing compromiser, and a reflexive anti-Communist, I was simply one of a horde of milksop liberals whom it was his duty — above all, his filial duty — to chastise. |
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We need to work with the new administration, to open our arms and embrace it, not criticize, chastise or ridicule it as we saw the leader of the Liberal Party do last week during the course of his visit to Washington. |
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I think it is quite inappropriate to chastise us on that issue. |
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I will therefore chastise him and release him. |
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With our good judgment and our sense of responsibility, we in the Bloc Québécois have had occasion to chastise the Conservative government about this issue. |
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He doesn't chastise people or go ballistic or anything like that. |
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