A wide range of educational institutions ranging from kindergarten schools to the professional colleges have come into being. |
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Whether or not such a market can ever come into being sponsored by government is a debatable question. |
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Only in service of that primal vision does the manifoldness of the created world come into being. |
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However, the barriers to entry aren't large, and new companies have come into being to take the slack. |
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How does such a system of brain-washing come into being without a cruel, omnipotent dictator? |
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No sooner did IDA come into being than it became the agency of record for all government advertising. |
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These obligations come into being via two different means: legal precedent and codified law. |
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New political groups come into being including the Popular Front of Estonia and the radical Estonian National Independence Party. |
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A great deal had been achieved in the 20 years since CMS had come into being. |
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It was regrettable that the resolution had only been partially implemented and only one of the planned States had yet come into being. |
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On the other hand, a systemmore than thirty years old,which had come into being in entirely different circumstances, needed to be reorganized. |
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What role can parliamentarians play in backing the work of a court that has just come into being? |
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Military service has never been provided for in Iceland, and no Icelandic armed forces have come into being. |
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He has not come into being, does not come into being, and will not come into being. |
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It is the principle of being a medium of exchange and only because of this that secondary functions come into being, such as the role of money as a store of value. |
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In addition to the inter-firm day care center, which opened in 2008, a medical center project will come into being. |
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We hope that, having come into being, this cooperation will then grow, but I will come back to this point. |
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Public enterprises formed in order to enhance the economic and social health of a nation, parastatals come into being through a variety of means and circumstances. |
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While tens of thousands race mountain bikes each year, it is truly a preciously small clutch of people who ensure these events ever come into being at all. |
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That's how some stepparents come into being. |
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However, there had come into being a whole network of library provision on a private or institutional basis. |
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What we just built is only a space geometry that allows describing how a classical Maxwell EM wave could spherically expand after having come into being at the major XYZ axis superset point-like origin. |
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Whilst some states have succeeded in keeping hunger within bounds, new starvation zones have come into being in other regions, for example in the former Soviet Union. |
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As for my friend from the Bloc, I listened with care and he said that the Bloc Québécois could not have come into being the way it did if the process my colleague is advocating had been in place. |
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To date, no project using this programme has come into being. |
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The committee might come into being under the aegis of the EU and would aim to harmonise the actions conducted by the Member States as well as those conducted by third countries. |
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That's how some single mothers come into being. |
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It appears very likely that it took all the political will of Mr. Lula da Silva, driven by his concern to defend the country's interests on the international arena, for this document to come into being. |
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Only when the mindset of the majority population opens up, society as a whole can engage in diversity, which is the only way an integrative society can come into being. |
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What we call civilization could never have come into being had we not been capable of proceeding from old to new things, and eager to make the change. |
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So come into being attractive but sometimes hard and exhausting questions and contradictions, which make that her paintings become in their own representation a question itself. |
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Such petrifactions come into being because a son shames his mother or father with degrading behaviors. |
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There were voices arguing that NATO had lost its raison d'etre at least in part, simply because the threat that had caused the alliance to come into being in the first place had vanished. |
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