The marina harbours ships and yachts of the high and mighty as well as modest ones for the common man. |
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Rules are flouted and violated with immunity exposing the common man to potential peril. |
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The retreat of the Government from public utility services, one after another, portends evil days for the common man. |
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The dainty ladies and gentlemen who first began to use soap were the harbingers of the big-scale production of soap for the common man. |
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The resultant loss of revenue to the exchequer could be made good through hike in prices of some other items that do not affect the common man. |
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But Mell had said the Marquise had married a common man, and that she was disinherited for it. |
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And he was able to mix as easily with presidents and prime ministers and dictators as with the common man. |
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But as the price was beyond the reach of the common man, those with deep pockets purchased these sites for speculation. |
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The report was they had been dining the night before on loin of veal while chatting about the plight of the common man in America. |
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Even topics of a serious nature are covered in a simple, lucid manner so as to make them comprehensible to the common man. |
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She said the marquise had a kind heart, and fell in love with a common man. |
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Lovers of the game feel that billiards and snooker will die a slow death in India as long as the games remain unknown to the common man. |
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But he did not go in for intellectualism, he developed an emotional approach to classical music, appealing to the common man. |
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For the common man, it is still the broker who is generally preferred as a go-between for arranging matches. |
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This enabled them to fashion the policies of the state in a manner that the woe and weal of the common man is addressed. |
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This shows apathy on the part of the Government to the problems of the common man. |
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As part of the American experiment, public libraries brought the wisdom of the ancient and modern tomes to the common man. |
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The increase in service tax and a new cess will put an additional burden on the common man. |
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If a common man were to dare to be as moody, as contemptuous, and as misanthropical, the world would laugh at him. |
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The idea of Spanishness has come to evoke Mexico, Puerto Rico, Jennifer Lopez, and support for the common man. |
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With charges for speciality services steadily rising, healthcare moves out of the reach of the common man. |
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Instead, in the supposed century of the common man, the poor man's king largely disappears from serious history. |
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It is, in a way, the only menace with multiple potentials to perturb the normal life of the common man. |
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Alert to the yearnings of the common man, they knew their security of position depended utterly on restraining the horde. |
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He is Prime Minister, and therefore has a duty to rise above the ordinary concerns, fears and prejudices of the common man. |
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Both draw their power from the compelling image of the strongman posing as the common man. |
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There is nothing so satisfying, however, as a victory on behalf of the common man against the inexorable march of officialdom. |
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Features of financial products are becoming far too complex for the common man. |
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Political statements also encourage the common man to take over politicians' opinions. |
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The notes are simple and are easily understandable even to a common man. |
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Laxman is telling politicians, bureaucrats, ministers and others that his common man is the unseen but unsleeping watchdog, telling the world at large of what is going on. |
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Just as importantly, a jury forms a reassuring lay tribunal between the polished professionals in their gowns and wigs and the common man or woman. |
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It is not easy for a common man in Africa to afford a motorboat with an 80-horsepower engine. |
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The notion that the era was his has also rested on a belief that an indissoluble bond connected the Hero and the common man, to whom Jacksonian Democracy ostensibly gave power. |
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Some philanthropists established newspapers to act as the guardian of the common man, while others did all they could to encourage the growth of universal education. |
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Perhaps no other form of dance has the beauty of the common man dancing in pure unadulterated joy displaying his boundless energy and throwing open the doors of the heart. |
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Government activism on behalf of the common man was an unforgivable sin to be extirpated from the body politic. |
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The Inca reigned as absolute monarch, but his will reached the common man only through the local chiefs, whose authority and privileges were maintained, if not reinforced. |
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Christ set the example for us when He came to earth dressed as a common man. |
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No, I am not saying that these three popular role models, who were exploited by Home Trade to make suckers out of the common man, must be punished for their silly mistake. |
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There is a huge gap between the cutting edge digerati and the common man. |
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In many cases, the district administration is far beyond the approach and comprehension of a common man. |
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The director claims ignorance of a world in which the common man and cultural elite alike come together to nitpick and fustigate every movie that hits theaters. |
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With crooners there's this sort of paradoxical mix of the dandy and the common man. |
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The Art of Healing has been made very easy and useful even to a common man trying to know the principles of health, disease and treatment. |
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This was the first of several films that Capra would make spotlighting the plight of the common man overcoming the deception and greed of the rich fat cats. |
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Their knowledge was kept secret, given out very slowly, or modified a s a way of keeping the common man from knowing the complete truth. |
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The common man does not even realize that he is brought up in an environment of malice and is fed on suspicion, hatred and enmity. |
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You are not only sincere but you also know how to rid yourself of that strong personality of yours to become a common man with your friends. |
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These reforms were intended to free the common man to pursue business opportunities without the oppressive yoke of high interest rates or excessive rents. |
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These few words express perfectly the kind of person he has been all his life: a common man. |
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Jerry Mersa, a plump 38-year-old, remembers Taylor fondly as a president who gave the common man a sense of dignity. |
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And an ever increasing gap distances common man and the cops. |
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Just how many times has the sentencing for serious fraud offenders involving large amounts of money gone in the wrong direction, at least from the point of view of the common man? |
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Without access to relevant information, it was not possible for a common man to participate in a meaningful debate on political and economic options or choices available to him for realizing socio-economic aspirations. |
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It was probably in order to make such facilities and treatment available to the common man, who of course could otherwise not afford them, that Swami chose these particular specialities. |
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The common man throughout the world is not seeking Utopia, but a little alleviation of his lot today and that better tomorrow about which Dr. Trueman speaks. |
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Mr. Rioux was a little disappointed not bringing home an Oscar, but is confident his 3D laser scanner will keep finding new ways to help scientists, artists and the common man explore the world around them and in outer space. |
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The abundance of often contradictory rulings of the judges regarding Internet use gives a favorable ground to all speculations and expectations of the common man in his electronic life. |
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Government's resolve to fight violence and terror, generate productive employment and ensure good governance by providing basic facilities to the common man was reiterated. |
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Price control ensures that drugs are available at a reasonable cost to common man. |
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A particular canon of this code was that those of rank shared much of the same hardship as the common man. |
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Another visitor Adman Shah said that Rs 200 fee for one day fish hunt was an amount which a common man hardly can afford. |
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Many of the liberties enjoyed under Roman law endured through the Middle Ages, but were enjoyed solely by the nobility, rarely by the common man. |
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Though representing himself as a spokesman for the common man, he often appeared out of place with real working people. |
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While the common man is holding the brunt of the taxes, there are groups, special-interest groups, that are getting off with paying none. |
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Although I am dressed as a dacoit, I'll take the money from those dacoit politicians and give to it to common man. |
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His personifications of the common man paved the way for Quebec's leading scenarists and gave a voice, at home and abroad, to French Canadian culture and society. |
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Our Conference is of unique importance and unique hopefulness: for surely in the field which is our concern the national and the international can most readily be fused for the common good of common man. |
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If statesmanship can bring to the common man all the benefits offered by science, it can give him new and now unknown powers of personal satisfaction, political efficiency and social service. |
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Townshend wrote the song to commemorate the common man, as a contrast to the themes on Tommy. |
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It is generally agreed that Bhutto gave the common man a sense of dignity, worth and self-esteem and that this was largely responsible for his popularity amongst the down-trodden and the poorest sections of society. |
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In countries where such rights are weak or non-existent, the arbitrary power and special privileges of the elite increase and the power of the common man or woman is diminished. |
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Both front-line staff and the common man went into the making of it. |
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It is beneficial neither for the common man, nor for the economy. |
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The pronounced symbology of antispecial privileges in schools and in society at large underscores the pervasive emphasis on the social equality of the common man. |
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We're the only country in the world to honour the common man. |
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If the Chaudhry of Gujrat was terming it a routine budget then federal minister Farooq Sattar considered it another document full of juggleries to hoodwink the common man. |
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The incident that inspired his transformation from 1700s common man to 1800s hero to the proletariat, was when he broke two stocking frames in a fit of rage. |
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