He was one of the first officers to talk about the complexities of modern military life. |
|
A recent court case forced him to travel into the dangerous and uncharted territory of the legalities and complexities of copyright. |
|
Question 8 stood alone as the only straightforward, answerable question on the entire ballot, and yet it too was fraught with complexities. |
|
This may be due to lingual complexities created by terms absorbed from other languages, says Jordan. |
|
He does not ignore the psychological complexities of Ellison, who was not the drab, neutered literary lion some critics made him out to be. |
|
The adoption of organizational rules is influenced by other factors such as routineness of organizational tasks and environmental complexities. |
|
The plotline is simple, but the real complexities of the film lie in the newspaper offices, not the fight against the evil drug lords. |
|
From that, a one-to-five scale model was generated, in which the complexities of bending and the joints could be investigated. |
|
The complexities that this schematic description suggests can only be appreciated by considering particular types of analysis. |
|
There are marital complexities both on and off stage in the latest production from Bingley Little Theatre. |
|
Pedro Almodovar's homage to women and their complexities is a drama filled with bawdiness, tenderness and raw emotion. |
|
Experiences in jungle fighting motivated the U.S. Army to adopt modified Daisy BB guns to teach recruits the complexities of snap-shooting. |
|
His chronic lack of judgement and naive approach to the complexities of the society lead inevitably to tragedy. |
|
In view of these complexities, further U-Pb geochronology was carried out using the ion microprobe. |
|
Programmers and pay-TV service providers can increase the amount of ad inventory by reducing the complexities of mid-roll advertising. |
|
The feelgood factor, a staple of Hollywood, is binned in favour of emotional truth and the complexities of human nature. |
|
It is essential that we strive for a deeper understanding of the complexities facing us and that our message reflect this depth and complexity. |
|
The complexities of mollification, compensation and reconciliation can often be dealt with outside this theatrical space. |
|
Anyone who has a sister, as I do, understands the mental, emotional and spiritual complexities that biological sisterhood imparts. |
|
Working in a multi-platform environment increases the complexities associated with managing this data. |
|
|
But a malpractice suit, given all the complexities, wouldn't be a slam dunk. |
|
These are aimed at unshackling the excise procedures from the slavery of complexities and rigidities, and making them simple and user-friendly. |
|
The complexities that surround the properties of viral bacteria are discussed with wonderful clarity. |
|
Having designed a center that revels in the exuberant complexities of Columbus Circle, Time Warner's architects stint on the details. |
|
Doubtless it takes time to get your head around the understated complexities of Japanese food. |
|
To take them seriously is to wrestle with their complexities, to bring to them both a hermeneutic of suspicion and a hermeneutic of trust. |
|
According to the highbrows, the middlebrow arts relied on glib formulas which were untrue to life's real complexities. |
|
But he insisted the Government was not dragging its feet and blamed legal complexities for hold-ups. |
|
A simple, sparse arena populated by a sundial and small bench gives the actors freedom to explore the text's complexities. |
|
Two other poems suggest a similar male response to the complexities of negotiating a gendered world. |
|
The award citation highlights his achievements in ocean exploration and unraveling its many complexities. |
|
His attempts at penetrating the cultural and religious complexities encountered along the way are far less successful. |
|
There is no disguising either the immensity of the political moment, or the vast complexities of the choice facing us. |
|
Why didn't he just say so, instead of exposing himself to the Escherian complexities of the comparative construction? |
|
Hong is concerned with some of the complexities of the relationship between life and art. |
|
This presents particular difficulties and complexities where technology is changing. |
|
The book explains the complexities involved in recommending road safety measures. |
|
But such a simplistic analysis surely bears no relation to the complexities of the situation. |
|
Life isn't that simple of course, and it's the complexities of the situation that Hewitt is trying to address. |
|
Would such complexities have slowed down the pace of a film whose point is not to challenge, examine or explain but simply to mock? |
|
|
What follows is his adventure as he travels to Canada and becomes embroiled in the complexities of the politics of the period. |
|
Beyond that, she knows little of the complexities surrounding globalization. |
|
Word problems contained in the workbook illustrate the complexities of the fee increases. |
|
I reflect that it is sometimes difficult to understand the complexities of the Western mind. |
|
Don't let the complexities of the system discourage you from the entire idea. |
|
Given the complexities of pharmacology, there is justification for this caveat. |
|
No technical background is required to understand the complexities of the political issues. |
|
Sometimes the call will involve more complexities, but they are few and far between. |
|
This results in part from our limited understanding of the complexities of channel processes. |
|
Instead it tries to balance the complexities to make the process as easy as possible. |
|
That all has to come, and I don't deny that there are complexities in taking these treatments. |
|
I left bemused, bewildered and even more interested in a region of complexities and complications. |
|
Their computational networks discover mathematical complexities far beyond the point reached by humans. |
|
To force everyone into being one way is not respecting the complexities of the human condition. |
|
But more importantly, discovering the complexities of vanilla brings home the truly complex and intangible relationship we share with food. |
|
The first half of the play did not unravel or rise above the complexities of the plotting and infighting of the Plantagenets. |
|
On an apparent level, this work concerns the intellectual and technical challenges of conquering isorhythmic complexities. |
|
Is there a social complexity, say, in the new architecture, corresponding to the complexities in its apparent formal and material attributes? |
|
Modernism and postmodernism have made us more aware of the complexities of the art form. |
|
The complexities of having eight different airlines with different working cultures must surely prove cumbersome. |
|
|
From the Greeks we inherit the concept of Gaea, or Gaia, the earth mother that gives rise to life in all its complexities. |
|
The project produced many remarkable insights into the complexities and contrarieties of genomic structure. |
|
All of these denotations involve philosophical complexities of absoluteness and are not relative or practical connotations. |
|
There, large tracts of developable land are still locked up in legal complexities related to ownership and land use management. |
|
Willetts does a noted comic turn reeling off the complexities of Gordon Brown's devilish clever schemes. |
|
The ability to speak a language, with all its grammatical complexities, is an innate part of our humanity. |
|
But the topic of mailing lists is a whole universe unto itself, involving all the subtleties and complexities of group dynamics. |
|
But this same light is a photographer's gift, elucidating the complexities and contrasts of the country. |
|
Anyway, the complexities are multitudinous and certainly hard to disembroil. |
|
As early as 1748 the Dutch journalist and encyclopedist Egbert Buys reflected on the complexities involved. |
|
The playwright allows a predetermined narrative structure to quash the complexities that make Yamashita's case worthy of dramatization. |
|
Family history is now shaped by the complexities of personal, ethnic, and racial identity. |
|
Meanwhile other educators having understood the merits of the round wheel, have moved on to the complexities of the axle and the differential. |
|
Digital art has myriad complexities that make it all the more difficult to define a new esthetic. |
|
Rachel and Samson fight over their guests, leaving Samson to ponder the complexities of womanhood that he does not understand. |
|
The work of the poet, who perceives and attempts to define the wonders, complexities and beauty of nature, is hidden and obscured for many. |
|
The complexities of the quality of social relationships would be reduced to such simplistic proxy variables. |
|
As members of a society, we cope with these complexities and uncertainties by relying on trust. |
|
The natural evolution of language has integrated colloquialisms, or slang words, into everyday speech, but it has also magnified complexities associated with English grammar. |
|
Hoggard likes bowling simply because he likes bowling and he would rather think about his pet dog than the complexities of cricket which so fascinate many other people. |
|
|
In a revealing letter to his nephew, after three years of marriage, he confessed to some problems, but denied that the complexities of married life were unsurmountable. |
|
While this style can exhort some blacks to great sacrifice against entrenched white supremacy, it often comes up short as a means of conveying the complexities of the world. |
|
What better way to articulate the fraught complexities of our national identity in the brave new world of home rule than through two nights a week of soap opera? |
|
The lens of art cinema, constitutive of Italian neo-realism, is an additional model for Memories' complexities, as it clearly influences Alea's vision of film. |
|
For the moment, the Democrats are too busy firing broadsides to pay much attention to the complexities of the issues they are distilling into sound-bites. |
|
But his essays show a man struggling to figure out the complexities of discernment and judgment. |
|
In all honesty, however, I think this is the essence of our attempts to understand and make sense of the complexities of the British and European royal houses. |
|
The subject of labour relations causality is a fascinating field of study for persons interested in the complexities of modern societal phenomena. |
|
Not only may they be purposely babbling and coding their conversations to confuse the eavesdroppers, but there are also the complexities of language itself. |
|
Regrettably, the public was less interested in the complexities of ethics regulation than, understandably, in attempting to repair the damage done by fraud. |
|
The painterly quality of this popular art was often limited, but the artists were expected to understand the complexities of sails and rigging, and to depict it accurately. |
|
Those of us who have tried to penetrate the often baffling complexities of modern music have often had cause to be grateful to him for unravelling its mysteries. |
|
One effect of the welfare reform act was to put the individual states in charge of implementing the often Byzantine complexities of welfare policy. |
|
He advocated theories existence that would be sufficiently robust to reveal the larger patterns of society and do justice to its intricacies and complexities. |
|
Rather than going about things in a straightforward manner, she devises stratagems, the complexities of which are analogous to the workings of a Rube Goldberg project. |
|
The broadly uniform system of parliamentary representation belied the administrative complexities inherited by the Hanoverian monarchy from its predecessors. |
|
For the fourth year running, the ICA has had to grapple with the complexities of coordinating a group show. |
|
Full of allusions and caricatural aspects, the piece is difficult and challenging, but its rich and luscious orchestration more than makes up for its complexities. |
|
Her understanding of the complexities and nuances of families is profound. |
|
Full of allusions and caricatural aspects, the piece is challenging, but its rich and luscious orchestration more than makes up for its complexities. |
|
|
In spite of the complexities of spanning the globe and a sluggish economic environment, most of these tech transnationals have been delivering outstanding financial results. |
|
All activities by which we shape and maintain our world, in all of its many complexities, also are an expression of the power of dominion over the world. |
|
Their relationship is given just enough depth by the complexities of his character and his mysterious past, which is a thankful foil to her sweet naivete at times. |
|
Awestruck by its glittering new friends in business, but baffled by the complexities of the scheme it supports, it has been consistently outwitted and outmanoeuvred. |
|
As the sighted child of blind parents Gareth Owens has always regarded the task of translating complexities into simple language as his birthright. |
|
There are still arguments for full decomposition and generative typography based on the complexities of cross-alphabet mapping, searching problems, etc. |
|
Outsiders who get involved in its complexities do so at their own risk. |
|
In this case, I suspect that the explanation has more to do the psychological complexities of real-time composition than with the logic of grammar, generative or otherwise. |
|
Those are the numbers, and numbers have a way of numbing us to the complexities that make up everyday life. |
|
In smart suit, immaculate blue shirt and plainish tie, Kinski attempts to demystify the complexities of the post-privatisation utility businesses. |
|
The final conclusion of an ongoing investigation into the oil-for-food scheme would help the public to understand its complexities, the UN chief said. |
|
Their analysis can usually be faulted on grounds not of unsophistication, but of insufficient familiarity with the complexities of Scholastic or Eastern Trinitarian thinking. |
|
He studied the complexities of the English language and the perplexities of religious faith. |
|
That there is some truth in these beliefs on both sides adds to the complexities. |
|
None of these issues are being discussed in American society with attention to their complexities. |
|
The complexities within that religious order, renowned for its scholars and loyalty to the pope, make for a numbing leitmotif. |
|
However, complexities arising from the transfer of functions have meant that this has had to be reconsidered. |
|
In addition to these five countries, peculiar monarchies of varied sizes and complexities exist in various other parts of Africa. |
|
To avoid these complexities, consider replacing latitude and longitude with another horizontal position representation in calculation. |
|
This case report discusses the complexities of determining the etiology of a toxic event in a zoologic institution. |
|
|
White's sexual explicitness masks a deeper discretion about the complexities and irrationalities of love. |
|
It installs and configures the resources and hides the complexities inherent in Oracle9i Real Application Clusters behind a simple interface. |
|
Quite obviously this sad story, riddled with complexities, is a burden for the descendents of eugenic stalwarts. |
|
On Christmas Eve of 2007, Mahindra and Mahindra backed out of the race for both brands, citing complexities in the deal. |
|
Other syntactic complexities of Pashto include endoclitics and frequent discontinuous constituents. |
|
The movie celebrates life by refusing to candy-coat its difficult complexities. |
|
In a sense, then, these women revoice Sheherazade for a twenty-first-century audience, reweaving the complexities of her nightly storytelling. |
|
Wince at them and you risk being warned that your ignorance of Poland's cultural and socioreligious complexities knows no bounds. |
|
Too often, the singers were overparted by the vocal complexities of the score, even though they benefited from some acoustical enhancing. |
|
Apogee Photonics provides advanced fiberoptic components that offer a high-level of integration with dramatically reduced complexities and costs. |
|
The Goulds played his Piano Trio of 1911 with open-voiced tone, muscularity and forthrightness that allowed the complexities to be heard in full. |
|
The complexities of the swift-moving Allegro scherzando finale were handled with apparent ease, and included a skilful cadenza. |
|
There are no additional complexities to any of these costs, except when it comes to ears. |
|
In his first novel, Pamela, he explored the various complexities of the title character's life, and the letters allow the reader to witness her develop and progress over time. |
|
Therefore, the WILLIAMS ECU may be considered a practical and proven stationary fuel cell, but without the complexities and expenses of adding and operating a fuel reformer. |
|
This year, structures of all of the test systems, which included the complexities of polymorphs, salts and hydrates, were generated by one or more methods. |
|
Michael Mann's film Ali explores the complexities of life in a Lagrangian point, with forces pulling him between champion boxer and cultural icon. |
|
While creoles tend to have drastically simplified morphologies, mixed languages often retain the inflectional complexities of one or both of parent languages. |
|
While it's challenging to determine the fair value of the acquiree, ALM First's new service is designed to help credit unions deal with those complexities. |
|
White Beech is her account of her decade-long attempt to 'rehabilitate' this 'steep rocky country', to allow the complexities of the ancient ecosystem to reassert itself. |
|
|
The complexities associated with managing construction wrap-up projects may introduce costly delays in project completion and frustration to the project team. |
|
Untangle was founded with the vision of untangling the complexities of technology, initially targeting network security and control for small and medium size businesses. |
|
He died in 1988, but his books, which hypersensitively document the linguistic complexities of observing natural phenomena, remain contemporary events. |
|
Peter's relationship with his daughter Rosamond and the relationship he has with her husband Louie, Cather plays out some of the complexities of these negotiations. |
|
But in the Daniels and Sandy missionary effort to carefully unpack and unclutter the complexities of black manhood, they compile a book that begs for subtlety. |
|
Finnikin of the Rock is an accomplished and powerful fantasy novel that deals with the complexities of truth, justice and displacement of peoples. |
|
It is the most easily recognized of the complexities by both practitioners and researchers and is also described as complicatedness or the level of interconnectedness. |
|
This article argues that these complexities make PBB more vulnerable than other budgeting systems to threats from error, fraud, falsification, and misrepresentation. |
|