It was more closely modelled on the imperial system than either critic or supporter ever concedes. |
|
But neither of the victims, he concedes, were the most honest and upstanding of people. |
|
No wonder the manager concedes he has not settled on a first-choice selection. |
|
Besides which, she concedes, because of the damp climate, sheepskin wouldn't be very practical here. |
|
Three reds remain but Hendry surprisingly concedes to leave his opponent just one frame from victory. |
|
In adopting this stance one concedes that the rightness or propriety of belief and unbelief depends upon the outcome of a certain inquiry. |
|
Despite those efforts, the company concedes that gaps in middle management still exist. |
|
And the White House concedes it's an uphill fight right now to get public support and to get congressional support for that initiative. |
|
Glass concedes it is harder not to become more cynical about the game as he gets older. |
|
He boots it up the field and Ball concedes a throw-in deep in the Stuttgart half. |
|
She concedes, though, that her interest in football is as much about the spectators as about the game itself. |
|
Josemi tries to put Baros through with a long-throw, but the Czech striker fouls his marker and concedes a free-kick. |
|
The American salesman, everyone concedes, is the American salesman's easiest mark. |
|
Roles begin to dry up for women in Hollywood by about 45, she concedes, and branching out was part of remaining vital in the business. |
|
But he also concedes that because of its themes, and their comedic treatment, the film could have a rocky reception. |
|
You are never going to convert hard-line extremists by behaving properly, David concedes. |
|
That being said, she concedes that there will be a more rampantly Celtic vibe to their Starlite show, in honour of St. Patrick's Day. |
|
There is a case, he concedes, for the alternative vote, a one, two, three listing of candidates in order of preference. |
|
But he concedes that most of the collection is bolted to walls of the Fielding offices of the EMSB, which remains inaccessible to visitors. |
|
People are briefly distracted, Gable concedes, but she says the boost in morale makes it worthwhile. |
|
|
As Mr Threlfall readily concedes and accepts, you understand that this is going to result in a custodial sentence. |
|
This is clear to see on page 41 of the originating judgment where the trial judge relied on that alibi which Mr Smith now concedes is not true. |
|
Nobuyuki Yamaguchi concedes that conservationists need to tread warily in the U.K., a nation of pet lovers. |
|
Pirlow concedes a free-kick just inside the Italy half for obstructing Karel Pobor. |
|
While Scott concedes that she is somewhat overbearing, he understands what the character is all about. |
|
She concedes that a review by a competent authority was required before the claimant could be considered for release. |
|
But even he concedes that diversified companies with less advertising exposure are worth entertaining in this environment. |
|
In a recent song, he ruefully concedes that his fans prefer the Shady persona. |
|
And what is more, even he concedes that I am right to say that none of the vocabularies record a term corresponding to the English word for land. |
|
Refreshingly frank and unaffected, he loves a chat and concedes that he's often hyper. |
|
She thanks her for sharing her husband with the country and then concedes defeat in the strongest terms. |
|
But, as he concedes, no matter how bevvied they get, few expect them to beat the likes of Italy in the competition. |
|
Stafford Smith concedes that Britain is much more active now than in previous years. |
|
Trevelyan concedes that he could be hotheaded and rash and perhaps was not politically astute. |
|
A break of 57 proves decisive and Hendry concedes the match. |
|
Thomas is forced to speculate as to the intent of the framers, since he concedes they likely never imagined the vast modern apparatus of federal agencies and their powers. |
|
The company concedes that the present timetable, which was set out when the system was electrified in 1967, cannot cope with increasing passenger numbers. |
|
An Post's Liam Sheehan concedes that this is a book that hardly functions as a promotion for direct marketing but he says that was never the idea. |
|
Koplow concedes that this is the primary reason why some feel strongly about not exterminating the virus stockpiles currently held in the United States and Russia. |
|
Yet Mr. Wehner concedes that the distance of time and history is not yet upon the Bush administration. |
|
|
All the same, the Celtic striker concedes that it would be wasteful not to indulge in some of South Africa's more unique attractions. |
|
Gilliam now concedes that he wasn't in a fit state to start directing such an ambitious picture. |
|
Because of mercury, the biggest catfish — some run to 50 pounds — are still not yet fit to eat, he concedes. |
|
And although the resolution wanly concedes Senate complicity in mob murders, it does little to compensate victims of a racist terrorism that was culture-deep. |
|
But he concedes that surliness endures, even among waiters and waitresses who grew up in the privatised, post-Soviet years. |
|
John Hocevar, its head of ocean campaigns, concedes that in some locations reefed platforms, if non-toxic, may increase marine life. |
|
Americans' distrust of overweening government power is as deeply rooted a tradition as vigilante justice, Mr Zimring concedes. |
|
Even the founder of the Grameen Bank concedes that, between two more euphoric points. |
|
One commander has threatened a military coup if Kiev concedes anything to the separatists. |
|
Curry concedes that some intuition is involved in this meta-mathematics, but he claims that the metaphysical nature of this intuition is irrelevant. |
|
If the former interpretation is true, then Aristotle concedes in the very definition of the enthymeme that some enthymemes are not deductive. |
|
—Not any time soon, Jack concedes Is it me or is this shower the uselessest yet? |
|
The shifts would double capacity although the council concedes parents would have great difficulty accomodating the shift patterns. |
|
He concedes that there is a lot of bad mass entertainment, but that it is not part of an inexorable process of dumbing down. |
|
Push Mr Calhoun hard and he concedes that margins in China are, in fact, tight especially in the energy business. |
|
The pre-Christmas Mandelson crisis and the fight over the Euro-elections bill delayed the announcement, Mr Ashdown concedes. |
|
Of course, the Commission concedes that drawing this line may not always be easy. |
|
I want to begin by congratulating him when he concedes the fact that it was a good thing to get rid of the deficit. |
|
The Applicant concedes that he did not submit a second application, within the requisite deadline. |
|
There's no sympathy for the firebrands because they did succeed, they did change the world, and when the culture concedes a little there's so much less to be angry about. |
|
|
Neither is ready or willing to be put out to grass and they are hardly candidates for the sporting knacker's yard, a fact that Paterson readily concedes himself. |
|
Today Maddow concedes that occasionally she must come down off her trapeze and strut in the sawdust with the rest of the circus. |
|
Arnold seems favourably inclined towards Julius Nyerere's ujamaa system of village socialism in Tanzania, but concedes it failed before it was abandoned. |
|
She, who concedes that at this stage of her career she is in the privileged position of not needing to make records for the money, says she is unworried. |
|
The French have been blamed by loyalist mobs for brokering a recent peace deal that the government supporters say concedes too much to the rebels. |
|
In the end, James concedes that modern Celts exist as a legitimate ethnic group on the grounds that they are self-naming and have a shared sense of difference and history. |
|
Butcher concedes that the degree of suppression is relatively small. |
|
In that case, though, America is not going to be the hegemonic power about which he also worries so much. American beautyBeing a broad-minded sort of fellow, Mr Hutton concedes that not everything in America is bad. |
|
A player concedes the game before the 21st end if the score difference is such that it is impossible to draw equal or win within the 21 ends. |
|
However, it concedes no such acknowledgement to New Westminster and New Hampshire. |
|
The industry is years away from accepted standards for benchmarking, Mr Anson concedes. Nevertheless, competition to establish a leading index and to create tradable products related to it will only increase. |
|
How many more embarassing revelations need to emerge before the Coalition concedes the firm has lost all credibility? |
|
Baffert concedes that his front-running horse has only one running style. |
|
Having spent an academic career in science, Roberts concedes that she loves anatomical eponyms. |
|
But Jenkins concedes that eccentricity is not what it once was. |
|
Not everyone concedes to the artist or the poet the right to subordinate actuality to his point of view, or to suppress some externals in order to reveal the deeper, simpler truth as he sees it. |
|
The Administrator concedes that the Claimant was hospitalized at Saskatoon City Hospital in December 1989 at which time he was transfused with two units of blood. |
|
The appellant concedes that the information falls within this requirement. |
|
Americans get passionate about politics, she observes, but the next day they get on with their lives. As Mr Krikorian concedes, the fear that new immigrants are disagreeably different is not new. |
|
Commerce concedes this, and its Final Determination analyzes square-end bed frame components using at least some of the Diversified Products factors. |
|
|
It concedes that the amendment may have transitory impacts that result in lower pension benefits and lower commuted values at particular points in time. |
|
Mr Bellesiles concedes that some of his probate evidence is flawed. |
|
The report concedes that the definition is broad, but explains that this is simply a reflection of the number of significant harms that go unmitigated. |
|
Dr. Kleinman concedes that on the basis of the medical records available for his review, he would implicate the February 1988 transfusion as the likely source of the Claimant's infection but for the negative traceback. |
|
With his dying breath, Waters concedes the point. |
|
British nosh is no longer as awful as it was 30 years ago, he concedes. |
|
The report concedes that free trade agreements carry this risk. |
|
Cameron, meanwhile, concedes his Euro 2004 hopes with Scotland are resting on a new gumshield. |
|
The minister's letter concedes it has never been universally loved, but points out that in 1979 and 1980, soon after it opened, it won a string of construction and design awards. |
|
He concedes that some might argue that his own work is meaningless. |
|
When Washington is captured by the Army of Northern Virginia, Abraham Lincoln reluctantly concedes the Confederacy's independence. |
|
Being the complete ball-breaker that she is, Becky wears him down until he concedes and reluctantly takes the job. |
|
The tone, as Rushdie concedes, is practically Spenglerian, its basis the idea that all that is worst in a nation's identity will ever so often slither to the surface and express itself in government. |
|
He acknowledges the mistake and concedes that he was careless in this respect, but there is no mention of the guilty plea entered on May 13, 2008, or of the sentence imposed in this respect. |
|
Although he isn't pushing the boys to follow in his footsteps, he concedes that they're a bit more familiar with bench presses and curls than the average kid. |
|
The long-term goal, concedes the Government, is to have the Innu assume control, but in the interim programs and services have to be provided to them. |
|
Warren also concedes that there is no account in the Democritean fragments of what euthymia is nor whether it can be correlated to Democritus' physics. |
|
Edwina Hart is correct to recognise that the people really want to see renationalisation of the railways but Mrs Hart concedes that these powers are not in her gift. |
|