That credo was commendable for normal life but not for ambitious politicians. |
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Your credo can guide you, but you cannot magically make it your mother's guiding principle as well. |
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Perhaps in the end, the equal opportunity principle is a matter of rhetorical commitment more than practical credo. |
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Without it I had cobbled together a half-baked credo of chippy self-sufficiency and an irritating need to be recognised. |
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It's not exactly the kind of intoxicating credo that would send an inspired youth on the mad path of poetry. |
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Its credo espouses values such as integrity, offering the best value and service, and sustainability. |
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Spamming is an honorable profession, and all spammers live by the credo that everyone should have the right to unsubscribe from future mailings. |
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I'm in a tearing hurry because I'm frantically looking up stuff on DDB, and their clients, their credo, that sort of thing. |
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Last week that phrase had become the defining motto and operating credo for the military and foreign policy of the Bush administration. |
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Simple lifestyles, family togetherness and a vegetarian diet are their credo. |
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Turning children at the threshold of their teens into rational thinking beings is clearly not their credo. |
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This credo of a particular order of comparative literature is like the hush of the schoolmarm enforcing a designed consensus at lesson's end. |
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Both are driven, in one way or another, by the familiar credo of Power and Responsibility. |
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He wasn't aware that my credo is that he who criticizes the last topic becomes the new topic. |
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When does less than full belief in a professed credo become actionable fraud if one is soliciting gifts or legacies? |
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Such an ambitious credo sounds incongruous coming from someone whose debut album is not only innovative but also seems resolutely uncommercial. |
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But his mother did teach him to stand up for himself and that is the credo that he now brings to his children, four sons and three daughters. |
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This administration disrespects the truth, because they have a different credo. |
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I knew him, and well enough to understand both his credo and the spirit that spurred him on as a musical creator. |
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I would like to leave you, my valued readers and friends, with my new credo. |
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Further, professional journalists have a credo that they don't just poach on other people's scoops. |
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That is dishonorable and punishable by death, if you follow the old samurai credo! |
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In 381, the Council of Constantinople reaffirmed the credo of Nicaea and condemned the semi-Arians, the homoiousians. |
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This is a far cry indeed from the Anzac's credo of self-mocking mateship and chiacking comradeship and two-up and beer shouts. |
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The individualistic credo grants each of us sovereignty over what we choose as the best kind of life. |
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This sense of biological preordination culminates in something close to a credo later in the book. |
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Cogently, it is important to indicate that effective leadership requires a functional working credo that is more appropriate for the years ahead. |
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This decade ushered in the rise of multiple-use worship rooms, the new credo of congregations seeking maximum utility from their buildings. |
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But having grown up under the credo that information should be free, they see no reason to pay for news. |
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This is the credo by which I am genetically and irreversibly bound to live. |
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I stick to our credo, the Council conclusions, and the mandate which I was given. |
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I strongly agree with her basic stance, and with the points of her credo. |
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To find our own credo, we have to listen to our heart, give words to those beliefs, and then breathe life into them every day. |
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Timex is taking a trip back in time to prove its credo that it does indeed take a licking and keep on ticking. |
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However noble, this remained a promise without a prescription, a credo with an as-yet unclarified content. |
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The Robinsons went to church occasionally, but if they subscribed to any credo it was that of freethinking. |
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Their lowness is pretence to the narrator to introduce his credo in the third verse. |
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Not only was Francis a gifted speaker, able to enthrall both humans and animals, he also knew how to dramatically put across his credo. |
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The same pressures can sometimes produce a form of zealotry in adherence to the new, if somewhat underdeveloped, credo. |
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Having the right people in the right place and at the right time will undoubtedly be the Human Resources credo for many years to come. |
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The retort that there are no answers, however, often leaves an audience dumbstruck and yet satisfied with this anti-imperialist credo! |
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True its credo «Honestly», the Migrosbank is also proceeding openly and transparently in the area of payment traffic fees. |
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Words that form the credo of any artist who has hit her stride, be she painter, writer, or dressmaker. |
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She has a genuine passion for the multiple facets of her job, and is eager to share her credo for Rougié quality with us, in a few well-chosen phrases. |
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Mr Orban may well get another four years to fulfil his mission of expunging the communist past and shaping the country according to the nationalist credo of Fidesz, his right-wing party. |
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It's a tender paean to ambition and creation that raptly summates the artistic credo of Miyazaki and Ghibli alike, even as it looks and feels like nothing else they've previously produced. |
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By an irony of history, despite his anti-causalist credo, Karl Pearson himself furnished a formalism that through its very terminology induced an apparently causalist interpretation. |
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The resurgence of this well-worn debate may be seen as symptomatic of a change of tack in European policy-making, whereby economic policy is no longer the only credo. |
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I am not interested here in the fact that the proponents of capitalism are shooting themselves in the foot if they really believe in their credo of innovation and competitiveness. |
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However what seems to have been lost in the political fray – sadly, in both hemispheres now – is the credo of a civil society that enshrines that seeking asylum is not illegal. |
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Mme Rousseff spent nearly the entire period of the presidential campaign arm in arm with Mr. Lula da Silva and with the sole credo of 'continuing like Lula' serving as her government programme. |
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The comments of former whaling fleet captain Vladimir Dobralskiy echo the kill-at-all-costs credo that operated for years in the Soviet Union's whaling industry. |
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Cette assertion, Kafka semble en faire son credo litteraire. |
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The Republicans held a clown-car primary in 2012 with a dozen debates where their credo of hewing to the party line prevented any candidate from emerging looking presidential. |
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There, he advises that someone should recite the Credo continuously for a dying person, which was the customary practice of his fellow friars. |
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As with the old Missa Brevis, so too nowadays it's not strictly necessary to set the Credo to fresh music. |
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Don't you wish your bank or phone company or car dealer would live by such a Credo? |
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Credo pulled his horse up and wheeled around quickly to look behind him, where Erial pointed. |
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In fact, after the priest silently said the Gloria or Credo he would sit down until the music was finished. |
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The Mass omits the Credo and takes as its central point, the Holy Eucharist as narrated in the story of Christ's meeting with the disciples on the road to Emmaus. |
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One especially powerful instance occurs in the Credo movement of the Mass for Four Voices. |
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Credo knocked Dan out of his reverie with a jab to his ribs. |
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In 2000, a retrospective of his work, Credo, was exhibited at Tate Liverpool. |
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Current plans call for five days of retraining sessions highlighting all aspects of Ritz-Carlton Gold Standards, from The Credo to the Employee Promise and The Basics. |
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