There are dangers to thinking of time as headed inevitably to some omega point, of us being on some inevitable road to Armageddon. |
|
Falling objects, toppling furniture and panic present the greatest dangers during an earthquake. |
|
His estimate of the duties of the individual as against the dangers and thanklessness of public life is in its way a true monument of the age. |
|
Working in the flight deck of an aircraft involves dangers to one's health. |
|
There were numerous potential dangers to be avoided on this laterite track, and thick dust reduced visibility considerably. |
|
A rich tan is unmistakably the hottest summer trend, yet we all know the dangers of toasting ourselves silly to get that sun-drenched look. |
|
With the anti-smoking campaigns the nation acknowledged the dangers of smoking tobacco. |
|
This in turn would pose dangers to the operation of democratic government within the United States. |
|
Immediately the dangers of his civilization are reified, as Huck hears a conversation between outlaws on the run. |
|
James Woudhuysen warned of the dangers of Brownfield Brutalism and urged friendly bombs to fall on Brown's eco-towns. |
|
These concepts underlie his concerns about the dangers of a dictatorship of the majority in a putative democracy. |
|
How long before we see him, suited and booted, addressing the Tory conference on the dangers of low-interest rates? |
|
This only makes those accounts that detail the terrible hardships, deprivations, and dangers more effective. |
|
However, finals are never easy and this one is no different, as there are dangers aplenty. |
|
Is this just another example of academics talking up unprovable dangers to draw attention to themselves? |
|
Mr Holden said the greatest dangers were when people swam outside patrolled hours or on unpatrolled beaches. |
|
The medical centre argues that restricting antibiotic use because of the dangers of growing resistance may not always be correct. |
|
Suddenly you are aware of all the terrible dangers this modern world presents to the barely-walking. |
|
Through dangers untold, and hardships unnumbered Blinky made it through to the final. |
|
However, we consistently overestimate the dangers and undervalue the benefits we obtain by living in a complex society. |
|
|
The dangers of inflationary pressures on the economy have been referred to on numerous occasions in this newspaper during recent months. |
|
More pubs are becoming smoke free as more people understand the dangers of smoking. |
|
One of the big dangers here is when there is an offshore wind and people on inflatables could easily be carried quickly far away from the shore. |
|
There has been much discussion of the dangers of the anti-MMR campaign to public health. |
|
Heffernan, who turns 21 this month, is campaigning to highlight the dangers of not wearing helmets and face guards during hurling games. |
|
The practice of medicine is fraught with dangers and should carry a health warning for both patients and doctors. |
|
A north Cotswold couple are warning pet owners of the dangers of using slug pellets in their gardens after their dog was poisoned. |
|
Despite natural disasters, despite environmental anxieties, despite the dangers from terrorists, we live in singularly fortunate times. |
|
He warns of the dangers of rushing to market too quickly, accusing some advisers of pushing them unadvisedly along that route. |
|
Race organizers have since mounted an educational campaign to warn runners about the dangers of excessive drinking. |
|
Favourite backers, however, will be hoping there are no dangers at all, and that the popular grey can produce another copybook performance. |
|
The Mayor said that these murders had brought home the dangers of leaving children unattended and showed the cruelty of mankind. |
|
Saturday's rally reminded me of the dangers of defining free speech legalistically. |
|
Argentina's plight provides an invaluable case study on the dangers of adhering to untenable policies. |
|
One of the odd dangers of the sin of reactionary dissent is that, over time, you can become the sacrament despiser that you set out to oppose. |
|
The government have the proof of the dangers of smoking, yet this is a legal drug. |
|
We are going to read more about the sanctity of human life and the dangers of playing God. |
|
Nowhere does he emphasize the special moral dangers attendant on an active engagement in war. |
|
A mum today launched a campaign to hammer home the dangers of binge drinking after her schoolboy son nearly died following a boozy night out. |
|
Another eyewitness described the dangers immigrants faced at the border fence. |
|
|
Experts have warned about the dangers of online banking after a security breach. |
|
I would not say kids are not aware of the dangers of drug abuse, but they disregard what they know and do drugs anyway. |
|
I have invoked Shelley as an epigraph because he identified the dangers of hubris and vanity when desire is exhausted and over-idealized. |
|
And if weight-loss drugs are so great, why does she warn us later in the book about the dangers of the herb ephedra? |
|
If Graham had stayed, he would have approved of that gradual progression, but warned against the dangers of moving too fast, of doing too well. |
|
Disraeli saw its dangers and wished to take steps to quickly defuse the gathering tensions. |
|
Could you further discuss what you mean and the present dangers language is facing? |
|
There are dangers in avoiding dairy products, because they provide calcium, protein vitamins A and D, as well as other nutrients. |
|
Workshops to advise children about the dangers of drug use are planned to take place and a playscheme is also being organised. |
|
Eruptions of natural gas were observed from very early times and the dangers of firedamp in mines were soon realized. |
|
Large, brightly-coloured signs warning against bathing in the reservoir and expressly the dangers of cold water are prominently displayed there. |
|
Whatever the dangers of open fields and common pastures, enclosure movements are premature. |
|
The dangers of immoderate wine consumption were fully recognized, and excess strictly forbidden. |
|
It has put up clear warnings about the dangers of the sea at regular intervals along this stretch of coastline. |
|
Beware of the hidden dangers lurking in rivers, lakes and ponds this summer, is the message from the Environment Agency. |
|
I have touched on the dangers that hacking into on-board flight systems on aeroplanes could do. |
|
This timely reminder of the dangers of diabetes should prompt a careful look at the wisdom of that strategy. |
|
Six youngsters from the club have drawn the mural, which highlights the dangers of drug abuse and the effects it has on young people. |
|
Consequently accidents still occur due to a lack of awareness of the dangers involved with electricity. |
|
Thunderstorm dangers include fierce up and down winds, called updrafts and downdrafts. |
|
|
These cases underline the additional dangers from concentrated single chemical extracts from herbs. |
|
She knew the dangers of getting involved again, but her body had been too long dormant. |
|
Firefighters are warning of the dangers of children mistaking novelty lighters for toys. |
|
The conventional wisdom holds that Cesarean deliveries are fraught with more complications and dangers both for the baby and for the mother. |
|
An assistant principal and a guidance counselor went around to each class to lecture them on the dangers of choosing the wrong wardrobe. |
|
He said he would like to see more prominent signs warning people of the dangers of diving in the area. |
|
Although the physical dangers of public speaking have disappeared these days, the trepidation of that poor message bearer has not. |
|
Political dissidents have long warned of the dangers if such a strategy is not implemented. |
|
This included advice about regular hand washing, warnings about crowded places, and the dangers of nose picking. |
|
Police used the sentence to warn parents of the dangers of chatrooms and the potential threats caused by unmonitored use of the Net. |
|
We learn something about life near the border and the dangers that we, sitting comfortably curled up and reading novels, are safe from. |
|
Yet, despite the tremendous odds against him, he passes through all the dangers unharmed. |
|
Living in such close quarters and facing daily dangers engendered a sense of great camaraderie at the Airfield. |
|
Later, after his mother was clean, she warned Jim ceaselessly about the dangers of drugs, warnings that he heeded. |
|
He is setting sail again to circumnavigate the globe, with all the obvious risks and dangers that entails. |
|
The dangers were highlighted as a 60p lighter combined with the blazing heat of the sun to destroy the interior of a car. |
|
On television, there was some boring old fart in a suit talking about the dangers of credit growth. |
|
Newspaper leading articles stressed the dangers of the insanitary conditions in the city. |
|
Officers will distribute posters and leaflets about the dangers of selling and using imitation weapons. |
|
He is famous for the low-down tactic of setting up imaginary, exaggerated villains and dangers and then heroically shooting them down. |
|
|
The surest way to do this on a modern farm is to keep children out of farmyards or where there are other dangers such as livestock. |
|
The organisation urged the international community to take note of the dangers posed by the current arming of the civilian Katangese population. |
|
Price pressure could lead to a wage spiral while dangerously high government spending also poses very real dangers down the line, he warned. |
|
One of the real dangers the BJP Government has created is the rise of intolerant and bellicose people who bumptiously air their views. |
|
In addition to the dangers of flying low-level missions, landing on the airfields was often equally dangerous. |
|
But in the end, they all prefer the safety of enslavement to the dangers of freedom. |
|
A final area where progressive economics has been vindicated concerns the dangers of deflation. |
|
In a recent article, we wrote about the dangers of borrowing money against your home. |
|
By having more programs, you might see a reduction in the dangers facing youth today like street gangs. |
|
In particular the systems need to address potential dangers of cross infection. |
|
Mr Shean felt that there were very real dangers in this situation with a fragmenting relationship. |
|
In large part, that's due to scientific findings on the dangers of trans-fatty acids, prevalent in most margarines and spreads. |
|
We are not speaking, as the existentialists would have it, of dangers and dilemmas that are immanent in the very nature of the human condition. |
|
Notice that his reassurances about her doubts initially take the form of a warning about the dangers of narrative. |
|
The powerful myth of the dangers of protectionism is one of the philosophical keystones of today's globalisation model. |
|
Completeness and potential finality of injury to reality are the dangers that arise out of contemporary fact manipulation. |
|
Every story we diving big-heads had told each other about the dangers of being sick into our breathing tubes at depth leapt to mind. |
|
This result suggests a worrying lack of appreciation of the dangers of suxamethonium use in critical illness polyneuropathy. |
|
Very windy conditions and extremely warm weather increase the dangers associated with backyard burning as well. |
|
This latest feature is a good example of the dangers of over-thinking a problem. |
|
|
The dangers of artificial sweeteners like aspartame and sucralose have been splattered all over the media. |
|
That many people have begun to find a recital of these dangers tiresome is perhaps an even greater threat. |
|
The few who warned against the dangers of nuclear were dismissed as alarmists or even hysterics. |
|
Then there's his fingerless left hand, a potent reminder of the dangers of living adventurously. |
|
Finally, clinicians' perceptions of the dangers of magnesium sulphate may have contributed to the drug's non-use. |
|
The dangers and harmful effects of webmasters focusing on search engines are very evident. |
|
Various groups expressed concern about the dangers of radio programs to youths and pressured broadcasters for change. |
|
But these lads are from the inner city with all the dangers and things that go on in tough areas. |
|
Having shared the dangers of their trek on my first season cowboying, they assumed I would return. |
|
Until you've grown your own tomatoes, you cannot imagine what dangers exist out there. |
|
Doctors warned today of the dangers of eggs exploding after being heated in a microwave oven and leading to serious injuries. |
|
A Yorkshire Labour MP will today spearhead a new alert over the dangers of Valium and other benzodiazepine tranquillisers. |
|
A possibly deadly incident involving Quinn's hired guns underscores the dangers of private forces policing American streets. |
|
The sound of nearby gunfire interrupts the inspection, a stark reminder of the dangers never far away. |
|
Passing remarks in Flashes also highlighted what might be seen as another aspect of the dangers of over-indulgence in sport. |
|
Pubs in York are to be blitzed with beer mats and posters warning about the dangers of messing around with fireworks. |
|
No sooner have people been successfully corralled into shedding a few pounds, they are hectored about the possible dangers of dieting. |
|
For all the dangers and encounters he has been involved in, this man is still naive of the corruptness of other individuals. |
|
Most people acknowledge the big difference between the dangers of soft drugs such as cannabis and the likes of heroine and cocaine. |
|
I have always been conscious of the inherent dangers to our natural world from our industry. |
|
|
In many ways, the salmon are a perfect example of the dangers of overtraining and cortisol overexposure. |
|
It had a shattering effect on those present and men and women, who normally take the dangers of racing in their stride, were reduced to tears. |
|
The plant was filled with workers who barely knew their way around, let alone grasped the dangers they faced. |
|
There are some dangers inherent in the consolidation of our intelligence structure. |
|
It had all the makings of a tragedy and shows the dangers of candles and the importance of smoke alarms. |
|
This new scheme is an effort to re-educate drivers about the dangers of speeding to help stamp it out. |
|
Canadians must know about the dangers posed to infants through the use of baby walkers. |
|
At least here, they are safe from the dangers of everyday life in the worst of areas. |
|
The article says that Eric will help educate children about the dangers of the internet. |
|
They are also having to battle with the dangers of congestion from the sheer volume of traffic created by the morning and afternoon school runs. |
|
Surely it would make more sense to put up an advert outside a football ground alerting men to the dangers of testicular or prostate cancer? |
|
He knew that something was wrong and never stopped to think about the dangers involved and that demonstrates what a brave man he was. |
|
The dangers of sun worshipping, such as malignant melanoma and accelerated ageing, are well known. |
|
The scheme is set to highlight the dangers of substance abuse, in particular drugs and alcohol, to the youth of the area. |
|
Davis, who has written extensively about the dangers of our fire ecology, is well-acquainted with the burn area. |
|
For myself, I think there are dangers in seeking to gloss the words of the Convention itself. |
|
The campaign will distribute posters warning people of the dangers of leaving their drink unattended. |
|
Links and colleagues rightly note that modern short-term hospitalizations have few of the regressive dangers that previously existed. |
|
With the Christmas festivities only weeks away he gave a reminder of the dangers of over-consumption of alcohol. |
|
Educate your employees about the dangers of opening e-mail attachments, particularly from senders they do not know personally. |
|
|
When I think of the dangers inherent in such a madcap scheme, my blood runs cold. |
|
Most known radiation dangers occur at the high end of the electromagnetic spectrum, and include X-rays and gamma rays. |
|
The course covers the laws about poisons, and the dangers to wildlife, and practical exercises in laying and baiting a trap. |
|
There are, after all, dangers in laying all the blame at the manufacturer's door. |
|
The dangers of teenage experimentation are somehow much less ruinous for boys. |
|
The Fund, set up by her parents after her death, works with schools and youth organisations, raising awareness of the dangers of solvent abuse. |
|
This particular snake isn't the first python to get a tough lesson in the dangers of swallowing oversize prey. |
|
If the US moves forward with weaponization of outer space, the dangers to the Earth of new arms races in space will grow enormously. |
|
Although not considered high-risk surgery, potential dangers include infection and ulcers. |
|
Falling masonry, backdrafts and explosions are all very real dangers facing a firefighter outside the training room. |
|
Mr Johnson does not mince his words when it comes to emphasising the dangers associated with this mammoth project. |
|
Residents and parents who reside on the Mountain Road are up in arms over the dangers posed by speeding traffic. |
|
British liberal and opposition writing up to 1789 concentrated almost entirely on the dangers of the excessive power of the crown. |
|
She hoped that publicity surrounding the case would help to highlight the dangers of live rails. |
|
The Forest of Dean has dangers enough for the unwary stranger, without these. |
|
A barrister tells a cautionary tale from Australia, on the dangers of creating a crime of incitement to religious hatred. |
|
The dangers of moving backwards are clear for an administration fixated with past mistakes. |
|
This text highlights how my training in philosophy was a plunging into the history of philosophy with its dangers of scholasticism. |
|
Also, popular kids with troublesome peers showed the highest likelihood of being led into such dangers as vandalism and shoplifting. |
|
A scoop by the tabloid newspaper announced that he had sent him to visit a rehab clinic to observe the dangers of drug use. |
|
|
Anyone from a place with name of Moose Jaw already knows the dangers of messing around with jackalopes. |
|
The act of clarifying alerts town residents to the dangers of violating the act and therefore itself constitutes a form of warning. |
|
We should be wary of dangers to our liberty and privacy with the excuse of security. |
|
The FDA ordered the ads changed within 90 days to include information about the dangers of transmitting the virus and its deadly nature. |
|
The Conservative Party came round to him, and by October the worst of the dangers of that year were past. |
|
The Prime Minister yesterday warned of the dangers of standing aside from closer European integration. |
|
Similar dangers exist of a structural collapse leading to an uncontrollable release of energy which could release radioactivity, he said. |
|
This whole process can be done invisibly to the user, so for the unwary, the dangers of transmitting it to others is very real. |
|
Learning from history is well and good, but such talk illustrates the dangers of learning from the wrong history. |
|
Irwin adds that the dangers of arrest or bashing from loitering in public places also do not exist while on the Internet. |
|
While fully appreciating all the dangers of identity theft, I'd almost rather clean the litter box than shred documents. |
|
Rather, he cautions young musicians to beware of the dangers of political roadblocks in building a career. |
|
Inspector McComb said that in terms of joyriding, the latest incident showed the dangers involved. |
|
Such are the dangers at a time when ghosts and goblins are not the only things scaring American voters. |
|
Subtle concern of the possible dangers still stays with our family through four generations of railroaders. |
|
I knew the dangers that awaited any two werewolves who met on the full moon. |
|
The poems articulate the function of puritanism as a check against the dangers of untrammelled art. |
|
The selective closure can also help reduce parents' anxiety about their children who are out there exposed to physical dangers and health risks. |
|
Fallen tree trunks toss about the stream, presenting mortal dangers to swimmers and bathers. |
|
It is not true, but there are great dangers in the growing belief that it is. |
|
|
It is also an object lesson in the dangers of trying to impose democracy in a culture that is not ready for it. |
|
I would appreciate any information you have on Radar and dangers to health. |
|
On top of the obvious dangers of injury or death during combat, they tend to live harsh lives. |
|
Widespread fears loomed about the efficacy of the young democracy and the dangers of rearming a recently created German state. |
|
Mr Webster said the dangers of the Legionella bacteria in air conditioning systems were well known. |
|
It became a movie the entire family watched ritually in consensual comprehension of the continuing dangers of ignorance, hate, and violence. |
|
Now we are going by airplane, it is very risky, but we are taking the dangers anyway. |
|
In the triumph of Royalist counter-revolution Milton saw the dangers of political passivity, of ideological sloth. |
|
The only true security against nuclear dangers is an enforceable ban on all nuclear weapons. |
|
He said the case showed the dangers of the Government's campaign to secure more convictions for rape. |
|
Every spring for over 100 years, Newfoundland men had gone sealing, aware of the dangers from ice floes and storms. |
|
The dangers for Stephen, however, arc the barbed remarks of the scholars, presently engaged in a discussion of Goethe's novel, Wilhelm Meister. |
|
They are attempting to maintain a standard of safety by eliminating any potential dangers that cause people harm. |
|
He said the athletic department catfished several athletes to teach them the dangers of social networking. |
|
Nevertheless, it highlights the dangers of naive advocacy of urban consolidation as a panacea. |
|
All anglers need be aware of the dangers involved when fishing near electricity lines in order to minimise the risk of accidents. |
|
The dangers were most conspicuously apparent in the vast sums being made from India. |
|
The Fabians do not appreciate the dangers of politicising the Speakership. |
|
At the mention of such a grown-up task, Alex squared his shoulders and assented that yes, he had protected his mother from all sorts of dangers while his father was away. |
|
The accident serves as a grim reminder of the dangers of drinking and driving. |
|
|
On Wednesday the focus was on the prevalent use of skin whiteners and the dangers of using products which are not approved by the health ministry. |
|
So there are potentially dangers of treating men with slightly lowish testosterone levels with testosterone because you can actually cause damage by doing that. |
|
A health education program is needed that explains the dangers of asbestos exposure and warns about the use of asbestos-containing soils for whitewash. |
|
Fusarium wilt kills plants by cutting off nutrient supply from the roots and is one of the biggest dangers facing lupin production in Europe and Russia. |
|
Because Chirlane and I have had to talk to Dante for years, about the dangers he may face. |
|
As if looking out from a watch-tower you give warning to them all, averting dangers and forearming against all the downfalls treacherously plotted by the enemy. |
|
Which reminds me to mention a word of caution when managing cows around calving time, there is nothing like a good scare to make one realise the dangers of attack. |
|
There were 6,000 other prisoners in the camp, and the nurses used an old mimeograph machine to start a public health campaign on the dangers of disease. |
|
At many a public meeting we constantly warned of the dangers of product transference and that we would not lose money but in fact could make more. |
|
The dangers of writing either melodramatically or reductively about the slaughter and terror at the center of these new killing fields are all too real. |
|
The main north-south highway was reopened on Thursday but motorists were urged to remain on alert against possible dangers caused by the continuing heavy rains. |
|
While one person was going on about gluten, the other countered with the dangers of saturated fat. |
|
Told in a dream of his impending return home, he made his way to the coast and joined a merchant ship, facing many dangers before rejoining his family. |
|
Bolted to the deck beside it are bright yellow warning signs about the dangers of entering a wreck, and reminding divers that they enter at their own risk. |
|
Then, sadly, they bade farewell to their beloved village and walked together into the forest, leaving behind the dangers that the humans threatened to bring to them. |
|
The dangers of further intensifications of managerialism are considerable. |
|
An easing of tensions between al Qaeda and ISIS presents dangers for America in its military campaign in the Levant. |
|
They also try to predict guest behavior, speculating where participants could wander and any potential dangers they may face. |
|
He balances imaginative contemplation of Christ's Passion with calls to ascetic efforts, regarding each as balancing and correcting the dangers of the other. |
|
For the two founders, who prided themselves on being well-informed, it would be a harsh lesson in the dangers of being too clever and too cloistered. |
|
|
After the crash Gareth's father said he had taken six of his son's friends to the chapel of rest to warn them of the dangers of so-called joyriding. |
|
With no food or water, and the dangers of hypothermia and dehydration sliding into inevitability, the men continue their treacherous descent through white-out conditions. |
|
In some episodes where a threat lurks, the colored scribbles grow dense and fraught, mutely warning against dangers that the character is too naive to see for himself. |
|
The Minister for Agriculture has again warned of the dangers of complacency creeping into the efforts to contain and prevent further outbreaks of foot and mouth disease. |
|
Nobody would deny that dangerous rogue states have to be contained to prevent them from becoming dangers not just to themselves but also to their neighbours. |
|
We are not naive about the many threats and dangers there are today to world peace and security, nor about the urgent need to do something about them. |
|
These customers could not hear what this scrupulous real estate agent told them about the dangers of this kind of risk. |
|
Foley was a risk taker who reported from the front lines, fully aware of the dangers that might entail. |
|
Armando Hart, director of the Jose Marti Program Office, has warned of the dangers of this diabolical annexationist plan not only for Cuba, but for the entire world. |
|
The movies were the primary retailers of the myth, and Hollywood failed dismally in its attempts to sell the dangers of the international conspiracy. |
|
One of the biggest dangers to commuters at the time was the constant threat of pickpockets and other petty thieves preying upon unsuspecting victims. |
|
The dark liquids have similarly ominous implications, as if to underscore the dangers of offshore oil drilling and the devastation wrought by oil spills. |
|
Everyone is wise to the mercury dangers in paints, but patients need to know that button batteries, mercurial antiseptics and broken thermometers are sources of mercury. |
|
The stark reality of being a parent is that there are unfathomable dangers everywhere. |
|
Although I had been irritated with her on many occasions, I admired her drive and her uncomplaining coolness in the face of the dangers we'd encountered. |
|
Mr. Burke claims the new regulations, which require boatmen to carry anchors in small fishing boats, create very real dangers and are, in fact, a safety hazard. |
|
And plenty of people speak of this immigration and its supposed dangers as if these were unvarnished, unquestionable truths. |
|
It wasn't until these areas were charted, the dangers known, and markets for goods discovered that private ships sailed the ocean to move goods around the planet. |
|
New research is brewing debate over the dangers of high-fructose corn syrup, writes Sharon Begley. |
|
Out of nervousness about unipolarity, they might underestimate the dangers of a multipolar system in which nonliberal and nondemocratic powers would come to outweigh Europe. |
|
|
There are extra dangers if the pollen count is high and sufferers take higher doses of their medication to relieve symptoms such as streaming eyes and sneezing. |
|
It also sets the stage for the opportunities and dangers that helped to create the burgeoning scientific and conservation movements that relate to heritage animals. |
|
Sceptics about musical meaning tend to regard these alternatives under the sign of Scylla and Charybdis, as formidable dangers nearly impossible to avoid. |
|
Although as a young man he didn't tend to dwell on the dangers facing him, the devastation and suffering of the conflict has left Lord Harewood strongly opposed to warfare. |
|
Staff from York Dungeon will be joining forces with students from York College to dramatise the dangers of slips, trips, burns, cuts and stabbings in the kitchen. |
|
Aquariums, like adultery, draw us into a shadowy underworld of unspoken sensual pleasures, an engrossing, exotic environment harboring dangers of mythic proportion. |
|
We get a lot of calls asking if we can home unwanted bunnies, but we can't, partly because of the dangers of disease, such as myxomatosis, to our own. |
|
Karla Zabludovsky on the dangers of reporting in a country plunged in turmoil. |
|
He has won the chance to promote a Private Members Bill in the Commons and he has chosen the issue of telecommunication masts and dangers to health. |
|
His father Paul said yesterday that he had taken six of Gareth's friends to the chapel of rest to warn them of the dangers of so-called joyriding. |
|
However, there are dangers in using these dichotomous terms. |
|
The habitual residence test was introduced as a centrepiece for a party conference speech in order to deal with the dangers of what is described as benefit tourism. |
|
In a recent column about political correctness, I touched on the dangers of facile stereotyping, citing the Germans' reputation for monopolising sunbeds. |
|
Miners and managers alike sometimes rode the tram, especially in the winter and early spring when avalanche dangers made the tramways the safest route to the mines. |
|
Scientists close to the programme are aware of the dangers of these misapprehensions, for public respect towards science, as much as for the future of biotechnology. |
|
And each year more and more reports surface of the potential dangers down under, with shock-horror headlines grabbing the imaginations of the public. |
|
Perhaps one of the dangers that the show flirts with is that an emphasis on visual rhyming may cause divergent works to look perfectly complacent. |
|
Labradors, Cocker Spaniels and Pomeranians are the three main pedigrees which are exposed to the dangers of being stolen from homes, say the Blue Cross volunteers. |
|
Women stressed the dangers of the heat and many suggested that the horrible rotten-egg gas smell that pervaded the place would not be missed at all. |
|
The dangers it poses were highlighted by the Yorkshire Post two years ago, when in a single weekend, six young people collapsed in Leeds after taking it. |
|
|
Every time National members and our colleagues in ACT pointed out the dangers of the Local Government Bill, for example, we were howled down as scaremongering. |
|
The movie reminds us of the dangers of high altitude mountain climbing. |
|
Fifty school principals and mukhtars from the newly liberated area were lectured on how to educate students and residents about the dangers of land mines on Sunday. |
|
These themes are underpinned by unquestioned assumptions about the dangers of modern life, lazily repeated like a mantra through much of the media. |
|
Over the past year, I've learned that inside all subcultures there exists a fascinating world fraught with peculiarities, dangers and strange rituals. |
|
The project is expected to be long term, with the igloos remaining in the area as protective enclosures, shielding the penguins from dangers of domestic animals. |
|
Anderson pointed out that despite the dangers of overconfidence, it does makes some sense to follow confident people in general. |
|
The promise and the dangers of our era are indissolubly connected. |
|
It does mean, though, that interviewers need to be sensitive to the dangers to which victims may be exposed as a direct result of the interviewer's presence. |
|
But the government and the cell phone industry owe it to us to protect us from the dangers and discourtesies that these wonder gadgets have generated. |
|
This method had its dangers since the P38 was subjecting itself to antiaircraft fire from defenders as well as gunners aboard the Japanese bombers. |
|
Korematsu knew firsthand the dangers of war-time hysteria and pleaded that we not make that mistake again. |
|
Its strong external envelope, made from several distinct Titanium shells, will protect it from the dangers of a long flight in space's hostile environment. |
|
The endless possibilities of the city could pose moral dangers of temptation and vice, of prostitution and degeneration, as well as rational recreation. |
|
The brother met us and gave us the spiel about the dangers of the city. |
|
There is no question that the outbreak of SARS has focused the world's attention on the dangers of how easily a virulent disease can spread around the globe. |
|
Ironically, the alarming discovery of the glue bags comes just a few months after a major campaign in Bradford schools to warn against the dangers of volatile substance abuse. |
|
The dangers in a rural agenda driven by non-rural people are many. |
|
A group of tweenie girls set about rescuing a beleaguered tree living next to a landfill in this spirited play about the dangers of corporate excess and waste. |
|
There are dangers in drawing comparisons between an artificially bred and domestically trained animal and an animal which is living completely in the wild. |
|
|
On the other hand, imposing the criteria of ethnically defined borders in relation to Kosovo held even greater dangers than in the rest of former Yugoslavia. |
|
The right-wing law and order legislation contained in the speech led a number of observers to comment on the dangers of the development of a police state in Britain. |
|
Ella's journey to find a way to break the spell has its own dangers as she meets up with elves, ogres, giants, fairies, and of course a very charming prince. |
|
One of the real dangers of caregiving for the caregiver is losing your sense of self to the responsibilities and worries that make up your everyday world. |
|
Many hidden dangers in the home go unnoticed until it's too late. |
|
You have to beware of many dangers on the winterly roads of Lapland. |
|
The dangers posed to them by superstores and online sellers don't just threaten some quaint form of distributing goods, they imperil the fabric of neighborhoods and towns. |
|
The recent deluge and the resulting floods have no doubt made many househunters think about what dangers they could encounter when buying a new house. |
|
There are grave dangers in extending such subsidies, as the absurdity at present under discussion of providing hourly salary levels for visual artists suggests. |
|
Contrary to the impression created by the doom-mongers, there has been a dramatic decline in smoking since the dangers first became widely publicized. |
|
Whether it's ready-made cigarettes, roll your owns, cigars, pipes, snuff, or electronic cigarettes, most smokers know the health dangers but continue anyway. |
|
Content providers eager to leave the narrowband world for the new high-speed Internet often find themselves in uncharted waters, with as many dangers as there are rewards. |
|
Still, there are enough dangers on every side, especially from electrically operated gadgets that can give a nasty shock if handled the wrong way. |
|
There are many dangers in a house for an unsupervised child. |
|
To involve them in a new set of dangers would have been unthinkable. |
|
In February 1940 a nationwide campaign was launched that warned the general public against loose talk and the dangers of unwittingly giving information to enemy sympathizers. |
|
Well prior to the outbreak of the current war, they warned the Pentagon of the dangers to Iraq's cultural heritage posed by postwar pillage and destruction. |
|
Hooton said that the foundation would continue reaching out to young people about the dangers of anabolic steroids. |
|
Ezra Pound's virulent anti-Semitism, his radio broadcasts and tracts in support of Mussolini, stand as potent reminders of the limits and dangers of the human imagination. |
|
Parents were warned yesterday about the dangers of sharing a bed with their baby as campaigners stepped up efforts to prevent cot deaths. |
|