Thompson retains the lines but abandons their judicial context, thus depriving the play of its retrospective irony. |
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I only hope this sort of health tourism is not depriving poor people there of similar operations. |
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The adults and young feed on saltcedar leaves, repeatedly defoliating the tree and depriving it of nutrients. |
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But when Independence came, some Africans looked on the Asians as interlopers, foreigners depriving the locals of jobs and economic opportunity. |
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We repay them by making them spend short, comfortless, unnatural lives, depriving them of their young who can suffer cruelty and brutal deaths. |
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This year, it was finally decided that their crumbling site would be roped off, depriving the revellers of their usual spot. |
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Lateness or non-attendance inconveniences other patients, depriving them of appointment time. |
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The adjacent flood plain was left high and dry, depriving the inhabitants of the catfish and other marshland staples of their diet. |
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The bill overrides a decision of the court, depriving those people of their right to access and to receive justice in that forum. |
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Isn't depriving a person of their liberty the worst punishment under our criminal law? |
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Try muslin or gauze, which ensure privacy without depriving a room of light. |
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Health because they are recking their body, through destroying their lungs, taste buds and depriving their brain of oxygen. |
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By depriving the bacteria of oxygen, electrons are freed to set up a voltage between the electrodes. |
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I never was in the habit of depriving myself but from now on I refuse to be careful with my money. |
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How can you just carry me off like this, depriving me of internet access without even a whisper of warning? |
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The receptor soaks up angiogenic growth factors, depriving blood vessels in the brain, lungs, and kidneys of essential maintenance tools. |
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Miserably, in trying to recover his lost childhood Jackson is depriving his own kids of theirs. |
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I thought fer years I was having mad anxiety attacks y'know what I was depriving my biocomputer of valuable air. |
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Enormous subsequent engineering projects have modified the river still further, depriving it of huge wetland areas. |
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In doing so, they are depriving themselves of the numerous blessings and rewards of fasting. |
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He who wants to remain free, must fight unto death those who are intent upon depriving him of his freedom. |
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According to the leader of a Co Mayo-based women's group, widespread neglect is depriving rural women of their rights as citizens. |
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The schools have also closed, depriving thousands of children of an education. |
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Where the state is potentially depriving individuals of their liberty, we need to be able to keep a check on who these individuals are and what they have done. |
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Oxygen deprivation at birth left him with cerebral palsy, depriving him of full use of his limbs, and mild retardation. |
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Consider that depriving an accused of access to evidence is contrary to the tradition of defending rights and procedural fairness. |
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By using an ad-blocker, you are depriving the website of revenue. |
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Mr Breen said Mr Kerry had no intention of depriving his employer of the van, and that he was nosing out of the car park when the accident happened. |
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Corruption is essentially a means of depriving other people of their equitable rights by tilting the balance in favour of certain individuals or communities. |
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It is then removed from the Google index and no longer appears anywhere in the results, consequently depriving you of most of your visitors. |
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It is also argued that regulating usury may constitute a market restriction, depriving those consumers who most require it of credit. |
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Youth also underlined the fact that the crisis is depriving certain vulnerable groups of educational opportunities. |
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Furthermore, internment or imprisonment shall, for such offences, be the only measure adopted for depriving protected persons of liberty. |
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I think that the denial of the North is a form of self-contempt that is extremely puzzling and terribly depriving. |
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Firth has also ruled out wishing someone ill by depriving an ideal moral judge of the influence of such emotions as hatred and jealousy as depicted in his concept of dispassionateness. |
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Those arrested are put in a temporary cell comparable to a dungeon, depriving them of light, food, water, visits from relatives, etc. |
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Too often in this tournament, the Portuguese center forward has tended to drift wide or into midfield, depriving the team of an offensive terminus. |
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By depriving people of light and other external time cues, scientists have learned that most people's biological clocks work on a 25-hour cycle rather than a 24-hour one. |
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Nor would they stoop to depriving the downtrodden fans of a struggling club of an adored star just by offering him some filthy money and the chance of European football. |
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The Union should not rush headlong into depriving itself of room for maneuver. |
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Tribes killing their neighbors and burning their fields were now depriving the Romans of soldiers to conscript and produce to tax. |
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After all, you are tricking Mother Nature by depriving your body of sleep. |
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You're born with balance, but bad habits like depriving yourself of the foods you need or ignoring high stress levels can upset that balance and cause you to gain weight. |
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It did not bring the oversampling issue before the board, thus depriving them the chance to explore the issue in a zoetic context informed by both case-specific facts and administrative precedents. |
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It could be a purely chemical reaction to depriving my brain of pleasure for so long. |
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By the time I actually made it to the clinic, I had been awake so long, and had been depriving myself of anything other than just water, that I was beginning to hallucinate. |
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In the prison, the floors would get wet during the rainy season, depriving people of a dry place to sleep. |
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Somehow, because I value his ideas more than any item, he never gets the feeling that I am rejecting his wishes or depriving him of his heart's desire. |
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No marriage takes place, depriving the woman of legal rights, and men have several wahaya. |
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Saprophytic microorganisms feed on the green manure, depriving potential pathogens of available nitrogen. |
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Many physicians avoid the hard truth, fearing that they risk depriving patients of their last chance-the hope and the willto survive. |
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It has no reason to act in haste and thereby risk depriving itself of an effective tool. |
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Option 25: A cause of action for consumer associations without depriving individual consumers of bringing an action. |
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He accused his prison guards of depriving him of sleep, hitting him and putting him in a cell with mentally disturbed detainees. |
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These provisions may also have the effect of depriving the shareholders of the opportunity to sell their shares at a premium. |
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We're finally managing to get our automatic pilot to work and we're not depriving ourselves, revelled the skipper of Safran. |
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The Scottish Executive's suggestion that the park should also be neutered by depriving it of powers to control damaging developments has also run into fierce opposition. |
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The worst abuses were officially abolished, but the yoke of oppression did return, and new laws depriving people of their freedom and their political rights were instituted. |
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Many customers use these cassettes to copy the works of creators without paying copyright, thus depriving them of their living. |
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The Commission intends to strengthen efforts to hit criminals where it hurts most: depriving them of the assets they acquired through crime. |
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Earlier on November 4, the rebels had shot dead a SPO, Goura Chandra Dalai, depriving his family of their sole bread earner. |
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Market regulation is a necessity, but regulation does not require micromanagement of the emissions trading scheme at the risk of depriving the market of its flexibility. |
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Clodius set about depriving Caesar's senatorial enemies of two of their more obstinate leaders in Cato and Cicero. |
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As to the depriving the defendant of waging his law, it was thought, the practice merited discouragement, as a temptation to perjury. |
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The amount of illegal fishing has significantly depleted fish stocks, depriving local fishing communities of an important resource for survival. |
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Does the minister realize that, by refusing to offer compensation, he is not only depriving Quebec of money to which it is entitled, but forcing Quebeckers to pay for compensation given to other provinces? |
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The Ministry of Interior can recommend, under certain conditions, depriving nationality from a naturalized citizen for reasons of public interest. |
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This setback put Procter in an awkward position by depriving him of his main channel of communication with the rest of the British forces and his sources of supply. |
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This pooling in the lower extremities diverts blood away from the brain, depriving it of oxygen, and leads to dizziness, lightheadedness and, eventually, fainting. |
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Similarly, the watering down of Europe in a Confederation comprising only unshared, individual interests, by depriving it of the means of action it needs, was rejected almost unanimously. |
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Mr President, Prime Minister, if we fail to deal with this crisis immediately, we will be depriving Europe of its future, because without children's integrity our Europe will have no future. |
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As we know, war is a stern teacher, and in depriving us of the power to satisfy our daily needs and desires our morals gravitate toward the situation in which we find ourselves. |
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It is fair and square to find that the DPRK took its steps of action to cope with the high-handed act and threat aimed at depriving the DPRK of its rights to peaceful economic construction. |
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Fathers experience misandry in the family courts of Canada and other institutions, which is depriving them of their children and subjugating them financially. |
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We would deregulate certain aspects without depriving the state of its role in offering citizens fairer access to the information for which it is responsible. |
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Imprisonment and other measures which result in cutting off an offender from the outside world are afflictive by the very fact of taking from the person the right of self-determination by depriving him of his liberty. |
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A scarcity, or in some cases, a total absence of secondary schools has left many children unable to continue their education, depriving them of the possibility of obtaining good jobs later on. |
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Washington State is not depriving anyone of the free exercise of religion. |
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The acceptance, whether tacit or express, of a reservation made by a contracting party does not have the effect of depriving the Convention as a whole, or the relevant article in particular, of its declaratory character. |
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While there was some attempt to suggest that this state of affairs was due to security concerns, no plausible explanation was offered for keeping the women in leg irons and depriving them of any means of keeping warm. |
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Earlier ice breakup is also responsible for declining polar bear populations in the western Hudson Bay region, by depriving them of critical time to prey on seals and fatten up to survive the ice-free months without food. |
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An intervenor in the case argued that depriving poor people of access to counsel would result in equality in access to justice that would be inconsistent with section 15 of the charter. |
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Is it possible to go against the tide of globalization, one-way globalization, a voyage of no return, that is depriving humanity of its cultural vigour and leaving us with few alternatives? |
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In the first part of this presentation I will deal with the ill-natured effects of prohibitory, exaggerated and emotionally depriving hidden family messages. |
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At present the quality of retread and remould tyres on the Single Market varies widely and these disparities help cast doubt on their reliability, thus depriving the consumer of some of the aforementioned benefits. |
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We mustn't look down on this new art expression in the form of luminous pictures, for fear of falling behind and of depriving ourselves of a strong element of success. |
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The Reds took this game by the scruff of the neck from the very first minute, depriving Besiktas of the ball, pressing them high up the pitch and generally imposing a very quick tempo. |
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Spite the black sheathy thing in your pocket by depriving it of its single purpose. |
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Many of the springs are used almost exclusively for irrigation purposes, thus depriving villages of drinking water and forcing the use of unhygienic boreholes and wells. |
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They at the same time, well beyond the legal obligations of the NPT, argue for depriving the developing nations of the use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes. |
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Similarly, making persons stand, kneel or crouch in an uncomfortable position for hours on end, or depriving them of sleep, is unlikely to leave clearly identifiable traces. |
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It is in this fashion that humanity has fallen into idolatry, fanaticism, rites, and external worship, drowning their spirits and depriving themselves of the blessed liberty of praying directly to their Father. |
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When you think about it, this donation is not depriving me of anything and I will not wonder for one second what I would have done with the money. |
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I'll come at once» made her interrupt her most important activities such as her lessons meticulously prepared, depriving her of precious time for prolonged contact with God which her contemplative soul ardently desired. |
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The Tigers closed the sluice gates of a dam, depriving thousands of families, mostly from the ethnic Sinhalese majority, of irrigation and drinking water. |
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Permit me to allude to my previous occupation as a veterinary surgeon when I say that we are castrating ourselves and depriving ourselves of power here. |
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They turned their frustrations on the illegal moneychangers who line up Harare's main streets, accusing them of depriving banks of the scarce banknotes. |
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This whole issue prompts a good question: why do we not outrightly condemn such violent behaviour, instead of depriving one of the parties in the dispute of the ability to continue running his business? |
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Such brain drains may appear to be a real problem in relatively poor countries, by depriving them of intellectual capital and drive and reducing the overall tax base. |
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These nutrients cause algal blooms, depriving aquatic creatures of oxygen. |
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Take, for example, the mysterious role that an obscure subcontractor plays in the delivery of gas from Turkmenistan to Ukraine, using Gazprom's pipes but depriving it of large profits. |
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Urban renewal, by contrast, was immiserating its intended beneficiaries by depriving them of the organic features of real neighborhoods. |
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Should the mesquite be allowed to kill the casuarina trees by drilling its roots deeper and depriving them of water, as in some places it seems to be doing? |
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A State party that withdraws from the NPT after violating the Treaty should not be permitted to avoid corrective action by the international community depriving it of such benefits while in violation of the Treaty. |
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Northern Ireland A person is guilty of theft is he dishonestly appropriates property belonging to another with the intention of permanently depriving the other of it. |
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Active employment policies are being used as an excuse to subsidise big business while depriving families of even the most basic right to survival. |
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The negative effects of the infringement of the right-that of depriving individuals of the protection of the CHRA-outweighed any positive benefits of the challenged provision. |
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But not having the Augustów by-pass on grounds of protecting the environment at any cost, while ignoring human needs, is depriving the residents of north-eastern Poland of the opportunity of development and a dignified life. |
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By aggressively wearing our hair in a public place, we are depriving young women of the chance to speak about the energy choices this country faces. |
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It has been repeated since by everyone from Elizabeth Banks and Kristen Stewart to Carey Mulligan and Michelle Rodriguez: Hollywood is depriving its actresses of interesting roles. |
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By depriving its engine competitors of cooperation with Honeywell, GE will be the only engine manufacturer able to develop innovation in that project. |
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This can cause other families to withdraw their children, thereby depriving migrant children of the contact with the host country's language and culture which is vital to their integration. |
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Does the minister realize that by slashing this program's budget he is depriving thousands of students of potential income enabling them, among other things, to continue their education? |
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Expulsion shall not be resorted to for the purpose of depriving a migrant worker or a member of his or her family of the rights arising out of the authorization of residence and the work permit. |
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Some governments have changed the law to transform public or cooperative banks and insurance companies into public limited companies, thereby depriving them of their original social purposes. |
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Ross speculates that he may have borne a grudge against Edward for depriving him of a fortune. |
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Several days later the two struck at Epping Forest, depriving a man from Southwark of his belongings. |
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One such way is if it moves over land, thus depriving it of the warm water it needs to power itself, quickly losing strength. |
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The expansion of the Rus' put further military and economic pressure on the Khazars, depriving them of territory, tributaries, and trade. |
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The Hindu law discriminated against women by depriving them of inheritance, remarriage and divorce. |
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Even so, I feel a tad guilty to be depriving him of the opportunity. |
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The defoliants were sprayed over vast swathes of jungle in South Vietnam in an attempt to flush out Viet Cong communist guerrillas by depriving them of tree cover and food. |
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In the space of seven hours, more than 70 sites were destroyed, effectively depriving the Iraqi military of any early warning of the coming invasion. |
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A detachment sent out to seize supplies was decisively defeated in the Battle of Bennington by American militia in August, depriving Burgoyne of nearly 1,000 men. |
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Notably, the hated new Poor Law Amendment was passed in 1834, depriving working people of outdoor relief and driving the poor into workhouses, where families were separated. |
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Henry Austen's bank failed in March 1816, depriving him of all of his assets, leaving him deeply in debt and losing Edward, James, and Frank Austen large sums. |
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