Just recently Arminianism has spawned a movement which embarrasses even Arminians by its distortion of the character of God. |
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Has there been any kind of promotion or promotional material which embarrasses you? |
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The guy should just resign already, before he embarrasses his party any more. |
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This also embarrasses me because it implies that people like me can't compete in the job market on a level playing field. |
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Except that once in a while she has too much to drink, and embarrasses him in public. |
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In fact, the sages asserted that someone who embarrasses another person in public is akin to a murderer. |
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Max humiliates and embarrasses me all the time, so I don't know, this made me happy. |
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So even when the gray haired man I sometimes call my father in public embarrasses me a lot, I love him all the same. |
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However, I'd add that he's a caveman that embarrasses other cavemen. |
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Murdock had stuck Mikey and I with the scene where Poppy runs off after Luciano embarrasses her in public, and Luciano follows her and admits his undying love. |
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They acted in a way which shames and embarrasses us as Europeans and democrats. |
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Harassment is any behaviour that demeans, humiliates or embarrasses a person and that a reasonable person should have known would be unwelcome. |
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The stuff going on at the football stadiums is atrocious and it's embarrassing and I think it embarrasses the whole country. |
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If the actions of the defence minister embarrasses the government, then why is it inviting more debate in the House? |
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Second, your question embarrasses me because I have said this perhaps 200 times in my public career. |
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It is the type of practice that embarrasses me as a parliamentarian to play a role in. |
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Increasingly, reporters are victimised for making public vital information when it embarrasses their government. |
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Suppose the committee helps improve public services, but in the process it embarrasses the government: would this be considered a success? |
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We must not protect information merely because it reveals the violation of a law or embarrasses the government. |
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But I didn't. I talk about things that really bother me, like how my mom keeps telling everyone about the abuse, even though it embarrasses me. |
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Teasing is unacceptable, especially if it demeans, belittles, embarrasses and causes personal humiliation. |
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She is a free spirit who embarrasses her child not by her backwardness but by her progressiveness, her individualistic way of dressing and behaving. |
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Her report embarrasses the present government, the last one and Northern Ireland's police. |
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Neither Salomon nor Mr Grubman were named, but correspondence that embarrasses them has been included in the evidence. |
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It's been shown that alcohol embarrasses the elimination of fat in the body. |
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What really embarrasses the Liberal members of Parliament opposite is that they see these signs popping up all over their own ridings. |
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Nothing embarrasses the Liberals because they do not know the meaning of shame. |
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The thing can also effect genuinely useful change by simple virtue of its celebrity, and this embarrasses the powers that be, as in the Hackney housing story, so it will be really interesting to see what else happens. |
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Starting from object manipulation and giving them humanity they obtain a kind of tragic illusionism where we see our unworthy condition full of a nervous and recognized air that embarrasses the agreed limits. |
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Discrimination encompasses harassment, which includes behaviour that demeans, humiliates or embarrasses a person if a reasonable person should have known it was unwelcome. |
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And it embarrasses the government in front of the world's football fans. |
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On a continent that so reliably embarrasses optimism, some regard South Africa's current troubles as the first skid down the African slope to economic collapse, ethnic warfare, lawlessness and corruption. |
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Its claim to editorial integrity is patchy, but it provides the biggest outlet from which material that embarrasses the authorities is sure to reach a wide audience. |
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Before the minister does more damage to the nation's finances and before he embarrasses himself further, will he table a precise ways and means motion in the House? |
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That question embarrasses us terribly, because we were surprised like everybody else, even if we witnessed the rapid growth of the tensions and of the process of intoxication. |
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Jane Austen's novel Emma is set in Surrey and the famous picnic where Emma embarrasses Miss Bates takes place on Box Hill. |
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