Cyberspace creates a fine line between science fiction and popular theology, especially eschatology. |
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There is a fine line between sweet glorious cheese and eye-rolling, forehead-slapping idiocy. |
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It treads a fine line between being a traditional boozer and a downright dirty pigsty. |
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There is an increasingly fine line nowadays between some modern dance and classical ballet. |
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There is a fine line between Scouse wit and sentimentality, and Peel had crossed it. |
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There is a fine line between being Churchill and being a chump, and we'll let history decide who you are. |
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The framework is trying to walk a fine line between accepted terms of art and plain language. |
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It's a fine line between motivating people to stop smoking and scaring the pants off them. |
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Of all the recent attempts to tread this fine line between quality and humor, he does it better than almost anyone. |
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He should then appreciate the fine line between Churchillian rhetoric and hyperbole. |
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These pompadoured locals strut along a very fine line, with psychobilly overkill on one side and castrated vanilla-billy on the other. |
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With much success he walks a fine line between scholarly jargon and patronizing colloquialism. |
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Educators at public schools near polygamous communities walk a fine line to encourage children from plural marriages to attend school. |
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There's sometimes a fine line between vigorous, healthy debate and angry, unproductive arguments. |
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They are treading a fine line, risking bookings over mundane issues like throw-ins. |
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However, there's a fine line between mysticism and the intellectualization of spirituality. |
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There is a fine line between maturity, sobriety and patience, and indifference, alienation and disgust. |
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With adware, which collects data on your buying habits, there's a fine line between what's legal and what's not. |
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It was nice to know her friends cared but there was that fine line that went to far. |
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The proof lies in the way the story treads a fine line between goofy comedy and smartly written dialogue. |
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In the sponsorship of the arts there is a fine line between class and crass. |
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I find him, by and large, very funny, though he's always treads a fine line between being funnily offensive and being downright offensive. |
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A fine line that should be trod wisely in order to create a future where everyone can gain from the benefits of using this technology. |
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Since there is a fine line between firm chunks and a sudden collapse into mush, avoid adding water. |
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There is a fine line sometimes between a joke, satire, ridicule and genuine defamatory ridicule. |
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There's a fine line between standing up to your bud and bossing her around. |
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These songs demonstrate the fine line the saxophone walks from raw emotion to abominable cheesiness. |
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His photographs walk the fine line of documentative anthropology and sensuous beauty. |
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In Riyadh, the absolute monarchy of Saudi Arabia walks a fine line to maintain power. |
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The boarders, though, are weaving a fine line between staying true to their surfy, freewheeling roots and the rewards of success. |
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There's a fine line between what's classed as malingering and what is accepted as genuine illness. |
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How did the Los Angeles Times, through images, walk a fine line between exalting the order of law and fanning the flames of white hysteria? |
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I admire your fortitude, but there's a fine line between being a trouper and recklessness. |
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There is a fine line between a person embracing his unique, God-given attributes, and the heart curved completely inward. |
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Mainstream commercial radio has learned to walk that plank, treading a fine line between camaraderie and controversy. |
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There has always been a fine line between legitimate puffery and misleading advertising. |
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Yet Widayanto has succeeded in treading the fine line between his pure art creations and his more commercial products. |
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The occasional humblebrag might fly with your audiences but there's a fine line between sincerity and smugness. |
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He is by turns violent, sentimental, maudlin, self-pitying, and sadistic, and has a fine line in rhetoric. |
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He was already walking a fine line between thin and skeletal when we met, but now he just looks ill. |
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It must be said that the fine line between traditional and modern teaching is rather arbitrary. |
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Rollerball with hard metal ball in a flexible plastic tip, fine line 0.5 mm. |
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Critics say the airport must walk a fine line in its quest for revenue. |
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There is a fine line between standing up for your team-mates and indulging in serious foul play but Pratt insists his actions went beyond the pale. |
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The film walks a fine line between the irresponsible glorification of violence and the telling of an allegorical tale to make a philosophical statement. |
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That said, on the fine line between burnout and disuse, one person offered that having a volunteer do a YJC once every two weeks is the ideal. |
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It is to be preceded by a carriage return and bordered at the top by a fine line of 20 points. |
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She steers a fine line between braveness and bravura with nothing of the incantatory in her speech. |
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This prompted further discussion about the fine line that exists between the need for pain management, and addiction. |
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The House of World Cultures tries to walk that fine line between ethnic ascription and general artistic discourse. |
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It is indeed a fine line between our due diligence in holding the government to account and partisan grandstanding. |
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The result is simplicity of texture that mediates the fine line between bleakness and serene beauty. |
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It is about the choice between denial or denunciation in the face of evil, and the fine line between activism and fanaticism. |
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But even as these designers are walking the fine line between East and West while retailing abroad, at home their markets might be in for a shake-up. |
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Actually blinded by prosthetics, he walks the fine line between acting and mimicry, giving a performance that is neither stifled by imitation, nor unconvincing. |
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I wanted to show the very fine line between innocence, naivety and denial. |
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We are only too aware that there is a fine line between compliance of growers and rejection due to being bureaucratically cumbersome. |
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It's a fine line between being determined and stubborn, and Julian Green's attitude is likely to be defined by the career that eventuates. |
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I could try to fool people by letting it grow a bit, but as my father told me when I was a teenager, there's a fine line between Byronic and Moronic. |
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A little comic relief is welcome in serious deliberations, but there is a fine line between a jest and a jeer. |
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Each walked a fine line between the threat of inquisitional prosecution for heresy and prosecution by secular authorities in land or other disputes. |
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Ward is careful to walk a fine line in describing the weekend. |
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There has to be a fine line drawn and surely it has to be based on what is in the best interests of Canadians. |
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It becomes a fine line, especially when it comes to the idea of animal welfare and animal rights. |
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There is a fine line for family caregivers between their role as caregiver and their role as spouse, child or parent. |
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According to Safran's skipper, «We need to keep a close watch, as we're going to have to sail a fine line between a low and a high. |
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Today, all democratic governments walk a fine line between these two claims. |
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We recognize that there can be a fine line between encouraging voluntary actions and discouraging them. |
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He states that there is a fine line which will leave a lot of detailed work to courts to clarify. |
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The issue of funding criteria illustrates that there is sometimes a fine line between general and targeted measures. |
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Today's historically low rates are walking a fine line due to rising debt levels. |
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In the Social Security debate, Democrats are walking a fine line. |
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The fine line between information and legal opinion tends to restrict the scope of the information provided. |
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That's obviously a barrier, but there seems to be a fine line between building community capacity and community ownership without downloading. |
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Physically, I'd expected a dapper man with a fine line in suits and irony. |
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The fine line between loyalty and betrayal is like gossamer. |
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Brush plate with Chinese chili paste and make a fine line of wakame. |
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The film is humorous at times, yet it ultimately symbolizes something more serious, namely the fine line between white admiration and white appropriation of black culture. |
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Often there is a fine line between the sacred and the secular. |
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There is a fine line between taking the stance of Ebenezer Scrooge, skimping on our generosity to friends and relatives, and going absolutely mad with the plastic. |
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It is the perfect blend of comedy and drama, carefully treading the fine line between sentimentality and humour so that it never becomes too schmaltzy or too dreary. |
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There is a fine line between success and failure in top-level golf. |
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Treading this fine line will be a difficult challenge in the months ahead. |
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We are not out of the downturn yet, and companies still find themselves having to tread the fine line between cutting costs and improving processes. |
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There is a fine line between being a statesman and looking like a junketeer,'' said Republican campaign consultant Sal Russo. |
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Bren walks the fine line of becoming one of the greatest comedians ever or dying in complete obscurity. |
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There is a very fine line to be drawn between the Chain of Command who gives appropriate instructions and the one who actually intervenes in an investigation. |
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A fine line between the permissible repair and infringing reconstruction is difficult to draw, but is important for businesses in order to make their decisions. |
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There's a fine line between fishing and just standing on the shore like an idiot. |
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A fine line exists, however, between completeness and superfluity. |
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These decisions sometimes have to tread a fine line between preserving the major financial balances even though some reforms have yet to be carried out and blocking all aid even though progress has been made in some areas. |
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In practice, however, problems arise when technology development approaches the very fine line between civil and military applications, largely because most of the technologies can be used for dual purposes. |
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Where's the fine line between inspiration and unethical knockoffs? |
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This formulation walked a fine line between developing countries supporting a second commitment period and those, such as Japan and the Russian Federation, who had come out against it. |
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One of the hardest problems is how to tread the fine line between the need for flexibility and the need to strengthen competitiveness and job standards and protect workers. |
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Given the fine line between ordinary criminal activity and criminal activity relating to national security, it is possible that a national security investigation could grow out of the organized crime mandates of these teams. |
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Under bipartisan, preelection pressure for a significant re-examination of the president's war plan, the White House is walking a fine line. |
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There is an extremely fine line between carrot and stick for our car industry, and at the end of the day we must take great care to ensure that we really do export the best products and not perhaps our industry. |
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Clerking is mostly an art which entails a fine line between helping competitors, controlling them and ensuring that racing is not delayed because skaters are not ready. |
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This aesthetic of feeling the most and showing the least can be tricky — there's a fine line between underacting and nonacting — and it isn't always rewarded at prize-giving time, when flashier turns tend to carry the day. |
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As such, fine line patterns within weather radar imagery, associated with converging winds, are dominated by insect returns. |
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Kick the bucket: the fine line between euphemism and plain old slang. |
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Civil society at large feels greatly concerned, and is increasingly questioning scientific and technical developments from a moral and ethical perspective, emphasizing the fine line between the possible and the acceptable. |
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Sellers sees a fine line that activists must now walk when engaging in civil disobedience. |
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Anti-EU campaigners in the Tory party must also tread a fine line between making common cause with Mr Farage and not letting him hijack the whole thing. |
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However, there is a fine line between achieving reasonable bi-partisan positions that put pressure on government to improve, and having bland recommendations purely to have agreement. |
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Appropriate instructions given by authorized managers do not constitute an infringement in the conduct of the investigation but there is a very fine line to be drawn here. |
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The NEOSYS LOR System incorporates the Optomec patented Aerosol Jet Print Engine to deposit highly conductive, fine line traces to repair micrometer size open circuit defects. |
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Though most adware is designed to collect user information, a fine line exists between collecting data for simple advertising use and violating one's privacy. |
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There is a very fine line between luxury and glamour and sluttishness. |
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Our core capabilities include photoetching, thin metal stamping, polymer patterning, sputtering, plating, fine line circuit fabrication, and micro assembly. |
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But when these categorists reach thirty-five, they usually change it to forty, just as they did when they reached thirty when thirty was that fine line. |
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