Practical approaches were also apparently undermined by the foreignness of apparatus and irrelevance of curricula in rural settings. |
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It is his signature, his philosophy and shtick, his declaration that love conquers all, a testament to the gaudiness and foreignness of romance. |
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The East through Western eyes has throughout history been seen as the ultimate symbol of foreignness, the most exotic of lands and people. |
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Because even in Egypt I have never belonged, but suddenly it hit me when we arrived in Greece that my foreignness gave me freedom. |
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And Locke is out of joint with his job: though he is famous for his foreign reports, foreignness is his defeat. |
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The dilemma of foreignness comes down to one of liberty versus fraternity the pleasures of freedom versus the pleasures of belonging. |
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Because I experience in my own way, foreignness and melancholy but also the joy required by the globalized world? |
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So-called abstract painting is not abstract in the sense of a foreignness to life and humans. |
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His translation ethics emphasizes the importance of accepting the foreignness of the Other as it is. |
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Such communication creates misunderstanding and unease on both sides and increases the feeling of foreignness. |
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At the same time, the transpacific migrations within and of Hollywood continue to perpetuate the myth that any marker of Asianness is synonymous with foreignness. |
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The New Yorker watched, fascinated, as this exotic foreign food began to lose its foreignness and become, in various ways, American. |
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For the close-minded and mistrustful its strangeness or foreignness makes it a provocation. |
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Instead, novels and plays emphasise the anti-religious character of the movement and particularly its foreignness. |
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Yet, in so doing, they gradually placed themselves in a position of foreignness to their own society. |
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How much greater might the adventure be, how much more intense the sense of foreignness, if there were no possibility of return? For the real exile, foreignness is not an adventure but a test of endurance. |
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A life of foreignness imposed by poverty or persecution or exile is unlikely to be enjoyable at all. Even so, all other things being equal, foreignness is intrinsically stimulating. |
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Most of them have foreign roots and are torn between familiarity and foreignness, between their Swiss friends and their family of different cultural origin. |
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Beyond that, however, he is doubly affected by his foreignness. |
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The main issue in the beginning was that of acceptance by their Gentile neighbours, despite their foreignness and their rather rapid economic integration. |
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And this is no rhetorical figure of speech: the foreignness of the movement that is laying siege to Spain is betrayed by its watchwords, by its slogans, by its aims and by its sentiments. |
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