His congregation believes same-sex unions go against basic Anglican beliefs. |
|
As difficult as it is to go against your instincts and emotions, you must control them and keep a cool head. |
|
Moreover, derivation by prefixation of a single consonant would go against the general pattern of word formation in English. |
|
So for any woman to engage this dynamic is to go against social decorums and stereotypes in such a way that she may find herself beyond the pale. |
|
But helping the poor directly would go against the grain of the ruling party's old guard. |
|
I've decided to go against the grain and not have any mixed drinks tonight. |
|
We like to find unique clothes that bring out the best in our personalities and go against the grain. |
|
Most young people are afraid of not being accepted if they go against the grain. |
|
I reserve the right to refuse readings that go against my ethics as a reader and my morals as a human being. |
|
She realized then that the administration really had been convinced the vote would go against the union. |
|
When results go against the team, supporters speak of the club being a galactico retirement home. |
|
This could be the day that effectively decides this year's race as the riders go against the clock for the individual time trial. |
|
Residents are also concerned London Assembly and central Government objectives go against the wishes of the community. |
|
How can anger, or any other emotion or feeling, get someone to go against what they have deliberately resolved on doing? |
|
It's so, so hard to go against the grain, and so, so easy to join the madding crowd. |
|
As they prepared to go against whatever was up ahead, the emergency lights blinked out without warning. |
|
At times of national hysteria, certain things that go against the tide of public opinion become almost unsayable. |
|
We had some calls go against us, we weren't shooting the ball really well, even though we were getting great shots. |
|
Oblique culinary references and obscure terms go against the grain of the present climate in the culinary world. |
|
This can lead to an information cascade that can go against rational self-informed decision making. |
|
|
They go against armed forces numbering 120,000, armed with AK 47s and strutting with pride and arrogance. |
|
It is crucial that, if early decisions go against them, Celtic's players do not react petulantly and adopt a persecution complex. |
|
The fact that her looks go against the convention seems to work in her favour. |
|
I come from the Native American background of two-spirited people, which allows us to go against the dominant sexual orientation and gender roles of the majority. |
|
Here's an opportunity to go against the grain and emerge a stronger company. |
|
There are at least 2 good reasons you might want to go against the grain of this conventional thinking. |
|
Both cases go against the WTO rules without any justification at all and, what is more, they imply self-punishment by the United States. |
|
Relationships expert Dr Raj Persaud admits the findings go against the received view of commitment-shy blokes who like nothing more than playing the field. |
|
I am very proud that our government decided to stand tall and go against the tide. |
|
Perhaps he imagines that the flax is first bundled and then beaten, though that would go against the flailing process which is normally done on a threshing floor. |
|
When it comes to regulating political life, French officials often go against the grain. |
|
So I want to get a sense from you as to how you have been able to go against the grain. |
|
In a sense, as a student to go against the grain was to be a Thatcherite. |
|
Did you know your lady shaver likes full body contact and wants to go against the direction of hair growth? |
|
Our planning is basically the beginning of a new deal to get Canada out of this recession, but some of the choices we made go against the grain. |
|
But Southwest is also innovative and nimble, and willing to go against the grain. |
|
In its opinion, some aspects of the agreement go against the rules of international trade and threaten the Community's legitimate interests. |
|
Diane and Alicia keep make decisions either without him or that directly go against his wishes. |
|
It is very hard to go against ingrained traditions that reap new harvests with a cycle of generations, over and over, until it is almost part of the should be. |
|
In conclusion, the challenge of the day is to go against the stream. |
|
|
We hold separate gatherings in our home and observe purdah as much as possible so it isn't that we're looking for any way possible to go against the commandments of Allah. |
|
It seems anathema to most gardeners to go against their natural instincts to prune, train, stake, deadhead, divide and generally fuss on the plants in their gardens. |
|
They tried therefore to draw up plans which would not go against the supercilious convictions of the Brothers. |
|
Any collusion or behaviour likely to falsify or go against the interests of the competition shall be forbidden. |
|
They have always been upfront about their desire to be famous, partly because this was a very vulgar thing to say in the Seventies and it pleased them to go against the grain. |
|
It prompts you to do things that go against your better nature. |
|
The claims go against some of the opponents to the Coppergate Riverside scheme who recently fly-posted empty shops, claiming 150 were already standing empty. |
|
It follows therefrom that any provision to the contrary would go against the very purpose of this Convention. |
|
Organizations that are self-serving and self-perpetuating go against the very concept of a movement. |
|
We go against the grain a little with our more composed, quick and technical approach. |
|
To go against what they perceive to be their leaders' aims is considered tantamount to ingratitude. |
|
We cannot, and the international community should not, reward those actions, which go against international law in all respects. |
|
When did you last hear a politician genuinely appeal to our higher nature, go against the grain because what they believed in was simply the right thing to do? |
|
The government is seeking to go against the wishes of the public. |
|
That seems to go against the statement I made this morning on behalf of the Government and the people of Ecuador in this very room. |
|
This would go against a balanced evolution of rural communities towards more wellbeing. |
|
Forcing the individual participants to go against their will would hardly produce a positive result. |
|
Some of the methods applied in the second group produce effects which go against the policies set out elsewhere by the Commission. |
|
Foreign bonds would therefore perform better than expected which would go against our current strategy. |
|
To do this they had to go against the flow of passengers descending the escalator from the passenger deck. |
|
|
Still, in politics, we have to make choices that go against what the people want. |
|
I won't go against my family, if they refuse to give their consent. |
|
It could also go against the policy of encouraging widespread site sharing. |
|
For bottled waters, business growth and water use reduction would seem to go against each other. |
|
That would go against the natural course of history and the European orientation of both our counries. |
|
During the last few weeks, one of the safest investments in the market was to go against the Yen. |
|
With the union leaders going one way, he is unlikely to go against them. |
|
Disturbing auestions, which go against what we, europeans and occidentals, are formated to see the world. |
|
I cannot and I will not retract anything, since it is neither safe nor right to go against conscience. |
|
However this suggestion was not adopted by the government, as this seems to go against their culture and way of thinking. |
|
I too originally intended not to go against the grain and I argued that competence should fall to the IMO in such a globalised field as the sea. |
|
To cut it smaller would go against the entire Home Depot modus vivendi. |
|
It would take a lot of confidence and fortitude to go against all that. |
|
Then, if necessary, go against the grain for an even closer shave. |
|
No, of course not, since that will go against both non-comparability and ordinalism. |
|
But we also find that despite everything and without regard to the risks they incur some free and independent voices try to go against the current, to explain and sometimes to run up against the dominant feelings. |
|
Yes, you always have to keep a cool head, never follow certain orders or precepts blindly, especially if they go against your beliefs or moral values. |
|
Was this not what Lester B. Pearson did, when he dared to go against the tide of opinion of other allies so that the UN could play its vital role? |
|
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? |
|
In cyberspace, at least as much as anywhere else, they may be called on to go against the tide, practice counter-culturalism, even suffer persecution for the sake of what is true and good. |
|
|
The group shall focus on self-protection but take into account research worldwide on compatibility in order not to go against future compatibility requirements. |
|
Both go against Labour notions of equality. |
|
No Egyptian can go against his government. |
|
Why would a municipality go against the worldwide trend of energy diversification by banning the use of a clean, renewable energy source such as wood? |
|
The only paths that I think are interesting to follow, are those that help us go against the essence of our unique sensitivity, the pathways that connect us all to the universe and confirm our role in the world. |
|
Indeed it is important and right for the competition rules to be applied effectively and fairly and for cross-subsidies that go against the purpose of aid to be prevented. |
|
He then underlined the tendency of the rules on competition to go against the systems of regional development that contradict the realities of decentralisation. |
|
So good on Diedre Alden for espousing views which go against the grain in Birmingham. |
|
A RETIRED publican has been turfed out of a bar for wearing waterproof bottoms that apparently go against its anti-tracksuit dress code. |
|
Such consumerism seemed to go against the Buddhist immaterialism I'd attuned to the night before. |
|
It may go against the grain to back Cheltenham runners at shorter than 2-1 but I'd sooner go against the grain than against any of these. |
|
However, if you go against the norm, give life your best shot, and ignore the people besmearing your name you will eventually start to feel free. |
|
Marx noted that this was not an intentional process, rather no individual or even state can go against the forces of economy. |
|
During this time, the Habsburg Empire sometimes covertly hired Cossack raiders to go against the Ottomans to ease pressure on their own borders. |
|
I cannot and will not recant anything, since it is neither safe nor right to go against conscience. |
|
It was hard for a wild predator to go against his natural killer instinct. |
|
Therefore, to reject that legal basis now is to go against our previous tradition, to cast doubt upon what we had done, which seems to me to be above all very dangerous for the construction of a European legal system. |
|
These provisions may go against certain legal principles, such as the right of the accused to remain silent and the right not to incriminate oneself. |
|
It is the double standards that go against the grain with Europe. |
|
One needs a certain degree of courage and a certain degree of intelligence-I would say sometimes the courage of one's intelligence-to go against popular opinion. |
|
|
What stains man and separates the spirit from the path of evolution are his low passions, immorality, vice, and lust, for all of them go against the law. |
|
But the winner's tips for success go against the grain. |
|
Even now, his opinions go against the grain of boomer nostalgia. |
|
So in order to promote healing, you have to get them to take the opposite approach to what they did to tolerate the horror and, sometimes, go against the grain of what is thought in military circles. |
|
There, you'll notice that Slaves go against the trend for American scruffiness by paying attention to what they're wearing, both onstage and off. |
|
It started out being very antagonistic, and the implied threat was that they were somehow going to go against us and sort of bad-mouth what our efforts were. |
|
That's the way life is, and there's no use trying to go against it. |
|
The court said such prayers go against freedom of religion and conscience. |
|
If we cannot afford to run the NHS perhaps we should look over the bridge to see what we can do better, even though it will go against the grain with many in control. |
|
Holden's heart was loud enough to deafen him. He couldn't go against a mage of the power. No one could, no one could ever survive. One word and he was shark-bait. |
|
If I go against my gut feeling, then the consequences are my fault. |
|
Though the sheer bulkiness might go against the prospects of serious off-roading, the same proves to be advantageous in many situations during casual off-roading. |
|
If a third party gets a benefit under a contract, it does not have the right to go against the parties to the contract beyond its entitlement to a benefit. |
|