The law will not allow public authorities to be bothered by interfering busybodies and demands personal involvement to guard against this. |
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We must guard against the temptation to cloud it with complexity or dissect it to obscurity. |
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They provide the checks and balances that guard against the arrogance of power. |
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The signs are that it won't, but those involved must guard against becoming part of the very culture they are out to combat. |
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Given the undoubted complexity of this claim I must guard against conducting any form of mini-trial. |
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While there is a strong case to be made to free up some land, Ireland must guard against panic proposals. |
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You are enthusiastic and spontaneous about life but need to guard against sudden outbursts of anger or love. |
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We all know about the problems of obesity in youngsters, and of course we must guard against this. |
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To guard against corruption, those countries will use a system of peer review to monitor deployment of funds and progress toward good governance. |
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Fred prolongs the useful life of mountain laurel by applying a sealer every other year to guard against bugs and decay. |
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Monotony soon becomes a bore to anyone, so the music teacher should guard against the class period becoming mere routine. |
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The first lesson is to guard against being bounced into signing anything off in the euphoria of the moment. |
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They hold 150 pounds of rolled oats, and the snap-lock lids guard against rodent contamination. |
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They should be committed to fighting corruption and nepotism and guard against ostentatious displays of power. |
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The new villages were built over the sea some two hundred metres from shore as a guard against warfare and sorcery. |
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Calcium and vitamin D, for instance, have been found to be a sound way to guard against osteoporosis. |
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Llamas instinctively guard against canine attacks, possibly because their natural herd instincts have wired them to chase off predators. |
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Strengthening your forearms aids handgrip strength and can help guard against tennis elbow and carpal tunnel syndrome. |
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Wearing a hazmat suit to guard against possible infection, she collects tissue samples from a gorilla that died of Ebola virus in the Congo. |
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Samoyeds were traditionally used to herd reindeer and guard against wolves and bears. |
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The voter card includes a picture with a hologram covering it, a magnetic strip and a serial number to guard against tampering. |
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I used to think it was to guard against scorpions or other stinging insects, but realised now that it was to prevent jigger attacks. |
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But the biometric check is only useful if the process is sufficiently supervised to guard against spoofing or passport switching. |
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With skulls and bones now reunited, the ceremony will happen on an unmarked section of Paiute land in Nevada, to guard against further looting. |
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Military commanders have warned coalition troops in the south, where British troops are based, to be on their guard against attack. |
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For this reason parents and teachers traditionally guard against pigeonholing students in certain categories. |
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I agree that crucial among these issues is the question of how to guard against abuses engendered by conflicts of interest. |
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Residents are directed to guard against the threat of fire as flames continue to engulf many areas in New South Wales. |
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The track counsels people to guard against forsaking their traditional values for foreign ones. |
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To guard against cross-contamination, put packages of raw meat and poultry into plastic bags. |
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You might need to guard against becoming too full of yourself or overly self-interested, however. |
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A law intended to guard against the spreading of false stories actually forced the national broadcaster to promulgate a lie. |
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Police are now warning other elderly people in Blackley to be on their guard against the crooks. |
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They kept a vigilant watch at the back but had to be on guard against the counter. |
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Trading standards watchdogs are warning businesses to be on their guard against a bogus bills scam. |
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Working with the fungus in noninfected areas is restricted to guard against potential spread. |
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We must be on our guard against the Wordsworthians, if we want to secure for Wordsworth his due rank as a poet. |
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Mr Stainer said part of the plan included raising the level of the land to guard against flooding. |
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To guard against the very reasonable fear mentioned above, Madison proposed the 9th Amendment. |
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What parent can guard against their child bumping into an unsavoury character who can lead them astray? |
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You may be prescribed antibacterial, antifungal or antiviral drugs on an ongoing basis to guard against infection. |
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Don't blame yourself, as this time dumb luck has been beaten out of site by sheer stupidity and you can't guard against that. |
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We should guard against emotionally driven demands to kill many bystanders in an effort to liquidate our enemy. |
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Portchester Castle is the site of a third century Roman fort built to guard against Saxon raids. |
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Wear a warm hat to guard against heat loss from your head and if your hands are susceptible to the cold then wear some thin gloves. |
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Submarines ranged offshore to guard against unexpected seawards attacks, backing up patrolling destroyers and torpedo boats. |
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It is always wise to guard against adopting a complacent or smug attitude in life as one ages. |
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But we should always guard against the sin of intellectual pride, which leads to ideological thinking. |
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Banjul's independent biweekly The Independent warned the AU to guard against colonialism. |
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Do you feel that this is the real you and you must guard against anyone knowing it? |
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We must also guard against them raiding and exploiting our rich genetic pool. |
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On each corner of its curved roof perch ten dragons and other mythical water animals that symbolically guard against the ever-present risk of fire. |
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And that could be self-fulfilling, as investors start Monday to scramble to guard against that possibility. |
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He immediately refers back to the episode he had witnessed, using it as his main example of the need to remain constantly on one's guard against princely duplicity. |
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You are in a better position to guard against a shot or deflect a pass. |
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In England and Wales, St John's wort was suspended over doorways along with green birch, long fennel, orpine and white lilies, to guard against intruding malevolent entities. |
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If necessary, use an insect net to guard against the adults flying away. |
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They pack a.44 magnum revolver to guard against polar bears. |
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To soften the blow, the administration announced a beefed-up monitoring program to guard against a sudden flood of foreign steel coming into the country. |
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The shaft runs down to the club's sole and is designed to produce an optimum launch angle with minimum backspin to guard against shots that fly too high. |
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Strengthening your forearms can help guard against tennis elbow. |
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To guard against floods, a series of defences against the water were contrived. |
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It is a grave mistake to overshow your stock, and one that the novice must always guard against. |
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To guard against devaluation, the currency was convertible with silver and gold, and the government accepted tax payments in paper currency. |
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Harry's a good guy, but he needs to guard against coming across as whingeing and self-pitying. |
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To guard against aphids, cabbageworms, flea beetles, and other pests, lay floating row covers directly over seeded crops or plants. |
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As far as fears of Talibanisation of society is concerned, I would say that our democracy will guard against that. |
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At the very least we should guard against the possibility that unusual combinations of behaviors are merely products of dysfluency. |
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It was built in about 1067 by the Norman baron Hamelin de Ballon to guard against incursions by the Welsh from the hills to the north and west. |
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If we have to guard against our emotional brain taking over, why then do we not engage our neocortexes for every decision? |
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Australia is reportedly assessing the need for high-tech measures to guard against surface-to-air missile attacks on passenger aircraft. |
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We have to guard against the danger of counting numbers and pushing some of these more serious inquiries to one side. |
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How does a buyer guard against overglazing or fraudulent abuse of weights and measures regulations? |
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Shut down Bluetooth in public to guard against Bluejacking or Bluesnarfing. |
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Party cadres must guard against the temptations of power, money and sex. |
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Europe after 1815 was on guard against a return of Jacobinism, and even liberal Britain saw the passage of the Six Acts in 1819, which proscribed radical activities. |
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In December 2014, President Uhuru Kenyatta signed a Security Laws Amendment Bill, which supporters of the law suggested was necessary to guard against armed groups. |
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Be on your guard against pickpockets in the railway station. |
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In the 1930s, the Court used Ex parte Young to guard against regulatory state statutes which imposed heavy fines that were not redressible by eventual suit in federal court. |
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Officers should treat every injured person as if they have a blood-borne disease and guard against unprotected contact with a person's body fluid, which can contain blood. |
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About 300 inmates escaped from a women's prison in the city of Iquique, and officials said Chile's military was sending a planeload of special forces to guard against looting. |
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Women will learn to maximize workouts around the menstrual cycle and to guard against common injuries, disordered eating, osteoporosis, and menstrual irregularities. |
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In both the world of new science and that of quick-fix military technology we need, more than ever, to be on perpetual guard against the Dr Strangeloves of the future. |
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