How Roberts, a prodigiously gifted schoolboy, ended up pursuing a life of crime is a book in itself. |
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The celebration of the second millennium became now a millenarian goal in itself. |
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A certain homespun, unassuming, untidy tininess had become a virtue in itself. |
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Giving complete novices the responsibility for reviving a feckless football team would, in itself, be irresponsible. |
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Music is in itself a genre that demands difference, but easily allows for many sheep. |
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I've yet to be convinced that the technical ability to sing is, in itself, a vital or determinant aspect of what makes a pop phenomenon great. |
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Nobody can even put an exact figure on the number of children who have been excluded, which is a disgrace in itself. |
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A sophisticated administrative apparatus was in itself no guarantee of successful rule. |
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Also, that there are actually very few spelling mistakes, which is in itself a telling sign. |
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How he came to produce and mix the soundtrack for the film, however, is a story in itself. |
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I can't off-hand think of any non-competitive system that can establish this, since the act of ranking is competitive in itself. |
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To have a federation of republics, there has to be a central federal authority, and that in itself can lead to problems. |
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An albino monkfish was also landed and while this is rare in itself and even more unique feature of this fish is the fact that it had no eyes. |
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Although of signal importance in itself, even the characteristic dominance must be seen as a by-product of serum testosterone. |
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But it is also a very attractive subject in itself, since its basic ideas can be understood very easily, and involve drawing colourful pictures. |
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What to remember is that before the 20th century, drawing was rarely ever seen as an end in itself. |
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If a lie in itself only constitutes a venial sin, it becomes mortal when it does grave injury to the virtues of justice and charity. |
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It becomes an end in itself rather than an unanticipated surprise that leads you to some greater understanding. |
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The act of siting a caravan, in the open or within a building, does not, in itself, amount to operational development. |
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The book has been a saga in itself, with its subject falling out with two previous ghostwriters. |
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Although imaginary in itself, the Blue Riband offered immense tangible rewards. |
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To sit in it on a windy day was an experience in itself as you listened to the wind whistling through and rattling the galvanised roof. |
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Unilateralists are inclined to jump straight to nuclear disarmament on the assumption that this is an end in itself. |
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It isn't going to change my vote in itself, but I reckon I'd rather have the honest boofhead. |
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When a group maintains such a level for five years, however, its uninterestingness becomes noteworthy in itself. |
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It is the right to exercise their discretion if a law appears unjust in itself or in its application. |
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Firstly, a flat rebuttal of another's opinion is not in itself a statement of fact, simply a disagreement in terms. |
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That his places are unpeopled, in today's arena of politicized landscape photography, is in itself anachronistic, however abrupt the photographs. |
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Though critical in itself, it still accounts for just one-third of total borrowing in the state. |
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This gathering together of understanding is in itself an aspect of narcissism. |
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What I didn't expect was Isaac's unprompted reaction, which in itself says a lot. |
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Differential treatment of persons for nationality and immigration purposes cannot therefore in itself be unacceptable under international law. |
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John's garden is a nature reserve in itself with little ponds, waterfalls, nest boxes and feeding stations. |
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Correction of vascular disease is important as it's the only factor in itself which will necessitate foot amputation. |
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But humoring allies counts for little in itself, and negotiating for its own sake has no appeal. |
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In order to create sperm, the scientists first had to make embryonic germ cells, that in itself a major achievement. |
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However, not all of the surrealists saw psychoanalysis and the liberation of the human mind as an end in itself. |
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New Zealand First is aware that the bill in itself will not upskill social workers. |
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While a win in this derby will be important in itself, he will be looking at the bigger picture. |
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Well, of course, it is just that usualness of mundane experience that is important in itself. |
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To the right of this room is a utility room, which could also serve as a kitchen in itself. |
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Still, there was nothing newsworthy in the event in itself until right at the end. |
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This in itself is a flawed methodology to find any conclusive evidence of cause and effect. |
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Setting up a website will in itself improve your company's competitiveness rating. |
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Hypoalbuminaemia may be a reflection of chronic inflammation rather than of nutrition in itself. |
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Yet aggregating the collective wisdom and putting a probability on it is a very valuable function in itself. |
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Creating characters is almost a game in itself, and in a nod to the genome project, their looks and characteristics are passed on to children. |
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It has a beginning, middle, and end, almost a spare and simple story in itself. |
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However, there is no textual or versional evidence for such a reading and the compound preposition is not in itself objectionable. |
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That is an achievement in itself, though it also imposes on us a constant need for vigilance. |
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But spiffing up a kid can be an experience in itself, and a delightful one at that. |
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It is not clear why this should be an end in itself, unless we believe there are spillovers from capital accumulation. |
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The very fact of such a decision would in itself restore the balance of perceptions on the part of our allies and our potential aggressors. |
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The detection of some volatile substances in blood does not in itself indicate inhalant abuse or even occupational exposure to these chemicals. |
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Fascinating in itself, it also plays a complex role in the surrounding cityscape. |
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The weed, which turns its distinctive red shade during the cold winter months, is not dangerous in itself. |
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The giant puff-ball is a feast in itself, and I remember a huge one found by a shepherd of the wolds near Loughborough. |
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No one in his senses now stall-feeds cattle in the Irish Free State with any expectation of profit from this transaction in itself. |
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The fact that so many Kiwis got behind Jeff and voted should in itself show what he could've done for the show. |
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Brand awareness should be a stepping stone to more concrete action, like opposing sweatshop labour, but it's not an end in itself. |
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Sharon seems to be deflecting on the art of understanding poetry in itself, because she objectifies this work with the woman as she knew her. |
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The description is so redolent of history as to be a constitutional precedent in itself. |
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For the customers that we're selling to, the car is quite a status symbol in itself. |
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All through the ages it has absorbed in itself new cultures and innovative thoughts. |
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The fact that a knowledge base is satisfactory is not in itself a guarantee that the doctor is practising well. |
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They put tremendous energy into climbing the greasy pole but it turned out to be an end in itself, not the means to changing the country. |
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This in itself was inconvenient as my van is also my workshop and materials store room. |
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But that in itself is not the problem, although it may have the more purist fans of the novel grumbling. |
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The centrepiece of the set, a T-Rex sculpture comprised only of tennis rackets and stilettos, is a work of art in itself. |
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It looked as if she had used it as a headband to keep her hair out of her face, and believe me, that was a job in itself. |
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The proposal was seconded by the head girl, who said advertising boosted consumerism, a spiritual evil in itself. |
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In the days of reel-to-reel tape recorders, it was a technological feat in itself to be surreptitious. |
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Is the glory of heaven no perfecter in itself, but that it needs a foil of depression and ingloriousness in this world, to set it off? |
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Impaired ventricular function in itself is not an absolute contraindication to cardiac surgery, although the operative risks are increased. |
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If Joe Public shrugs off each new encroachment as minor in itself, he will have only himself to blame if he ends up in state-controlled helotry. |
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In fact, the genesis of the book fair in 1983 in itself signalled a special synergy with students. |
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He was a rebellious writer whose books were censored for years, and that in itself was meaningful for me. |
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However, that presence, stupendous mystery as it was, was in itself no guarantee of benefit, either to celebrant or congregation. |
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Some theologians hold that neither Christology from below nor Christology from above is adequate in itself. |
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That in itself is proliferation, and it is linked to the aggressive doctrine of regime change. |
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The view in itself is so hedonistic and so filling that it often helps me forsake my regulation morning croissant. |
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Perhaps changing roles from fancied favourites to rank outsiders will not be bad in itself. |
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How events presumably known only by their results can be timed so exactly is a miracle in itself. |
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Besides, the Constitution isn't legislation in itself, it is the basis for legislation, which is why supermajorities are required to amend it. |
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The lack of an explanation may in itself be sufficient basis for rejection of the transaction. |
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Learning to conquer setbacks with a smile on one's face is in itself a great achievement. |
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Public hostility to artworks isn't in itself anything that the artist should be pleased about. |
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In the Test matches, we are playing the second-ranked team in the world so that's very difficult in itself. |
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The bright colours were only available in gloss paint and gloss painted brickwork was quite a statement in itself. |
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I'm not just suggesting that we teach our young'uns creative writing as an end in itself. |
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These emotions are then constructively generated in their next home game, which is an advantage in itself. |
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I finished off with a glass of lassi, a sweet yoghurty drink which seemed like a dessert in itself. |
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Which is an achievement in itself in this age of appalling service given to British consumers. |
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The proposal was seconded by Tara Griffin, head girl, who said advertising boosted consumerism, a spiritual evil in itself. |
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Finding ways to wring every penny out of real estate expenses can become such an overriding priority that cost cutting becomes an end in itself. |
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No matter what problem a caller has, he will not hesitate to plug some 30 dollar spyware program that probably contains spyware in itself. |
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There is a whole lot more going on at these cockfights than just the cockfighting, although that in itself is bad enough. |
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Even though that ability isn't in itself being copied, it was given by a copy effect and is copiable. |
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However, the absence of a formal recognition of this irremovability in the law does not in itself imply lack of independence. |
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This in itself is A-OK, but such countries run the risk of being sandbagged by protectionist tariffs initiated by neighbouring nations. |
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This large contribution is in itself a testimony to the limitless generosity of our people. |
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We met an uncooperative approach from the claimant's solicitors which put us to expense in itself. |
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A performance must appear to be addressed to and for the benefit of the listener alone and not to the idea of formal appropriacy in itself. |
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The historic, red brick building was a delight in itself and the interior, especially downstairs, had a feeling of intimacy and romance. |
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This agreement was perhaps in itself enough to prevent the partition of China. |
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To be born an aristocrat does not in itself prevent me from taking on the project of liberty for the commoner or the day laborer. |
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This in itself suggests the depth of localism and regionalism and the seriousness of giving them due weight in symbolizing the nation as a whole. |
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Cast within the context of the present study, this means that rather than being an end in itself, doubt is embedded in a larger process. |
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The arthroscope also enables a joint to be washed out easily, and this in itself may be valuable. |
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Some 50,000 tons are landed in a few short weeks, a flurry of activity which in itself is enough to keep the island economy afloat. |
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The idea that ruination and decimation of the peasants could promote industrialisation of the country is too absurd in itself. |
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But the very lack of documented failures in the co-management literature is in itself suspicious. |
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Taking the cable tramway up to Villa Opicina, with its view over the whole sweep of the bay, is an excursion in itself. |
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There are probably three great albums in here, but in itself it is too long for someone with my short attention span. |
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The desire to do good, to champion the cause of love can become so potent a power in itself that it obliterates the ends. |
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He was the first man she'd been attracted to who was also a good friend and that in itself made him dear to her. |
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And his voice seems to be mellowing into some kind of croon, which is odd in itself. |
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Acalypha wilkesiana, the Fijian fire plant, is the parent of many modern cultivars and is in itself a showy ornamental. |
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That nod in itself contradicts his assertion that my historical account lacks authorial analysis. |
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But the fact that she's still willing to enter the fray is in itself a tribute to her survival skills. |
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It is unclear whether screening for diabetes would, in itself, achieve an appreciable health gain. |
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Community composting is in itself the most rewarding activity that a group can partake in. |
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The marks have to be sandblasted away and that in itself has adverse effects on the building. |
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The term power pop is, in itself, fairly insulting, suggesting brainless three-minute novelties. |
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This rice dish is a meal in itself and makes a lovely summer lunch dish, served warm or at room temperature. |
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You don't have to declare this interest on your tax return, which is a bonus in itself. |
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You chose to use the motorway with scant regard for others, for your own purposes and your own enjoyment, and that is a crime in itself. |
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Although he was certainly not a technophile, he was not against technology in itself. |
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While each issue and error in itself would have been manageable, the combination of so many caused the failure. |
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The heath is a driving force in itself, a force that goes by its own free will and nature. |
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The drive to the base of the mountain, across isolated terrain, is enjoyable in itself. |
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However, Article 10 does not in itself grant a right of asylum or a right for an alien to stay in a given country. |
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But to finish as the second best side in the country is a great achievement in itself. |
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While the Peat Inn is a destination in itself, there is plenty to do in the surrounding region. |
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This in itself demonstrates how much territory we have surrendered to the criminals. |
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Kant was clearly of the view that majority voting does not in itself produce legitimate law. |
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A work can be a concert in itself, and a concert as tightly structured as a work. |
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That in itself is not sufficient, in our view, to give rise to a special removal situation. |
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If this wasn't in itself an imperishable unintended satire of the right, there is more. |
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On such a view, it is not in itself good if people are equally well off, or bad if they are not. |
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While a small point in itself, it is in our view another pointer against such a relationship. |
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The aircraft were barged to Hawaii, an epic journey in itself, for the main portion of the aerial filming. |
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The fact that the political fault lines remained in place is not in itself new. |
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It started well, but devolution quickly became an end in itself rather than a start of a process of democratisation and self-government. |
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It was a show they had virtually washed their hands of and abandoned, but one which they didn't actually realise was, in itself, a sensation. |
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The fact that women end up on the street selling themselves cheaply to get money for drugs is tragedy in itself. |
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When imagery blends with sound, a poem has come full circle and becomes complete in itself. |
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This is a good time to put some effort into the less glamorous side of gardening, although creating the perfect tilth can be rewarding in itself. |
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This box, designed to monitor gamma radiation, in itself contained enough strontium 90 to emit 500,000 becquerels of radioactivity. |
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Her advice was often comfort and solace in itself and her ways were the ways of goodness and serenity. |
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Indian paneer cheese is similar to Asian tofu in that it has a bland flavour in itself, but it absorbs the flavours of other ingredients well. |
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Being in such shallow water, the coral encrusted wreck is a mini-ecosystem in itself and snorkeling here is like being in a large aquarium. |
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This in itself is an indication of the problem, an indication of the fear in which people live. |
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If offers a wide ranging programme for all ages which in itself is a remarkable achievement for the organisers. |
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Those that shun or oppose this unfortunate but justified retaliation perhaps are blind to reality for some reason, and that in itself is sad. |
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The band, which was great in itself, was joined onstage by a couple of famous singers. |
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Each of these objections, rebuttals, rejoinders, and surrejoinders is in itself admirable, and does infinite credit to the acuteness and candour of the author. |
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Indeed, whether or not it was part of a collection of sayings gathered within this text, it does not explain in itself why it was kept within the synoptic composition. |
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Over the centuries the makers of delftware have copied all sorts of decorative styles so that this essentially imitative craft has become a style in itself. |
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Whether these alien chip implantations are part of another government project or are actually implanted by aliens is a whole discussion in itself. |
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The inadequacy of the material is not in itself a ground for prohibition. |
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And while the group's in-house manoeuvring for position made compulsive viewing in itself, the audience had the final say on who went and who stayed. |
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In the last few years I have returned to the notion of abstraction as an inspiration in itself, letting a particular instrumentation or musical gesture generate a whole piece. |
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That in itself might seem extraordinary, considering the intimate connection between Dutch and Scottish painting, and the fact that the artist painted 3,000 pictures. |
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Others claim that the continuance of the sanctions carries in itself a risk that this country could irreclaimably become a rebel and alienated one. |
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Photographer Colin Jones flaunts a life story that is a picture in itself. |
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Mountstuart's flimsiness as a novelistic character is supposed to make the book more realistic by acknowledging that personality is nebulous in itself. |
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It could well become a tourist attraction in itself, as the city residents get bored with amusement parks, discotheques, shopping malls and hotels with familiar decor. |
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The history of the Knockeen Hills brand is becoming a legend in itself, having first been produced when the sale of poteen was still illegal in Ireland. |
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The cross of Christ, theologically speaking, was not an end in itself. |
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We observed the ease of communication among focus group women, with one group even claiming that the data collection exercise was therapeutic in itself. |
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Striving for that target could in itself be a powerful driving force. |
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Of course, research in itself is no panacea, but more successful players like General Mills, Quaker Oats, Nabisco and, of course, Kraft, have turned it to good account. |
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A pond is a little world in itself, he says, home to a dizzying array of creatures from frogs and newts to water boatmen, diving beetles, dragonflies and damselfies. |
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They say the two governments have agreed a joint position, bar a spot of fine-tuning on key issues like policing, and this in itself is a major achievement. |
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That in itself keeps the number of aero pilots rather small. |
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For Katharine Casey, doing a good deed was a reward in itself. |
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In The Paying Guests, the house, which creaks and stands so still and yet so freighted, is almost a character in itself. |
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From peasants splashing in the mud, to the thump of hammer and axe, to the sound of rain falling, the sound design is almost an entire film in itself. |
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The film's journey from obscurity to rediscovery is a tale in itself. |
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The demotic self-deprecation barely masks a vast ambition, which is a kind of deception in itself, or an artifice. |
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That Nolan was there to play his part was a near-miracle in itself after the youngster's lucky escape from that morning's dramatic smash that wrecked his car. |
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Being booked for rejoicing in a goal is sheer folly in itself. |
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Instead, the acoustics of musical space is, in itself, an alterable element of the representational system within which musical meanings are constructed. |
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Meads defines the term banquet precisely, pointing out that a banquet served as a light repast or perhaps the final course of a feast rather than a feast in itself. |
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First, Americans have to understand that they should not enthrone democracy as an end in itself. |
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Under Irish law, a partnership is not a legal entity in itself. |
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The anthroposophical concept, that pests and diseases are nature's way of getting rid of something that is basically unhealthy, is in itself seen as a warning. |
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Reaching the former leper colony was an adventure all in itself. |
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Is it exhaustion, something intensely painful in itself to someone who always felt boundless energy? |
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The Levitical priesthood was not intended as an end in itself. |
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The use of force to obtain justice is morally licit in itself. |
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Healthcare spending is not promotable as a goal in itself and such spending, except in its preventive or prophylactic aspect, is unrelated to good health, a promotable goal. |
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And that in itself will persuade the allies to fall into lockstep. |
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The symbolism of a gun-control group grading members of Congress for the first time is a display of power in itself, glaze says. |
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Hypoxemia, for example, has significant clinical implications, yet hypoxemia in itself is not a diagnosis but a component of other diagnoses such as atelectasis or pneumonia. |
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The way we eat now, especially in America, is not only wrong in itself, it produces the appetites which it then so abundantly and lucratively supplies. |
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The lie has become a gratification in itself, told purely for pleasure. |
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Finding the shop is a trip in itself and an introduction to a slice of history. |
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The title in itself is a little misleading, for this delectation produced for our viewing pleasure is neither about love nor does it appear to have celebrities! |
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Just digging the site was an achievement in itself, he says. |
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The creative ability of these artists to produce the music we love, combined with the time and energy they spend throughout that process is in itself priceless. |
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Just taking the shutters down and re-entering the world of daylight was a relief in itself. |
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Another important factor to bear in mind, is the saturation of the media with sexual images, which in itself promotes sexual activity at an increasingly younger age. |
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As a result, the dollar must decline. The result of a declining dollar is logically a move towards other currencies which in itself is a form of Gresham's law. |
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It often feels more like a standard third-person shooter where the sniper rifle just happens to be the best weapon, rather than a sniping game in itself. |
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The food is not only tasty but is an art in itself specific to the Mon people, who also pride themselves on their culinary skills down to the very minute preparation details. |
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Snowden is the lawbreaker here, and his law-breaking is now being used to do damage to the United States as an end in itself. |
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What could be more befitting tribute than a poignant musical evening, bejeweled with similar soothing melodies, to a person for whom music was soul in itself. |
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Ngai responds that tagging something as interesting may in itself be a judgment. |
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He said sheep tagging and traceability will assist in resolving illegal movements but the reality is that tagging in itself will not apprehend and root out rogue dealers. |
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It's an attraction in itself to rise early in the morning to watch the enormous luxury liners taxiing into a berth at the wharf near the bauxite terminal. |
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This does not in itself mean that millennialism is right and true. |
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Jake's dark eyes betrayed that he was in a state of worried shock in itself, but it seemed to vanish when Vivian's blessed lips spread into a infinitely joyful smile. |
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This in itself inspired a tremendous growth in investigative journalism. |
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A bill of exchange or a note is not, in itself, such a means. |
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For them, tweaking the game, making play as exciting as possible, is a quest in itself. |
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It was not so much the price-support system in itself that was irrational, but the level at which prices were set in a context of mixed farming sizes. |
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In moving towards biography you must have felt that journalism was insufficiently rewarded to provide a living and also that its bittiness was in itself too limiting? |
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You could start by going to her book blog, which is a valuable resource in itself, or you can go to the book's own web site and work on from there. |
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The committee meeting took almost a whole day, which in itself is unusual for virtually one item, and hardly indicative of an unconsidered judgment. |
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That in itself was a huge innovation, but de Silva says access to markets is still a problem for everyone. |
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His gentle presence was often a source of comfort and solace in itself. |
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It was also interesting to see how she prepares her pointe shoes with long threads stitched across the top of the vamp, a labor of love in itself. |
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Air marshal Houston was careful to make it clear that, however encouraging, the ping detections were not in itself enough. |
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But, of course, if the will determines itself only in and through such choices, free from any prevenient natural order, then it too is in itself nothing. |
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One more sense is revealed in this manner, as the viewer can hear what is present during the exposure, which in itself adds volume to the vacant, but not void, photograph. |
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A non-temporal series, then, has no direction in itself, though a person considering it may take the terms in one direction or in the other, according to his own convenience. |
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Funniest of all, though, is the opening squeal of computer noise nonsense that momentarily almost passes for a new Radiohead composition in itself. |
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The one assumption I hope to have unsettled in these pages is that any particular novelistic genre in itself embodies a metaphysical or transcendent approach to the real. |
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For Karen Handel, just relating to David Perdue is hard enough work in itself. |
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In other words, it must be shown that the object or purpose of the defendant is to inflict harm on the claimant, either as an end in itself, or as a means to another end. |
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The fear in itself invoked age-old mythologies about the end of the world and gave religious cults the chance to enact rituals based on obscure prophecies. |
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The rich allegorical description of the island throughout the first five cantos of the poem offers, in itself, a harsh invective against prevailing Stuart policy. |
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I accept this penchant may have developed as an offshoot from my dislike of thongs, but it's grown up big and strong into a whole new preference in itself. |
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Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell talk so fast that the speed of their dialogue is a joke in itself. |
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This kind of attempt to demystify intellectuals and artists by relating them to objective social processes is in itself neither misguided nor new. |
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Perhaps we live in an era that finds so little to admire in itself that it feels compelled to cut the storied past down to the size of the tabloid present. |
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It is also the story of a young society discovering a new confidence in itself, outgrowing old boundaries and prejudices, becoming more aware of its strengths and weaknesses. |
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Not an end in itself, domestic violence is a means of enforcing gender roles in society and maintaining a hierarchy in which men remain in control. |
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The graduation of nicknames within armies is a subculture in itself. |
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I mean King's Cross is an area that is a honeypot for a whole range of socially disadvantaged people, and that in itself is the vulnerability of the place. |
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The study of fossil plants, palaeobotany, it not only of interest in itself, but can be applied to solving a wide range of biological and geological problems. |
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Given his monocratic nature, this organ joins in itself prerogatives that in all other collegial organs are attributed collectively. |
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Sometimes the odor of the armpit may even become a kind of fetich which is craved for its own sake and in itself suffices to give pleasure. |
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Moreover, all this ruin was brought upon the Romans by a woman, a fact which in itself caused them the greatest shame. |
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This caused great consternation among the aristocracy, who insisted that long use in itself constituted licence. |
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However, that in itself was far from enough to balance the Crown's finances. |
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Eastern Wandsworth was to form a borough in itself, with western Wandsworth being paired with Battersea. |
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Years later, he sought to abolish the Tripos system, as he felt that it was becoming more an end in itself than a means to an end. |
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Like other parts of the great Lone Star State, this section of Texas was a world in itself. |
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It holds in itself a repository of the cultural and social heritage of the country. |
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The Theravada tradition regards insight into the four truths as liberating in itself. |
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This exhaustive analysis is in itself sufficient to prove that Beowulf was composed orally. |
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The learning and mastery of a tongue, being unpleasant in itself, should not be cumbered with other difficulties. |
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The Africans felt that winning their zone was enough in itself to merit qualification for the finals. |
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This is done by fans from all over the world and, although considered vagrancy, is part of the Wimbledon experience in itself. |
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Conrad's distrust of democracy sprang from his doubts whether the propagation of democracy as an aim in itself could solve any problems. |
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One might argue that the Soviet posters made in the 1950s to promote the wealth of the nation were in itself a form of pop art. |
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The possession of a visa is not in itself a guarantee of entry into the country that issued it, and a visa can be revoked at any time. |
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The relationship between federal and local courts varies from nation to nation and can be a controversial and complex issue in itself. |
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His record of the achievements of others was an achievement in itself, though the extent of it has been debated. |
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It is part of the Maritime and Coastguard Agency, which in itself is an executive agency of the department for transport. |
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World history is the record of the spirit's efforts to attain knowledge of what it is in itself. |
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This statistic in itself was seen by some that the socialist system was superior to the capitalist system. |
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Although the latter is a soup, it is considered as a dish in itself and is served as such or with dates especially during the month of Ramadan. |
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Antwerp Central station is an architectural monument in itself, and is mentioned in W G Sebald's haunting novel Austerlitz. |
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In Slavic languages, a given verb is, in itself, either perfective or imperfective. |
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I pray that it will not be an end in itself, but will lead to new opportunities for proclaiming the Gospel. |
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Hence the need to postulate the substratum, which is in itself quite qualitiless. |
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In Grotius' understanding, nature was not an entity in itself, but God's creation. |
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To make this mid-17th-century rat's nest of love affairs and sexual confusions intelligible for late-20th-century audiences is a job in itself. |
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Personality is individuality existing in itself, but with a nature as a ground. |
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Later designs used gauze for the same purpose and also as a barrier in itself. |
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Transportation was not a sentence in itself, but could be arranged by indirect means. |
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The actual building of the circle, perhaps taking place in stages over time, might in itself have been one of the purposes of the monument. |
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He was open to the way counterculture stylelessness could become style in itself. |
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The principle of backdating taxation over an extended period is in itself unfair. |
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Even the very name, Hamlet, constitutes controversy in itself, occurring from 10th century Jutish Amlethoe, then as Amlethus of Saxo. |
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His office is in itself a big surprise, with a funky recreation room taking pride of place on the premises. |
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Gabi Ashkenazi, who warned that Israel's enemies would notice the measure and that in itself might touch off a war. |
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The first part of the book is of interest in itself, as it considers the boundary value problems for the Laplace-Beltrami operator. |
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Watch French chef Xavier Caille open oysters one after the other and you know shucking is an art in itself. |
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A visit to the Nook in Holmfirth and the adjoining Taphouse is a mini beer festival in itself. |
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But Earth Jurisprudence, through its Thoreauvian lens, sees nature very differently, as having a value in itself. |
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That in itself speaks volumes about the great difficulty, in 2005, of mounting a real intellectual defense of the Iraq war. |
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Pleasure, says Ibn Sina in section 3, is a perception and attainment of that which to the perceiver is a perfection and a good in itself. |
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Hairbands are also unacceptable but apparently long hair in itself is okay. |
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Rosie having a romance storyline is, for a fan, radical in itself. |
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Each branch the moment of distinction is incomposite both in itself and in regard to its opposite. |
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This, in itself, is no easy task in a frigid zone and at an altitude of 3,000-4,000 meters. |
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But the movie's sheer flawlessness turns out to be a flaw in itself. |
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This last scene is like a playlet in itself, artistically linking all the previous scenes and connecting the play to what is happening in Egypt at the moment. |
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For each Kickstarter pledge Yager will include a small square painting, each a work of art in itself, but assembled like pieces of a photomosaic creating a larger image. |
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This in itself suggests that the vast differences between humans and milkweeds must be caused by far more than what we can see in their differing genomes. |
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It is such a forlorn, sad dream of an aged man which, in itself, was replicated in the younger generation with their veneration of Gadoid, Castro and so forth. |
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The divine essence is something uncircumscribed, containing in itself in a supereminent way whatever can be signified or understood by a created intellect. |
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To hear him playing, singing melodically, and tapping out a backing rhythm by rapping his fingers on the side of his guitar was a sight worth the admission fee in itself. |
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In fact, it's carved from a tagua nut, an interesting material in itself. |
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Another argument would be that when Daniels, Frolich and the other sculptors used Roosevelt as the subject matter, this in itself served to masculinize the product. |
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