Still others are equally driven to lose weight by purging in one form or another whether binge eating or not. |
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The most common minerals are those that contain silicon dioxide in one form or another. |
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The evil arms dealing world of imports and exports has created him and from now on we will have to have him for breakfast in one form or another. |
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The lumpenproletariat has always existed and I suspect that it always will in one form or another. |
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It is rather striking how often oracles obtrude in one form or another in debates about the kingship at Sparta. |
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Life in one form or another is very plentiful in the pack, and the struggle for existence here as elsewhere is a fascinating subject of study. |
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In reviewing a stack of recent volumes sent for this omnibus, I was struck by the number of times the subject arose, in one form or another. |
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Culturally, this freedom is being played out in terms of materialistic Epicureanism in one form or another. |
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That said cut ups of The Smiths, S Club 7, Frank Sinatra, Cypress Hill, RAM Trilogy and David Bowie are all present in one form or another. |
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In many cases the Member States have obligations which are not classed as debt, but which do, in fact, constitute debt in one form or another. |
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We are always sensitive to judges who may have expressed a bias in one form or another and then refused to recuse themselves when challenged. |
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Common to all these areas, in one form or another, is the issue of property rights. |
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Research knowledge application or utilization in one form or another is a precondition for impact. |
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Nonetheless, the fact was that all those gaps were present in one form or another in the proposed budget. |
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Australia would like to see developing countries adopt strong reduction targets in one form or another. |
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It increases energy costs for federal operations, which ultimately must be paid by tax-payers, in one form or another. |
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In many cases, you'll see you are already practicing them in one form or another. |
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The style was imported from England and remained a classic in one form or another throughout the 20th century. |
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In many if not most cases, equality policies will already exist in one form or another. |
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Now we like a decent ballad as much as the next popster, but it seems like these songs have been around in one form or another over the last couple of albums. |
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This is just the latest skirmish in a culture war that has been raging, in one form or another, for at least 30 years. |
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In order for this to happen, the question of Kosovo will in all likelihood have to be addressed in one form or another. |
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It seemed the whole of the country was there in one form or another. |
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But writing, in one form or another, has remained a constant passion throughout his globetrotting career. |
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Ironically, despite their misadventures, the franchisees look as if they will survive in one form or another without the crutch of public funding. |
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Many of the objects mentioned above have been credited with beneficial or medicinal properties, and prescribed in one form or another as curatives or aphrodisiacs. |
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In spite of its arbitrariness, that hypothesis had a singular fortune, for it dominated Western thought in one form or another almost until the eighteenth century. |
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The Grammy-winning group has been together for more than 30 years in one form or another and is easily the best hard-core Cajun band in the world. |
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Environmental issues in one form or another pervade almost every aspect of human life. |
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Considering the fast growth rate of the sector, I think there is a need to offset its environmental impact in one form or another. |
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These have long been in place within the Agency in one form or another, but will be more explicitly articulated through the establishment of more formalized criteria and processes for the review of analytical studies. |
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A global ocean has existed in one form or another on Earth for eons, and the notion dates back to classical antiquity in the form of Oceanus. |
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Insurance in one form or another has been around as far back as there are records. |
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The therapy group in one form or another has become widespread in America. |
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A public debtor or guarantor is a debtor or guarantor who, in one form or another, represents the public authority itself and cannot either judicially or administratively be declared insolvent. |
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Ice hockey doubtless originated in the stick and ball games of bandy, shinty and hurley, each of which was brought to the colonies in one form or another by students or the military since the 10th century. |
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A war that drags on in one form or another will finally provoke human behaviour that demonstrates a degree of disillusion fraught with serious consequences. |
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The Nordics are poor church attenders, but along with the Dutch and British are the most actively engaged in one form or another of voluntary organisation in Europe. |
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The filibuster has been around in one form or another since 1806, when the Senate absent-mindedly neglected to readopt a rule allowing a simple majority to move the previous question. |
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At the same time, legitimate concerns need to be taken care of: any solution must ensure that fiscally-responsible countries cannot be forced to bail-out undisciplined member states, in one form or another. |
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The addition of the Granite State brings the total to 15 states who approve of direct shipping in one form or another. |
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Does the EU intend to support industrial agriculture in the same way as family farming or is the intention to implement aid and modulations in one form or another that decrease with size? |
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The system was inherited from and exists in one form or another in all of the older Germanic languages. |
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Horse racing in one form or another has been a part of Chinese culture for millennia. |
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From the 7th century until around the 1960s, the Arab slave trade continued in one form or another. |
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In fact, the only females in the novel who do not practice extreme repression in one form or another are presexual girls. |
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Slavery has existed, in one form or another, throughout the whole of human history. |
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Sabbatarian practitioners were also to be found within the Church of England in one form or another. |
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The VPL has been a part of this state's law in one form or another for more than a century. |
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Either the bourgeois norm must in one form or another spread to the means of production, or the norms of distribution must be brought into correspondence with the socialist property system. |
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How many of them still rage on in one form or another? |
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We work on the trees, in one form or another, for 11 months of the year. |
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He's been involved with poultry in one form or another all of his life. |
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The list of steel uses is long and impressive: bridges, tools, computers, clothing and countless other items all utilize steel in one form or another. |
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Over two thirds of the information centres currently lead efforts to coordinate the communications activities of the United Nations Country Team in one form or another. |
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They believe that organ transplant, palliative care and hospice care are issues that all people with CF will face, in one form or another, at some time or another. |
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On the contrary, Yemen's present institutional, economic and social situation is leading, in one form or another, to a number of problems affecting sound practice in the area of human rights and freedoms. |
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Becoming a partner allows you to appear on the various communication platforms of the event and to benefit in one form or another from the audience present. |
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Everyone who studies at the EPFL will one day be confronted, in one form or another, with such themes as management, innovation, high-tech marketing or the financial and legal issues facing start-ups, for instance. |
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Petroleum, in one form or another, has been used since ancient times, and is now important across society, including in economy, politics and technology. |
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A thing was a form of governing assembly found in Germanic societies, and a tradition that endures to this day in one form or another across Northern Europe. |
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Acturience, or desire of action, in one form or another, whether as restlessness, ennui, dissatisfaction, or the imagination of something desirable. |
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In one form or another, corporations of one kind or another feed us, clothe us and provide shelter. |
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