The influx of foreign students in the early 1970s transmuted the lives of Kathakali artistes who had known until then only indigence. |
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But you have placed yourself in this predicament through bad policy, and your indigence keeps you in it. |
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While Lakshmi is the goddess of riches, her elder sister is the deity of poverty, indigence, odium, reproach and ignominy. |
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Unsurprisingly, given the risk of arbitrary expropriation and extortion, the ordinary people responded by living in studied indigence. |
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For every one rich man there must be at least five hundred poor, and the affluence of the few supposes indigence of the many. |
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The formula for the determination of indigence can be summarized as follows. |
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Poverty and indigence statistics, which are calculated using the affordability of a basket of basic goods, are due to be announced in April. |
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But there are many more people balancing precariously on the verge of indigence. |
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We have lowered poverty and indigence considerably and increased employment. |
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The poverty and indigence statistics, for example, are linked to official estimates of inflation. |
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The information received was of great use in reviewing and assessing the system in place for the determination of indigence. |
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Family or social benefits to which the person claiming indigence may be entitled are excluded. |
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It was really begun by small boys who had very little cord and would put their indigence to rights by recklessly cutting down other people's kites. |
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But if it calculated poverty and indigence lines using its new inflation data, reported poverty would spike and the government's image as a champion of the poor would take a battering. |
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But not all of them savour the alternative ending for their cold war: rapprochement and reunification. North Korea's indigence is almost as scary as its belligerence. |
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For one very rich man there must be at least five hundred poor, and the affluence of the few supposes the indigence of the many. |
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