But I believe the historical conjunction that gave rise to accountability continues to inflect and propel it. |
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For example, they do not inflect for past tense, and with a third-person singular subject they do not take the characteristic s inflection. |
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We listed a few words that we claimed were just exceptions to the claim that monosyllabic adjectives inflect, and we included wrong on that list. |
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Individual producers, distributors, and exhibitors inflect key tropes of Australianness, like the bush myth, in different ways. |
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Various ochers, a pale Naples yellow and a pale green, all of nearly equal intensity and weight, inflect a predominantly gray field of dots. |
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We cannot stop the inexorable sweep of time, he says, but we can inflect it with a human voice and touch. |
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Nevertheless, it does inflect achievement, and clearly restricts potential. |
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If we could inflect demographic trends in these countries, we could curb world population growth. |
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I decided to rewrite the play and to start with the possibility of magical effects that inflect its constructions. |
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He's there to deliver the dark news, the mournful tone, while in the background John Williams's haunting guitar solos inflect a general mood of ominousness. |
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Rusticasa, with 3 decades of experience in wood building, decided to inflect its offer in order to answer who searches a contemporaneous architecture. |
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Their goal was to carry the voice of urban elected representatives and to inflect policies, especially during the negotiations on the European structural funds. |
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As mentioned, the Mediterranean poses specific difficulties that must inflect to a minimum the durations and even certain guidelines and the ways of doing things. |
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He argued that National Commissions should continue to inflect on the input that they can give and should take their own responsibility, with strong support from the Secretariat. |
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To give up or inflect these fights, paves the way for the injustice to be restored or rooted in other forms and appearances, always to the advantage of the pernicious, vicious and malignant spirits. |
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The little meal they bring from home for the lunch is not sufficient to inflect the illness, which often results in a lack of concentration at school, or an important absenteeism. |
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Only after the protein is cleaved into gp120 and gp41 components is the AIDS virus able to bind to and inflect other white blood cells. |
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Only pronouns inflect for case, and the previous genitive case has become an enclitic. |
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Prepositions inflect for person and number, and different prepositions govern different cases, sometimes depending on the semantics intended. |
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Chinese does not inflect verbs for tense like English and other European languages. |
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For example, in some Scandinavian languages, such as Swedish, definite nouns inflect with a dedicated set of suffixes. |
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As in most Germanic languages, including Old English, both of these varieties inflect according to gender, case and number. |
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It may inflect for grammatical categories such as tense, aspect and mood, like other verbs in the language. |
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Yet if mug shots are concerned only with cold, hard facts, the circumstances under which they were made can't help but inflect them with all sorts of untoward and bottled-up emotions. |
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Scripted television shows are often, although not always, produced collaboratively, for a variety of pragmatic reasons — and these pragmatic reasons inflect the artistic results, just as they do in Hollywood film production. |
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Yet we race around, work long hours, pollute our environment and inflect grievous suffering on fellow humans and animals. |
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Some Nahuatl varieties, notably Classical Nahuatl, can inflect the verb to show the direction of the verbal action going away from or towards the speaker. |
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Most adjectives in English do not inflect for gender or number. |
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