To gain an Ivy League education while soused suggests a certain intellectual capacity. |
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It will be soldiers who suffer the reactions and as usual the armchair hawks don't have the intellectual capacity to understand any of this. |
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The one-size-fits-all approach can never accommodate the vast differences in the intellectual capacity of individual pupils. |
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It takes one of apt intellectual capacity to be able to process that entire sentence. |
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Animals are governed by brute instinct and lack the intellectual capacity to understand the nature of their situation or do much to improve it. |
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Knowledge of languages became a sign of academic ability and intellectual capacity, as well as contributing to cognitive development. |
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Enormous intellectual capacity and resources must be deployed in order to understand and get a grip on it. |
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Forced labor shall not adversely affect the dignity or the physical or intellectual capacity of the prisoner. |
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Nor was he able to avoid the malapropisms that had led some critics to question his intellectual capacity. |
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They thought that verve, intellectual capacity, originality, bravery became incarnate. |
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It requires the skills of people and the creation of intellectual capacity. |
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To say that somebody doesn't have good literacy skills doesn't say anything about their intellectual capacity. |
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We have to ensure that we also improve our intellectual capacity to analyse and understand exactly what is driving this new form of terrorism. |
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His delegation believed that the intellectual capacity of the Sub-Commission was required more than ever before. |
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The employees available have the necessary mental and intellectual capacity to assimilate and apply the changes and new techniques. |
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Likewise, we are investing in our intellectual capacity and in the infrastructure necessary to develop new technologies. |
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His intellectual capacity has also been underestimated. |
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Her intellectual capacity is that of a five-year-old. |
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Never underestimate people's tastes or intellectual capacity. |
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Private sector support for scholarships and related programming directly enhances our overall productivity, our intellectual capacity, and our ability to compete in an increasingly complex and interdependent world. |
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Obvious disparities with respect to factors such as the parties' age, maturity or intellectual capacity should be taken into consideration before a case is referred to mediation. |
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Both faculty and students continue to fuel innovation and economic development in less fortunate countries by offering one of our most valuable resources: our tremendous intellectual capacity. |
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Besides, as John Maddox, who was editor of Nature magazine for many years has said, the human being's intellectual capacity is so great that at some point in the future there will be nothing left to discover. |
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We must not underestimate the intellectual capacity of these countries. |
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Mr. Vic Toews: Just on that point, Mr. Chair, at Confederation it was in fact acknowledged that while Ontario and those far reaches would supply the brawn of the nation, the Maritimes would supply the intellectual capacity. |
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Developing and setting new standards means not only having the intellectual capacity to think through new appropriate standards but also implementing them. |
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Higher intellectual capacity was not immediately affected. |
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Aziz had the intellectual capacity to talk through the issues. |
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From there they begin to understand that the choice of a profession raises questions on the cost of training, the future availability work, ones intellectual capacity and the physical and emotional implications. |
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If memory is compromised, so is your intellectual capacity. |
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In fact, with our stock assessment group for the south coast that would work with this run here, the staff size is adequate and the intellectual capacity is vast. |
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The intellectual capacity to direct, and the commitment to continuously grow, the knowledge derived from many disciplines about family trends and relevant public policy issues. |
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As a child he was sickly and of such unpromising intellectual capacity that at one time the idea of cutting the entail was seriously entertained. |
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