Yet the funny thing is if in England, you ask a man in the street who the greatest living Darwinian is, he will say Richard Dawkins. |
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It may seem like a lot of money to the average man in the street, because it is, but in relative terms, the players can afford to lose that. |
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In his role as editor, Guzzardi tried to put himself in the position of the average man in the street buying and attempting to read the book. |
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In an ordinary case it is generally said you judge it by the action of the man in the street. |
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This problem has made us seem to lack credibility in the eyes of the ordinary man in the street. |
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Police found cocaine and cannabis when they stopped a man in the street, a court has heard. |
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What did the man in the street think about the fact that the people Canada took as prisoners risked being tortured. |
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Everybody, from the city authorities to the man in the street, reckons the trend will continue. |
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The man in the street also feels more positively about the United States than ever before. |
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We need to state that, in a globalised society, our wealth and our military power do not offer the man in the street any security. |
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You said earlier that you were asked to report on what the man in the street thought. |
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At the outset, did that have an influence on the way the man in the street judged the allies and Canada? |
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However, their impact on the real economy and the man in the street may still be very tangible as is shown by the example of pension funds. |
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The man in the street wants to know what the Union has achieved and how it has affected him. |
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In some circles this movement has extended almost to a worship of the meaningless, and this does not appeal to the man in the street. |
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The man in the street in the countries of Latin America is the one who will pay. |
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These remarks reveal, in fact, an unacceptable state of mind, and they are not the remarks of the man in the street. |
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For the man in the street, the Directive is difficult both to read and to use. |
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Thanks to the Arts Council England, buying original works of art has now become a reality for the average man in the street through the council's new scheme Own Art. |
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It refers to orders of magnitude which are relevant to the money laundering business and which do not affect the man in the street when he pops into a bank somewhere. |
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However, any mention of intelligent energy and request for renewable energy is likely to be met with derision rather than serious debate by the man in the street. |
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I am confident that this time the actual powers of the Ombudsman have finally been clarified, and that we have genuinely created a means of increasing the confidence of the man in the street in the European institutions. |
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I pointed out that the man in the street has never had an opportunity to voice his opinion or concern with this industry, and this forum will allow that to happen. |
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As flames and smoke closed in, he and his wife saw a man in the street. |
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However, it goes without saying that, even acting collectively, the Union institutions do not have the capacity to engage directly with the man in the street. |
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While the Community institutions and national politicians give increasing prominence to the 1992 target in their formal statements and speeches, the man in the street has to put up with daily irritations. |
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Looking ahead to 2008, the BIPM intends to use the Olympic Games as a major world event which could be used to bring the attention of the man in the street to the value of metrology. |
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Some historians write for historians, but those who have written for the man in the street have shown the possibility of making the facts of life clear. |
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Access to law as such, even if carefully targeted links are there to provide it, will not suffice to give the man in the street proper access to judicial procedures in a Member State other than his own. |
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His own enterprising spirit and non-conformist approach, his constant concern for the man in the street and his own sense of humour and personality were defining characteristics of his presidency at that time. |
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But to let your soul get twisted from that stance to one in which you can plough down a man in the street is emblematic of a cruelness, a smallness, that one cannot but hope is confined only to the very worst of humanity. |
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The Commission is determined to play its part, explaining its actions more clearly, providing more information about its work and highlighting the benefits the Community brings to the man in the street. |
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You wouldn't see a man in the street with his shoulders exposed like that. |
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