The epithets chart a subtle change in perception of the state, from dull, square outland to parking lot for middle-class transients. |
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There's probably a copy of the book in every aspirational middle-class home, and equally probably, the last 20 pages remain untouched. |
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Marian's background as a tailoress differed from that of the middle-class, educated women who were prominent in socialist politics. |
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The researcher worldview is that of a middle-class, white, heterosexual male. |
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They pass themselves off as otherwise ordinary middle-class people, when they're manifestly not. |
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The brotherhoods' temperance activity incorporated aspects of earlier working-class and middle-class temperance efforts. |
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So much of what passed for left-wing thinking in Britain seemed to be steeped in middle-class guilt and self-hatred. |
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The grime of industrial pollution is as far from a middle-class issue as you can get. |
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That mantle fell instead upon the large middle-class house, in its own ample grounds but free from the ties of an estate. |
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It looks like he might just be fed up to the back teeth of certain tiresome middle-class women talking out of both sides of their mouth. |
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Although at times, the serial enters into boring sequences, it has been accepted by middle-class families as a good one. |
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At the time, area retailers were complaining of middle-class teenagers harassing shoppers for beer money. |
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He gives us these familiar, stiff-upper-lip, middle-class characters and then peels away the layers to reveal the pain beneath. |
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In 1658, Rembrandt made his final move to a rented house in a modest middle-class quarter. |
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This attitude comes mostly from the idea that American middle-class values are the touchstone from which all else should be judged. |
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Heck, we were just a pair of skinny, middle-class white guys from the suburbs. |
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The workers' mischievous behavior deeply offended the General Motors umpire's middle-class sense of propriety. |
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Until the 1970s anti-growth thinking was generally the preserve of a middle-class elite. |
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In some cities, new middle-class suburbs were linked to urban centers by large avenues. |
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They typically target middle-class areas, where they know the residents will be likely to have good credit ratings. |
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It also shows that pupils from the lower end of the social scale are beginning to close the educational gap on middle-class pupils. |
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They start from a famous name or from the cushioning confidence-booster of a solid middle-class education. |
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And he found a sedate, respectable, middle-class partner from the suburbs of London. |
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They argue that these benefits can make the sums even more compelling, especially for middle-class families. |
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No middle-class parents I have ever met actually believe that their kid's school is one of the bad ones. |
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Five miles south of the chaos of Cairo is a quiet middle-class suburb called Maadi. |
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What you get is a huge subsidy for middle-class teenagers and a reduction in direct support for working-class ones. |
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The focus is on a middle-class family, which is striving hard for survival. |
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Neighbours in the quiet, middle-class area expressed shock at what happened. |
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A middle-class boy from the suburbs would have picked up a camera at art school, but Jobson took two decades to find his metier. |
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Support workers also note many of the children are from middle-class families rather than deprived areas of the country. |
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Surprisingly, many middle-class customers also enjoy buying from the street vendors. |
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They lived in a narrow street in the city, in a middle-class neighbourhood. |
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It is less clear that Scotland is comfortable with becoming more middle-class. |
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There is this commonly shared middle-class fallacy that they have got the tradition. |
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Kate was middle-class and comfortable, and her father was a magazine editor. |
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Personally, I found this book's exclusively middle-class viewpoint annoyingly narrow. |
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As a satirist, the writer is unafraid of drawing aside the drapes of hypocrisy and sham that seem to safeguard middle-class ethics. |
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Just a handful of transnationals, local corporations and narrow sections of educated middle-class employees. |
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These artists added sophisticated polish to country music, facilitating its popularity among middle-class audiences. |
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Some middle-class British student movements have been criticised for misrepresenting the views of the poor. |
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Why is Joe, a Fifties Edinburgh bohemian, so fascinated by forsaking his middle-class existence to become a coal shoveller? |
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Lana looked at the crows' feet at the corner of Nell's eyes, her dutifully middle-class twinset. |
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They were just two middle-class people trying to keep a roof over their heads and raise their boy. |
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But the campaign's polls had found that unaligned voters wanted detailed solutions to middle-class woes. |
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It can save a blue baby from Rwanda, and deny treatment to an uninsured middle-class baby in Chicago. |
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Alas, it's just a situation comedy about the nervous breakdown of a middle-class mediocrity. |
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Many American middle-class women, for example, expressed their revulsion at what they saw as the dirty and uncivilized nature of Irish women. |
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The Government moved after research showed that middle-class professionals were under-represented on juries. |
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It is, though, a desirable middle-class property, as it sits along with its uniform neighbours on the slanting road. |
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A step below this grandeur are restaurants that middle-class Muscovites enjoy on special occasions. |
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Yet as the novel proceeds and Robert gains freedom and position, he adopts the uninflected voice that corresponds to his new middle-class status. |
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It is an accomplished group of self-made liberal middle-class professionals with a secular and universalist outlook. |
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The issue is far more complex than saying this is a matter of middle-class nannying or this is a matter of free choice. |
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There are frequent complaints about Parliament's social unrepresentativeness, particularly its male and upper and middle-class character. |
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Divorces were concentrated among middle-class and bourgeois women living in the towns of northern France. |
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In fact, throughout the 19th century, the French state was a bourgeois state which echoed middle-class needs and values. |
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The Greens have it easier, being the party of the altruistic middle-class whose hands are unsoiled by the affairs of the business world. |
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There is a middle-class reserve to Edinburgh that gets rather sniffy at the thought of making a public display of oneself. |
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Moreover, these workers sensed both a profound snobbishness and a dishonesty among the middle-class people they encountered. |
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This untrendy middle-class haven, throbbing with ambition again, is an economic and political boon to New York City. |
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Also, there is a preference for English-language use among middle-class and upper-middle-class adults. |
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I was born in 1973 in Kingston, raised uptown with a suburban, middle-class lifestyle. |
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Mind you, the meal that resulted from my middle-class organic shopping spree was chuffing gorgeous. |
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The memoirs of a Manchester brothel-keeper in 1865 show how her more upmarket club was frequented by both upper and middle-class male visitors. |
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The Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 also greatly intensified middle-class fears of the spectre of the radical Left. |
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According to one bugged conversation, the new recruits were mostly north Africans but also included middle-class Europeans. |
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At the city's apex resided a local elite of merchants and professionals who were proudly middle-class and predominantly Nonconformist. |
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The role of women differs greatly between middle-class urban areas and rural villages. |
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When the SAT was normed, its population represented a small minority of college-bound white middle-class students. |
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Those rising prices just one part of the financial squeeze on the middle-class in this country. |
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France was a safe haven for many educated Haitians, and only a few middle-class Haitians chose to go to the United States. |
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The story of how middle-class women came to occupy this central position in dance is a complex one, but told often in the literature. |
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While he came from old money and a heritage of prestige, she belonged to a middle-class family growing along side six older brothers. |
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Many have even denounced the traditional family as a stifling, patriarchal institution, thereby fueling a middle-class backlash. |
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The separation of classes was underlined by the formation of middle-class suburbs, linked to the town centre by trams, omnibuses, or railways. |
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For some they are a source of middle-class opprobrium, while for others they are an art form, reflecting social, political and cultural change. |
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Besides, the joke, to many, seemed more at the expense of his middle-class white victims than black street culture. |
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In terms of their social and educational origins these producers' backgrounds are broadly middle-class and meritocratic. |
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The penchant for sports wear among middle-class youth resided on an almost voyeuristic fascination with American hip-hop subcultures. |
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They are too busy trying to sell high-priced, high-profit products to middle-class customers in the richest countries. |
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In Mixed Feelings Paul plays Vernon, a middle-class man stuck in a suburban rut. |
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Born in Bristol on 29 July 1932, Hodges had a comfortable middle-class upbringing, qualifying as a chartered accountant. |
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Managerial and middle-class occupations are over-represented in its ranks, while the working class is proportionately under-represented. |
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This study describes the attitudes of a middle-class Mexican family toward the Spanish of a Chicana bilingual teacher from Yuma, Arizona. |
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Of course, the middle-class mother in Britain may be able to afford private childcare. |
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They have been further homogenized, and secularized, in the postwar years of relative affluence by American-style middle-class consumerism. |
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Here was a young man who had left his middle-class home to fight alongside labourers, professors, artists and hoodlums. |
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A spending rebound is visible from middle-class neighborhoods of Buenos Aires to tourist spots and the agricultural provinces of the pampas. |
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The specifics of the gendered division of society were a middle-class luxury. |
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Zoning's legal defense relied upon the same faith in middle-class domesticity that supported municipal housekeeping. |
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Men may well have envied the social and economic parasitism of middle-class femininity, despite the Victorians' idealization of home life. |
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For middle-class black men, churches, fraternal orders, and professional organizations offered pathways to leadership. |
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This tone of slight snobbishness, a patrician aversion to vulgar middle-class prejudice, is typical of the book. |
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Child labor has been closely connected to the lives and options of middle-class and upper-class children. |
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He discusses how the readers of crime fiction are caught up in the middle-class ideologies of the individual. |
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Monet valued the comforts of a middle-class existence, and even as a penniless student his love of the finer things in life was noted. |
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Unlike middle-class homeowners, poor people usually don't have assets to put up as collateral for loans. |
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Both novels expose middle-class desires for social control and the inability of philanthropy to alleviate poverty. |
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Organic food is a middle-class fad that can come and go according to sentiment. |
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By their incorporation into illustrated journals, photographs became a part of middle-class literacy. |
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He taught at Swansea Grammar School, a middle-class fee-paying establishment, for thirty-six years. |
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In Victoria, the battle pitted Turner, the working-class warrior, versus Beresford, the middle-class conciliator. |
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As we reveal today, Labour is planning a dramatic rebanding of council tax which would squeeze middle-class households until the pips squeak. |
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Iron and stone were used for footwear and some 13th-Century, middle-class citizens wore shoes with insteps inlaid with diamonds and rubies. |
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This middle-class morality also defined female convicts ' experiences of prison life. |
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But there is nothing like having a podgy, middle-class sociopath leave cycle-shaped bruises on your arms and legs to change your mind. |
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Once upon a time, nannies were the carers and the copers for middle-class families whose parents had opted out. |
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No more biblish, no more tiresome polysyllabic nonsense, no more mundane middle-class mutterings. |
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Culminating on Saturday, the exhibition has all that goes into fructification of the dream of a middle-class family. |
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They were basically condemned to flowing tents and baggy ill-fitting gabardine outfits displayed in middle-class department stores. |
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The difference was that these middle-class Peruvians did not lose any prerogatives or privileges. |
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There were instances of well-bred middle-class gels entering into marriage with only the haziest idea of how babies were conceived and born. |
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Despite rumblings in the media that classical music is only the preserve of the middle-aged and middle-class, Classic FM has shown otherwise. |
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More middle-class than working-class children, for example, stay at school beyond the school-leaving age, and proceed to higher education. |
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Years ago I profiled him, prompting a complaint that I had described him as middle-class, since his father was a doctor. |
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Many are actually ordinary middle-class citizens with proper jobs and houses. |
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They were behaving more properly, more respectably, than middle-class people at a funeral. |
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Yet its staid middle-class ending fails to narrate hard work as the proprietary glue that binds owner to estate. |
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In those days, good middle-class Prussians washed their hands of the Prussian soldiery. |
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Politicians and middle-class do-gooders have interfered with the balance of a vulnerable sociological ecosystem. |
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Attributes of Victorian and Edwardian middle-class identity served to differentiate the young clerk from those with full middle-class status. |
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In addition, stock ownership became more diffuse, enabling middle-class Americans to benefit from economic growth. |
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They're people of her own sort, regular middle-class Englishmen and Englishwomen. |
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To support their pleasures, some middle-class men entered into criminal activity. |
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Whatever middle-class donnishness I inherited quickly withered as I became involved in left-wing student and anti-racist politics. |
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Jen's account shows how deeply-felt were her experiences of estrangement from well meaning, middle-class women. |
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The comments reveal an ethnocentrism in judging lower-class behavior using middle-class standards. |
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The heroines explicitly reject comfortable middle-class lives when they rebel against their parental figures. |
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The film was shot on location in West Yorkshire, which proved an eye-opener for a middle-class university-educated Hindu woman from north London. |
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Some have middle-class backgrounds while others are drifters from broken homes. |
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Like Ignatieff, McEwan explores the abyss between middle-class lives shrouded in material comfort and the demands of sudden human suffering. |
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The family appears middle-class, living in attractive apartments, where the colours are warm and the flowers opulent. |
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A middle-class Midwesterner, he was weaned on Daniel Defoe and raised on hunting, hiking, and taxidermy. |
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The mania about guns emanating from America's white middle-class liberals seems peculiarly off-base to me. |
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He was essentially a middle-class radical rather than a champion of the working-class claim to representation in parliament. |
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We thought we were raggle-taggle gypsies one and all, despite the fact that we were actually middle-class A-level students. |
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To hush up the secret in her married mother's middle-class family, she was put up for adoption. |
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The veneer of middle-class respectability is laid bare for the cheating, backstabbing and adulterous world it really is in Leslie Darbon's play. |
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The only high-performing Providence school is a largely white, middle-class magnet school affiliated with Brown University. |
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New Orleans didn't just experience white flight, but Creole flight, black middle-class flight. |
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Millions of middle-class families like these are working hard and trying to get ahead, but they just can't keep up with the health care costs. |
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Others, presumably to put the wind up a middle-class academic, exaggerated their crimes. |
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Almost single-handedly, he reconnected with the positive and idealistic instincts of middle-class Americans. |
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For most of the non-golfing population the game is a ludicrous one played by middle-aged, middle-class men in questionable knitwear. |
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Indeed, the resistance of the working classes to socialist ideas made them the despair of middle-class intellectuals. |
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Being middle-class implies having enough money to spend on things beyond the basic necessities. |
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Marriage followed alongside a comfortable life on the cosy road to middle-class success. |
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Sean grew up in a middle-class Sikh family and devoted his teens to punk rap. |
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It's a short and pleasant hop through one of Rio's most attractive middle-class neighborhoods. |
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Music halls, theaters, book shops, and art galleries attract crowds of middle-class youth. |
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Does it really make sense to lead with your chin on raising middle-class taxes? |
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The stereotype of the middle-class woman as the angel in the house can easily be overplayed. |
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British painting enjoyed a boom in the early nineteenth century, in response to growing middle-class prosperity and leisure. |
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Born in 1942 into solidly middle-class circumstances, he was brought up enjoying the pursuits of the leisured classes of the 19th century. |
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But his lecture was mainly aimed at a powerful sect called the middle-class liberals. |
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Those who can afford expensive private preschools often don't want to see them filled with middle-class riff-raff. |
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The main villains of the piece actually are two white middle-class lawyers and policemen. |
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It's right where the shantytown used to be, ringed by businesses and middle-class homes. |
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For the first time, middle-class citizens and skilled workers joined activists in protest, rioting against the government. |
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Initially, its goal was to represent the interests of middle-class folks who resented the aristocratic inclinations of the Federalists. |
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The confidence of its 40 million shareholders, mostly middle-class professionals and pensioners, has been rudely shattered. |
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Bound in fog, menaced by wildlife and cut off from the world, this perfunctory middle-class exercise turns into a carnival of accusations, French cricket and sausages. |
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The blasts took place in crowded, middle-class neighborhoods. |
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Certain middle-class commentators and activists have long looked down their noses at those who aspire to make loadsamoney or who want to leap up a class or two. |
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A middle-class woman to boot, she ran the gauntlet of upper-class men marinated in sexism and class prejudice. |
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There is a perceived incongruity between the film's dark, fetishistic side and its ironic and humorous jabs at squeaky-clean middle-class America. |
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Their style was meant to symbolize tough, patriotic, working-class attitudes in contrast to the supposedly sissyish, pacifist, middle-class views of the hippies. |
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Whenever anyone says he's aristocratic he's always quick to repeat it in his diaries, which strikes me as an incredibly middle-class aspirational trait. |
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I grew up in a Florida suburb, the youngest of four children raised by two loving, God-fearing, middle-class parents. |
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Do you think people are poor because of lousy educational opportunities, wildly unequal social conditions and layer upon layer of middle-class privilege? |
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The lower middle class was probably the strongest and most unified source of support for the war, which helped make the struggle over middle-class opinion all the more urgent. |
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Yet it will be hard to please congressmen while cutting their pork barrel, and as usual, no one seems very eager to cut middle-class entitlement programs. |
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Guthrie was a middle-class Oklahoman with a calculated aw-shucks cowboy manner, who just happened to be a Communist Party sympathizer and had written for communist newspapers. |
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I had always rejected the suburban ideal of the carefully clipped and methodically poisoned greensward, with its connotations of Babbittry and mundane middle-class aesthetics. |
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Foreign-born women staffed canneries, textile mills, and garment factories and worked as cooks and child-care providers for middle-class Americans. |
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I agree with Oxblog's point but feel it should be extended beyond the world of documentaries for the scandalization of earnest middle-class undergraduates. |
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She was taken out of poverty in a back-to-back house in Bradford, where her divorced mum had to bring up six children, into middle-class affluence. |
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I think I have a much more tempestuous and eventful amorous life than the average middle-class citizen, but I wouldn't agree that I necessarily behaved dishonourably. |
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His movements are stiff and robotic, like those Bauhaus artist ballets where middle-class guys who don't know how to dance throw shapes in absurd costumes. |
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This is why the children of the middle-class intelligentsia are the ones you see at playgroup in the hand-me-down jeans and the bobbly, seen-better-days cardigans. |
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Unlike middle-class women whose job opportunities include positions as programmers and systems analysts, these minority women in my study will work in the service sector. |
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By performing the personal in public, talk-show guests transgress the boundaries of behavior and decorum deemed appropriate by middle-class society. |
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But he had no middle-class guilt, recognising from the first that the Soviet system depended on total repression, on slave labour and on the concentration camps. |
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Traditional still-life painting is often regarded as typically middle-class, representing the desire to possess and control the objects of daily life. |
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It is also an increasingly inhospitable place for a middle-class conference like the Wac. |
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There is a grain of truth here, but we are all now too conscious of middle-class socialists, Tory workers, and the like, to pursue this line uncritically. |
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The collapse of Toryism in Scotland has rendered many of these differences irrelevant but it's still the case that my middle-class Tory friends tend to be Rangers supporters. |
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After two years, the middle-class cuts would also expire unless Congress paid for them with offsetting savings or tax increases. |
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The cost of a public school and university education was high for middle-class families, and there was increased competition for available openings in the professions. |
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These are sometimes referred to as romantic novels, but actually, as I understand it, they were more in the nature of middlebrow novels about middle-class family life. |
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Critics from both the right and the left accuse middle-class women of neglecting their children and exploiting the immigrant women they employ as nannies and housekeepers. |
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Punks, skins, casuals, every decade has its archetypal teenager with attitude, demonised by the media to strike fear into the middle-class underbelly. |
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Educational opportunities at the time for a girl growing up in Germany were few with German schools for middle-class girls being little more than finishing schools. |
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It has been argued that the current interest in contemplative prayer is a middle-class luxury for those who wish to experience some kind of spiritual frisson. |
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Peter, an 18-year-old who lives with his parents and sister in a middle-class Toronto suburban wasteland in the early 1960s, is a rebel without a cause or a clue. |
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What this serves to do is reinscribe and produce the identity of the middle-class consumer subject in contradistinction to that of the common working masses. |
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The book vibrates with Ehrenreich's rage toward middle-class Americans. |
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She picks out the Luddite unrest to make it seem that the danger of working-class crowds actually engendered the need for middle-class female domestication. |
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Large middle-class subdivisions are being built away from the city center. |
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He believes that middle-class people bear a disproportionate share of the tax burden. |
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Victoria Adams was born to middle-class parents in the affluent county of Hertfordshire. |
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The affordable Care Act was always a short-term political loser with respect to middle-class voters. |
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Tapping into middle-class grievances with Populist ideas on the economy is where Warren excels. |
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But what about the formerly middle-class African Americans who find themselves on the backslide? |
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A Bollywood superstar is shaking up Indian middle-class values with an Oprah-like talk show. |
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Socioeconomic status was not formally assessed, but school principals considered the participating schools to be located in middle-class to upper-middle-class neighbourhoods. |
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He had grown up in a penurious middle-class family, and it was the middle class and the official world which predominated in his sketches, stories, and plays. |
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Working-class and middle-class mothers of Cuban heritage were questioned about their modes of accommodation to America in terms of language proficiencies. |
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Some comprehensives, particularly those in middle-class suburbs, succeed. |
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But Kate has clung to her middle-class roots and middle-class ideas of child-rearing defiantly. |
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Certainly, the leadership of the violent jingo crowds was middle-class. |
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Often using obscene, offensive and profane language she succeeds in shocking the reader out of the middle-class complacency that numbs the senses of the public. |
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A flapper and a flirt, she was white, middle-class and Midwestern. |
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He grew up, comfortably and happily he says, in an upper middle-class family, in Ohio. |
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Even among those who rank, at least by economic criteria, as middle-class, the most proximate precedent for their dress style is that of medieval varlets. |
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In Ireland early suffragists were largely Protestant, the leadership coming from upper middle-class women who were active in other forms of public work. |
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Delinquency was theorized by some as a rejection and inversion of the middle-class values purveyed by the school and, by others, as a celebration of working-class values. |
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It was designed to financially and politically promote already advantaged middle-class layers and business interests among the Maori and Pacific Island communities. |
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Almost as angry as the descriptions of poverty was Orwell's denunciation of the chasm between prim middle-class socialists and the rickets and rankness of working-class life. |
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Her passport out of middle-class conformity came through language. |
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In Madras, where a middle-class commitment to civic order is still discernible, the yob's inconsiderateness and the policeman's complicity heralded anarchy. |
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As I have been arguing here, middle-class knowledge and ignorance are invoked strategically and polyphonically in ways that answer many needs at once. |
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Where Kate is mild-mannered and middle-class, Cressy, 24, is a wild, blue-blooded aristocrat with bohemian heritage. |
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I hated how it was brainwashing a generation of bright and well-intentioned children, transforming them into a ghettoized and incurious suburban middle-class. |
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He's for keeping middle-class tax cuts and holding the line on free trade. |
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The rising cost of health insurance is the proximate cause of middle-class income stagnation. |
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Then it dawned on people that paying for it would involve a hefty middle-class tax increase, on higher-end insurance plans. |
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It endorses mainstream and largely middle-class values and language. |
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A middle-class business person on his first tax-evasion offence and a young indigenous offender on a third shoplifting charge face radically different outcomes. |
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Steele's film opens in the middle-class home in st petersburg of a man named Timor. |
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It's a very middle-class church, and the regulars are inviting. |
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Rather than fixing a position on a hierarchical socio-economic ladder, consumerism establishes lateral connections that affirm middle-class affiliation. |
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The lady of the middle-class house wasn't expected to break into a sweat. |
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Some black immigrants, who originally came to Canada to better themselves and have now achieved middle-class status, prefer assimilation over heritage. |
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At a glance one would have described them as middle-class and lower middle-class men with their wives and children sprucely dressed in their Sunday best. |
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I asked her if she did not feel as if she were just masquerading as a normal, middle-class person. |
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Likewise, the land grant colleges transformed America's education system and, as a result, transformed America in a genuinely middle-class nation. |
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American universities seem to radicalize more middle-class Arabs than did their upbringing in the Middle East. |
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Fantasizing about some underground tradition of progressive middle-class Republicanism, he embraces the governments of McKinley, Nixon, and Lincoln. |
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As a white, educated, Western, middle-class male, I possess most of the unearned privilege the world has to offer. |
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In the dominant U.S. worldview and value system biocentrism is counter-intuitive. The middle-class and striving to be middle-class college students I teach just don't get it. |
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This bill is one of those prime examples of middle-class do-gooding. |
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Young male office and shop clerks occupied a precarious social and economic position on the margins of respectable middle-class Victorian society. |
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For while they may appear every inch the middle-class professional, there is a growing chance a surprising secret lurks beneath the respectable clothing. |
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Indeed, they mistrust women, whom they see as enforcers of middle-class earning expectations they cannot meet. |
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It also explores the self-indulgence of the literary society and the day-to-day shallowness of middle-class life, without ever lecturing its audience. |
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The little town of midland Park is a middle-class suburb of New York City, just north of my hometown of Paramus. |
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One indication of the growing security of the Republic in the late 1880s was the decline of revanchism, particularly among French middle-class youth. |
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Traditional working class left voters joined with middle-class lifestyler lefties to elect the Green in Cunningham, and the independent Liberal candidate pitched in. |
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This is an honorable and compulsively fascinating evening that disproves the notion that the playwright is merely a witty chronicler of mid-century, middle-class life. |
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We grew up in middle-class, lily-white middle America, and most of our understanding of the contemporary black experience comes from hip-hop records and The New York Times. |
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Cindy Crawford sells furniture with Raymour and Flanagan to middle-class America. |
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The new middle-class epistemology concentrated on a connection between physical aptitudes and mental ability, making alleged distinctions between male and female anatomy. |
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But in more middle-class and working-class neighborhoods, sessions are typically a fourth of that price. |
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It used to be that an unabridged dictionary and an encyclopedia would be kept accessible in middle-class homes, for settling questions of language or fact. |
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Maimane was born in Krugersdorp to a Tswana father and a Xhosa mother and grew up in Soweto in a relatively middle-class family. |
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This is middle-class do-goodery that has absolutely no idea of the reality my friend found herself in. |
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If there's one thing I can't stand, it's a Babbitt. Say, there's nothing more wonderful than defying middle-class conventions. |
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They have done a bad job of championing middle-class interests. |
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This was because we had ghettoised many of these problems, keeping them out of sight of the middle-class majority. |
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Until the late 1980s environmentalism was generally considered a white middle-class issue. |
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He was a middle-class, provincial urbanite, who wrote for big commercial theaters and proudly noted his successes in them. |
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Few middle-class homes of the era were without a stereograph set, and stereoview companies sprang up to meet the demand. |
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I speak with the standard middle-class sociolect and I 'belong' to the kidney-transplanted community. |
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The hustler mentality is prevalent among the low and middle-class Kenyan urbanites who often desire socioeconomic mobility. |
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The Indian surfactants market for personal care hinges largely on the expanding middle-class consumer population in the country. |
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Wages are stagnant and middle-class household incomes continue to decline. |
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Once an obscure investment instrument, mutual funds have become the financial vehicle of choice among middle-class Americans. |
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Dr Nicola Rollock, one of the study's authors, said racism was still a reality for many black middle-class families. |
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And it is the party of middle-class stagnation and slippage. |
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Both candidates promised tax relief for middle-class families. |
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At universities like Oxford, middle-class students hold 'chav bops' where they dress up as this working-class caricature. |
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The newspaper the Guardian, together with its Sunday sister the Observer, are the liberal papers of choice among the middle-class chatterati. |
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I'm an activist, but in Kelowna I felt like my safety is predicated on silence and white middle-class homonormativity. |
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If you buy a Perdue chicken in the grocery store, you might think it had lived a comfortable avian middle-class existence. |
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In the 1980s, the narrative was the end of stagflation and middle-class tax bracket creep. |
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Mondeo Man was the moniker given to the disillusioned, white middle-class males who helped New Labout to victory at the last General Election. |
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His emphasis on middle-class concerns is, well, understandable. |
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Getting stoned in Afghanistan was an extreme sport, a very long way indeed from the polite blims of hash that middle-class Londoners sometimes consume at parties. |
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We also hear that her British flick LD50, starring Mel as a right-on middle-class animal activist, is due to be released next month, with a premiere in Leicester Square. |
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Teenagers living in poor, inner-city areas witness or become victims of violence much more often than their middle-class counterparts in suburbs or rural areas. |
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Lads talked about a new pair of DMs the same way those middle-class poofs talked about their new shiny Ford Cortina Mark 2, which had just come on to the market. |
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A lot of rather etiolated, epicene, middle-class, male intellectuals have discovered a new authenticity when they come to identify themselves as football fans. |
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She could buy pretty clothes for a girl and plait her hair with ribbons. And she could call her a nice, old-fashioned, middle-class name like Sarah or Emma or Hannah. |
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A middle-class couple's gilded life comes crashing down in this lacklustre French drama with a plot that goes from A to B with the speed of an arthritic escargot. |
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There can be something absurd or even melancholy about the open-plan minipalaces some middle-class Britons consider essential for civilised living. |
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Haynes's formulation all but conflated middle-class status with moral integrity, as he implied that by their nature, the better classes were more selfsecure. |
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Rather than joining the middle-class Rechabite temperance association to which his Uncle Tristram belonged, Gilman became a member of the more plebeian Washingtonians. |
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The Valley Girls of today might look, sound and dress different from those of 1983, those packs of mostly blond, middle-class teens who jammed the Sherman Oaks Galleria. |
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Scores of recent magazine articles have featured middle-class African Americans finding their niche in the world of antiquing by collecting derogatory black memorabilia. |
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Stereograph cards brought timely perceptions of African-Americans to life in middle-class parlors as social entertainment during the late nineteenth century. |
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