Instead, he pares down, offering a summational album, his most relaxed and unforced in years. |
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So he needed a thin section, for much the same reason that the microscopist pares off a thin sliver of tissue for investigation. |
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Create a CEO post as chief editorial officer to support the DG as a primus inter pares on the executive board. |
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As long as the United States was the economic primus inter pares, those arguments were hard to gainsay. |
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For government decisions, all members of the Federal Council have equal votes, which means that the federal President is only primus inter pares. |
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As things stand at present the Chairman in Canada can only use his influence as primus inter pares. |
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The third is, merely, primus inter pares, by the way, adumbrated, particularly in mediation. |
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When Pope Gregory II condemned iconoclasm, the Patriarch in Byzantium, for whom the Roman pontiff was at best primus inter pares, was furious. |
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In the Lutheran Church of Sweden, the Archbishop of Uppsala is considered primus inter pares. |
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The Archbishop of Canterbury, who is considered primus inter pares of all the participants, convokes the meetings and issues the invitations. |
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The Nagari script has been the primus inter pares of the traditional South Asian scripts. |
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The Prime Minister is a primus inter pares, with no explicit powers beyond those of the other ministers. |
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Mayors of German city states have traditionally acted as primus inter pares. |
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Apart from that, though, the President is a primus inter pares, having no power above and beyond the other six Councillors. |
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The senior bishop of the seven diocesan bishops of the Scottish Episcopal Church bears the truncated title Primus from primus inter pares. |
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The Moderator of the General Assembly in a Presbyterian church is similarly designated as a primus inter pares. |
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However, the president is a primus inter pares with no additional powers, and remains the head of a department within the administration. |
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As with the moderators of synods and assemblies, the moderatorship is a primus inter pares position appointed by the presbytery itself. |
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Egypt is primus inter pares in perpetuity in the Arab League. |
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It cannot rely on a role as primus inter pares on the international scene. |
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By the time he assumed the office of Supreme Guide in 1979 he was the primus inter pares of the Grand Ayatollahs in the Shi'ite clerical establishment in Iran in terms of prestige and political stature. |
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Although the theory, at least, is one of primus inter pares, it is not hard for the position of president or chief justice to evolve into a different perception and one that may risk becoming unhealthy. |
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Integrating as well into her rich scenarios evanescence and the materiality of nature and landscape, she pares down and simplifies the idea of the presentation. |
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This ambiguity may have undermined the leadership model of primus inter pares, with cluster lead agencies treating cluster members simply as implementers. |
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The Silver Spoon and Hartnett use the classic flour, egg and breadcrumb coating, while Carluccio pares it down to just egg and breadcrumbs, which is harder to stick to the rice. |
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The trade sector is forecast to contribute to the economy's growth rate for the second year running as the weak U. S. dollar keeps foreign demand growing while the soft domestic economy pares back import growth. |
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They are in full communion with the See of Canterbury, and thus the Archbishop of Canterbury, whom the communion refers to as its primus inter pares. |
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Also, Constantine the Great was given the role of primus inter pares. |
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He is recognised as primus inter pares, or first amongst equals. |
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Over the closing laps and with victory already in the bag Pares broke into a smile and glad-handed spectators along the 1,000-metre circuit, carrying the Welsh flag. |
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