The whole atmosphere is one of propriety and etiquette, under which the sordid matters of power and money bubble. |
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He became agony uncle to thousands of boys who sought his advice on broken voices, bad breath, and the propriety of using tinted writing paper. |
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The never-ending fuss about the propriety of testing helps to keep the practice within bounds. |
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No challenge of any kind is made to the lawfulness or propriety of this policy. |
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The city's Presbyterian propriety and Calvinist self-denial combined to outlaw libidinousness as an affront to polite society. |
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Were they concerned by Graham's less than lily-white reputation when it comes to financial propriety? |
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In our opinion, she was simply seeking to provide support and assurance to her friend Carole, and acted with complete propriety. |
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For many readers, this moment of unexpected sexual explicitness drives the general grittiness of Horace's satire beyond the pale of propriety. |
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Other positive characteristics of the Saturnian type are what may be termed the good old-fashioned values of courtesy, decorum, and propriety. |
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Circumcision is a way of protecting propriety, morality, and marriageability. |
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As you may have twigged, there is a strong sense of propriety in Lauren, which is rather endearing in one so young. |
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Faber's first novel tears away protective layers of propriety, leaving the flesh and bone of society quivering and in full view. |
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And then, with some embarrassment and sheepishness and a new sense of propriety, it ended. |
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Two consecutive tribrachs cannot be uttered with propriety without an intervening vocal pause. |
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The men, either out of resentment or a sense of propriety, were outraged and showed him the door. |
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Of course, in the company of others, Angharad rode side-saddle, for she'd had to accustom her horse to it for propriety. |
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In advising Edward VIII against a morganatic marriage to Mrs Simpson he acted with the utmost constitutional propriety. |
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The workers' mischievous behavior deeply offended the General Motors umpire's middle-class sense of propriety. |
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In adopting this stance one concedes that the rightness or propriety of belief and unbelief depends upon the outcome of a certain inquiry. |
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The propriety of the behaviour of the spy or decoy in so doing varies from one category to another. |
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This is the period when we built up the institutions of democratic government and tried to act according to certain norms of propriety. |
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In general, one must consult with his Rav concerning the Halachic propriety of eating any food at a non-kosher restaurant. |
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Obscure academics will trundle out to obfuscate the finer points of constitutional and ecclesiastical propriety. |
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It is a symptom of the age in which we live that even bastions of propriety like the Stock Exchange try to put the best gloss on their profits. |
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They court according to an intricate and stylised code of formality and propriety that hints at a wealth of buried emotion. |
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He has declared that he does not care to accept the propriety of compossible rights and will not be bound by them. |
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Questioning the legitimacy or constitutional propriety of an action by the executive is a useful device for the opposition. |
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I think my sense of propriety sometimes dulled the theatrical flamboyancy at which he truly excelled. |
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A polite, courteous, almost lavender man, he seems the model of bourgeois propriety. |
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Girls from respectable families follow a clear code of conduct adhering to propriety and decency. |
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Imagine how that set of policies, from this prissy pillar of property and propriety, would radicalize national taxation in any modern state. |
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Her speech was not frivolous nor her words presumptuous but in every way she behaved with utmost propriety. |
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She breaks every possible rule of propriety, in her behavior both as a woman and as businessperson. |
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But the point made is that, at some stage in life, propriety must supersede convenience. |
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And the issue of moral propriety tended to have to do with the fidelity of the wife rather than the activities of the husband. |
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When Pamela first realises what her master is up to, she expresses herself with a vivid mixture of moral outrage and offended propriety. |
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So I'm not altogether convinced is has anything to do with propriety or morals. |
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There were also plenty of discussions about the moral and ethical propriety of informing on others. |
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There are different standards of propriety for an intimate dinner than for the State of the Union address. |
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I think the triple membrane of two computer screens and cyberspace in the middle can tend to break down people's sense of propriety and decency. |
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He and my mother fought often, either when his cruelty surfaced or when his behaviour failed to meet her standards of propriety. |
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The accepted view of an organisation which is the protector of conformity and propriety has disappeared. |
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The department chair questioned the propriety of my proposal, pointing out that we were not operating in a rational climate. |
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That is the forum in which, for example, it is appropriate to debate the propriety of the conduct of a judge. |
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At the time of the attacks, few in the United States or elsewhere raised questions about the propriety of nuclear weapons. |
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In my view this connotes something more than a legitimate disagreement between counsel as to the propriety of particular questions. |
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Questions are being raised on the propriety of some officers being given these medals, but here lies the hitch. |
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Now, it has descended into a public den of iniquity used by local youths who have no sense of propriety. |
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It has nothing to do with breeding and everything to do with deportment, propriety, and education. |
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Girls and women were shy and had a sense of modesty and propriety. |
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He expects his readers to behave with perfect propriety towards large corporations, which, funnily enough, do not write to the New York Times and ask how they should behave. |
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The propriety of adopting the intentional stance towards a system is settled pragmatically in terms of the utility of its application in interacting with the system. |
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So much so, that there will be no equivocations or amphibolies, and everything which will be said intelligibly in that language will be said with propriety. |
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However, it is the issue of moral propriety that interests me most. |
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Presidents and potential presidents have often been accused of crossing some line of propriety. |
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The Weather Underground, while we certainly crossed lines of propriety and legality, we never killed or injured anybody. |
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As an athlete, he violated the codes of modesty and propriety. |
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Walking up to the edge of propriety and stepping over the line are all a rite of passage to self-definition. |
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He had no reason to question his doctor about the propriety of their use. |
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And the Parisian press, undaunted by a U.S. sense of propriety, has tried hard to figure out how attractive she may or may not be. |
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Is this truly the test of moral propriety you would have us aspire to? |
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The Halachic propriety of opening a plastic bag is somewhat complex. |
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In an interview this week, Egeland strongly defended the propriety of delivering aid to unwholesome parts of northern Syria. |
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Her failure to respect constitutional propriety has tripped her up before. |
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It is a career that will defy all propriety, convention, and logic. |
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I want to raise a question about the constitutional propriety of this. |
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The commission will also vet all nominations for life peers, including those made by the political parties, for the highest standards of propriety. |
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Uncertainties about the best way to provide for such patients, and indeed questions about the propriety of doing so at all within the NHS, have a long history. |
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Many Asian cultural traditions place emphasis on propriety and the observance of strict moral and social conduct, thus modesty and restrained sexuality are valued. |
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A solicitor acting on his own behalf has an even higher duty to behave with the utmost propriety than he would if he were representing clients in a similar transaction. |
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Darcy, and he accuses her family of wanting propriety and suggests he has been kinder to Bingley than himself. |
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We have always been conscientiously attached to what is called the Tory, and which might with more propriety be called the Conservative, party. |
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However, some did question the propriety of having Lovelace, the villain of the novel, act in such an immoral fashion. |
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Those who really understand propriety in Austen's novel take into account both the feelings of others and draw the appropriate conclusions. |
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Tave argued that the play Lover's Vows is a test of the character's commitment to propriety. |
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Now, if we may, with propriety, refer to the people one question, why may we not, with equal propriety, refer another? |
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I find such a pleasure, sir, in obeying your commands, that I take care to observe them without ever debating their propriety. |
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Elinor then ventured to doubt the propriety of her receiving such a present from a man so little, or at least so lately known to her. |
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Notably, Hooker affirmed that the power and propriety of bishops need not be in every case absolute. |
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The press is overstepping in every direction the obvious bounds of propriety and of decency. |
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The Commission also scrutinises party recommendations for working peerages to ensure propriety. |
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As in the Maurice Debate, his sense of political tactics was, in Jenkins' view, overcome by his sense of Parliamentary propriety. |
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Martineau, then 27 years old, stepped out of the traditional roles of feminine propriety to earn a living for her family. |
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Tattoos, in particular, are not the radical brandings, the bold violations of flesh and propriety, they once were. |
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New propriety and Enlightenment ideas became popular among the middle classes of Denmark, arousing increased interest in personal liberty. |
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The Local Rules do not address the propriety of surreplies or surresponses. |
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Among the most detailed and thoughtful analyses of the propriety of citing Wikipedia is contained in Campbell ex rel. |
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They debated the propriety of the punishment that he was given. |
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The great inconvenience and disturbance that must necessarily grow upon an indistinction of propriety. |
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The Optima HD incorporates our propriety spot beam technology, which because of its short, simple beam delivers greater productivity, higher yield and unmatched extendibility. |
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The reporter asked about the propriety of the BOE statistically sampling a takeout food business to see how much is consumed on-site, and hence subject to sales tax. |
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Out of context, Liguori's comments could be seen as Mariolatrous, since doctrine states that the only one who can save in propriety is Jesus Christ. |
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If they be led by virtue, and uniformity sought to be given them by the rules of propriety, they will have the sense of the shame, and moreover will become good. |
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Another possibility is that liberal education dates back to the Zhou Dynasty, where the teachings of Confucianism focused on propriety, morality, and social order. |
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Some reviewers, though, notably John Wilson Croker for the Quarterly Review, expressed reservations about the propriety of mixing history and romance. |
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In the convention there does not seem to have been much diversity of opinion on the subject of the propriety of giving to the president a negative on the laws. |
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Not only were its central personages the patterns of propriety, but no breath of scandal, no shadow of indecorum, might approach its utmost boundaries. |
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