The manager's gong would be just reward for the way the Redhill boss has built his side this year. |
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His birdie on the hardest hole on the course was just reward for his superb approach shot. |
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Far more than in the past, companies are using their paltry salary pools to reward stars with relatively meaty raises. |
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If you occasionally reward a behaviour you want to decrease rather than increase you will strengthen the behaviour by mistake. |
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The aim of these awards is to reward originality, quality and creativity in entertainment programmes. |
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I am over the moon for our fans, it is just reward for the way they have been behind us all season. |
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It was just reward for all the hard work Gareth has put in since joining the society two years ago. |
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All the pressure has been at their end of the pitch and the goal was just reward for the way we played in the second half. |
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It was just reward for the Brazilian driver after bad luck in qualifying put him down the order on the grid. |
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If he does guide the Blades into the Premiership it will be a just reward for one of the game's grafters. |
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It is just reward for two years of hard work for Handley, who was disappointed to be left out of the side for Britain's opening two matches. |
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Welfare would now be an emergency stopgap between jobs, not a reward that government gives you for being poor for as long as you stay poor. |
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Like skunks, stink badgers can reward an enemy with a blast of a vile-smelling liquid. |
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During the Carolingian reign, nobles were granted booty as reward and incentive to support the current king. |
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If they put in their required weekly practice time, he would reward them by letting them take a day off school to go on a family ski trip. |
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Others, particularly in the modern period, have envisioned their heavenly reward as a state of life after death in heaven with God. |
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At York, Seafield Towers should reward each-way support in the opening nursery at 2.00 after a promising run at Hamilton last week. |
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But it can also reward someone who tripped over a gold nugget on their way to pick up some more lumps of asphalt. |
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Rather than risk reward calculations and unthinking optimism, what we need now is courage. |
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Her forty-five Stableford points should ensure a further handicap drop to reward her steadily improving game. |
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Certain financial reward today is, for some individuals, better than the uncertain reward of behaving properly and conforming to social norms. |
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Finally, don't forget to reward yourself at the end of your holiday with a glass of non-vintage champagne. |
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The riverside bar can not have been cheap to open, but the chain is more than reaping its reward now. |
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The department has slashed nonmandatory overtime, much of it resulting from captains giving officers paid days off as a reward for good work. |
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It's a delicate and yet demanding film, one that will reward the patient viewer with visions of beauty and despair. |
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The company offers viral marketing, opt-in reward programs and direct marketing. |
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Her determination brought its reward with a number of junior tournament victories. |
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For some at least, greater opportunity and reward may seem to be offered by a criminal career. |
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The second peak requires more climbing, but our reward is a breezy pagoda overlooking the city. |
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The prizes are intended to reward specific discoveries or breakthroughs, and the impact of these on the discipline. |
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The reward came from a snap shot by Dougie Simpson after midfielder Graeme Dunlop had done all the lead-up work. |
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Shortly after our arrival we came into contact with a bounty hunter, one seeking a reward for the return of Jenna. |
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Perhaps it is natural for them to expect some kind of reward from the organisation. |
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She was born to help and serve and she did not expect for any reward or recognition. |
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I believe I mentioned before that my company does yearly bonuses to reward us for our previous year's performance. |
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The federal government would also reward states with performance bonuses based in part on lower poverty rates. |
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Some owners bluntly told their slaves they did not want the financial burden of women and children without the reward of cheap slave labor. |
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I like the tangible reward of a blue ribbon after I've subjected myself to the torture of riding without stirrups in an equitation class. |
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Food would go to the regime rather than the needy and the regime would be able to use it to reward friends and punish enemies. |
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My minimal goal is to argue that altruism is not motivationally compatible with reward as an incentive for donation. |
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The reward was a view of a reed-edged lake, snow-capped mountains and a brilliant green mossy floodplain where wild horses grazed. |
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His mortal fear of Jesse James led him to kill the famous outlaw, not just for the reward money, but as a preemptive strike to save his own life. |
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As a reward for helping with the kids, my wonderful SIL and DD took me to Menton's for dinner the night before I left. |
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Zethus fought against his power valiantly, wriggling and twisting, but got little reward for his struggles, as he didn't move an inch. |
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Only twelve came to bid him farewell and as a reward he named a year after each one in the order they arrived. |
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But at least, they assume, the reward will be a grateful NHS with no trouble from shroud-waving nurses and doctors. |
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Tyler was lost for words, wondering about his reward when he heard a great shrill of excitement from the cash register. |
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The tendency to binge-eat may be related to the brain's natural reward system, or the extent to which someone likes and seeks reward, he said. |
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He found it increasingly difficult to reward his traditional Transjordanian supporters with public jobs. |
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The brain associates completing the arduous learning task with the reward of a vigorous hand shandy. |
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They are tough enough to withstand being walked on occasionally and will reward the passer-by with perfume released from the crushed foliage. |
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The cognitive intervention story was based on standard metacognitive procedures, modelling a verbal strategy for overcoming reward dominance. |
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Some people think a meritocracy would reward literary novelists more than those who write formula romances. |
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It makes no sense in a world that bases reward on merit alone, but our God operates on a different level. |
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But in the case of a bartender there is a much thinner line, it is tempting to reward flirtation and tips with favouritism. |
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It's also a taste of things to come, a reward for the patient, and a merciful release for the tortured. |
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She passed to her eternal reward on Wednesday, 14th Aug., after a long illness which she bore with great strength and dignity. |
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It is hard not to have some sympathy for Clarke, who had fought tigerishly without much reward for most of the round. |
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The seller will be content to depart with a tidy sum as a reward for years spent developing the enterprise. |
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If the dog shows no aggression, reward it with a food tidbit or verbal praise. |
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So I think that most of these people are just being given this as a reward for basically soldiering on and supporting the ticket. |
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Carried by this one thought for a measureless number of lives, self-mastery is the reward of following this idea, and so it will be attained. |
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The reward for the risk taken pays rent, feeds children, and supports a subsistence level existence. |
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There is nothing ordinary about a man who thumbs his nose at the system of justice and to reward him, in effect, with a pardon. |
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To see the joy on so many young faces when presented with medals and awards was reward enough. |
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The reward for his family was ennoblement and the right to exploit the canal as a fief with rights of seigneurial jurisdiction. |
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The modern measure of success is material reward rather than the satisfaction of a job well done. |
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This demonstrates how dichotomous scoring cannot reward students for less than full knowledge or mastery of the content area. |
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There are things each of them had been saving for and I figured I would reward them for their good saving habits by adding to their bankroll. |
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But not a baht has had to be forked out in reward money because no one has been caught. |
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One quality she especially likes to reward is thus held to be manly courage. |
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Your reward is some money and the satisfaction of completing a really hard mission. |
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The reward for such assistance was a generous salvage payment based on the percentage of the value of the saved cargo and boat. |
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Sometimes we feel it's fair to give somebody a chance, sometimes it's to reward players who have bust a gut in training to improve themselves. |
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Every few years Oscar sees fit to reward genuine artistry, thereby reminding us why we watch the show in the first place. |
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They also said the study makes no mention of the value of intelligence collection and the need to reward cooperation with lesser sentences. |
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I had a long journey ahead of me, but the reward far outweighed the cost in effort. |
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Once Fido performs even a close approximation of the trick a reward follows. |
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In fact, I'm going to reward myself now, by having done 165 extra words today by eating a whole apple pie or big sticky toffee pudding. |
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It must be tied with operational risk management to ensure that the reward is worth the risk. |
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I suspect that his action is more motivated by desire for celebrity, notoriety and financial reward than righting injustices. |
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The long journey North played havoc with the travelling Blues support, but there was rich reward for the faithful fans who travelled. |
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Set-pieces, potentially important at a venue which doesn't reward width, will be among the priorities when the squad gather in Hamilton tomorrow. |
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These are all reasons why some old varieties have fallen aside, doomed in a modern market place that seems to reward size, looks and shelf life. |
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Light heavyweights don't typically win the overall because bodybuilding tends to reward size above all other physique parameters. |
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That is not something the political process is designed to reward these days. |
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Glanbia Agribusiness wishes to highlight and reward the excellent quality of the malting barley supplied by its growers. |
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Both see a system that doesn't reward quality, whether it's apples grown with Integrated Pest Management or tender lean beef. |
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Therefore, I believe we have to reward investments in technology, we have to reward quality. |
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The presentation party welcomed 120 juveniles and their families to Carlow Town Hurling Club to reward a busy year for the club. |
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Last week police offered a R20000 reward for information leading to finding Liyabona. |
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Securicor chiefs have offered the cash reward for information leading to the arrest of the thieves. |
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Securicor are offering a reward for information leading to the capture of the robbers. |
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There have been no arrests and police are set to offer a reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the perpetrators. |
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Surrey Police offered a reward for information leading to the arrest of Reed in January this year. |
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While Russia has offered rewards before for information on the rebels' whereabouts, the reward offered yesterday was by far the biggest yet. |
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To support this requires a society in which all citizens are able to make a real commitment and receive a fair reward for that commitment. |
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He was replaced in Switzerland by Salif Diao, who got his reward by returning to the starting line-up. |
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Today, expulsion can be the reward for behaviour that one might have expected of clerical students in the past. |
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He said new arrangements would aim to provide a fair reward for GPs providing medical cover. |
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Pleasure is usually a reward for behaviour patterns that are good for survival and reproduction. |
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As a reward for their efforts, the school was awarded Arts Mark Gold, a top award from the Arts Council, for its excellent provision in arts. |
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They gave her a red envelope with 100 New Taiwan dollars as both a traditional Chinese New Year gift and a reward for her good behaviour. |
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The company's smart card reward scheme allows clubs to cut the cost of football for fans and collect valuable marketing information for the club. |
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I felt it was my reward for managing to do five hours of revision yesterday, which is pretty impressive for me. |
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The owner of the dogs is offering a substantial reward for their safe return. |
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Signora Zarini is offering a huge reward for anyone who returns the Flame Diamond to her. |
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And, whenever new and useful information came in, she would up the ante by increasing the reward money. |
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A mid-trip packer resupply, two layover days, and delicious food reward the fit, experienced backpacker. |
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The reward for killing rats was increased from six annas to 12 annas a dozen. |
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She should rest assured that great reward awaits her if she only be steadfast. |
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Practise positive parenting by giving praise where it is due and reward your children for sensible and responsible behaviour. |
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The three friends are rich and leading a life of luxury after having won all that reward money in the previous film. |
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It does, however, underscore the challenge of changing reward systems to meet quality requirements within an individualistic society. |
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Well, the greatest reward in World War II was survival, if you lasted through it. |
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Better reward yourselves with spa baths, massages, nice food and retail treats. |
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The greatest reward went to the post master who received one shilling for each score of beaver or an amount of furs of the same value. |
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I gave him a bone off of one of the plates earlier as a reward and he almost ate the whole thing. |
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As Exton offers the usurper, now King Henry IV, the body of the dead king he lays claim to a reward for regicide. |
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This is exactly the kind of tired, worn-out, bland thinking we love to reward in this town. |
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I might try posting sketches of him up on some nearby trees with a reward offered for his safe return. |
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When employers want to reward all members of a hierarchical work group equally, they usually raise every member's wage by the same percentage. |
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The reward for their work ethic was that, for most of the first half, their goal remained untroubled. |
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The reward is points, which are redeemable for cash, electronics, even charitable contributions. |
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With my health clubs, the most effective marketing has always been to reward members for recruiting their friends, family and work colleagues. |
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Finally, as a reward for eating so much, the kitchen sent out a complimentary summer pudding with lush, homemade vanilla ice cream. |
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Fed-up bosses at a motor showroom came up trumps after offering a reward for the recovery of four stolen cars. |
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Not content with exploiting the thousands of unpaid overtime hours staff have worked, they reward us by sacking us. |
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That is to say, that a reward may be paid where tax is recovered as a result of information provided to the Inland Revenue. |
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But all too often their work has been done without proper reward or recognition. |
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Both employees received an all-expenses paid holiday to Barbados as a reward for their efforts. |
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It was their just reward last week to see the fruits of their labour come to fruition and be recognised. |
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Ask your newest hires to make a presentation, and reward them for asking fresh questions. |
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This is a reward you often get, here on the edge of Exmoor, with wild skies making up for a day of wild weather. |
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Consumers and investors now reward farms and agribusinesses that supply desired environmental services along with food and fiber. |
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The decomposed body of King Midas, lying in state in his coffin, might be viewed as the just reward for his over-indulgence. |
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His injury-time matchwinner was a fitting reward for a tireless, wholehearted, committed performance. |
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It gave voters a substantial and tangible personal reward and it was something Labour would never do. |
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To achieve this he is putting in place a bonus plan for the top 300 executives that will reward outstanding performance. |
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These privileges were the reward for the abnegation and servility demanded of Party functionaries. |
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Inspectors would not aim to reward excellence or to measure quality, merely to identify incompetence or fraud. |
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The greatest delight and the highest reward of the teacher came when his pupil outshone him. |
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Although economists see this as a reward for financial mismanagement and wastage of tax payer's money, many defend the move. |
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The only direct reward of sharing for the man would be his own emotional satisfaction derived from the benefits accrued to his young. |
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I believe that Theological Aesthetics will reward theologians, aestheticians, and others interested in these topics. |
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We must, as goal setters and achievers, find the correct balance between reward for enterprise and sustainability. |
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As a reward she is allowed to choose her husband and names Bertram, who unwillingly obeys the king's order to wed her. |
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Three times during the race, Martin charged from the back of the pack to the front, and his reward was a fifth-place finish. |
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But the individual who grazes one too many cows or the fisherman who catches one too many netfuls still gets the whole of the reward of that cow or netful. |
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You have to accrue power, use it in ethical ways, and hope that voters reward you for doing this. |
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Upward mobility and reward for work seems to be an afterthought for all concerned. |
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Still images of each will be released today and a reward will be posted for information leading to their arrest. |
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No German bounty hunter ever teamed up with a slave to kill wanted men and claim the reward for their corpses. |
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I once organized a trip to a Dave Matthews concert, with backstage passes included, to reward a busload of big Edwards donors. |
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They reward leaders who push the envelope, catalyze action, and get stuff done. |
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The christening of their firstborn Wednesday is a chance for William and Kate to honor and reward their most loyal buddies. |
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He just wanted a whacking great big mansion, which he thought would be a reward for all his hard work, fabulous for his family and great for parties. |
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Then there is the private and exquisite reward of escaping from the laws of consistency. |
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His achievement ranked among the best in Irish sport and his reward for lifting the spirits of a nation was to be named Irish Person of the Year at a televised ceremony. |
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They will find ways to punish you covertly and reward those that do go along with their narrative. |
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The Army must also reward or recognize those who serve in positions that cultivate the broad perspectives that are necessary to acquire strategic leadership skills. |
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The Queen knighted him in 1988 as a reward for his long service to her. |
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As a reward for her attempt to depict the consequences of online commenters, Gwyneth Paltrow has become their latest victim. |
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She wrote in a letter that the pleasure of living above Bridger Park, with its line of flowering golden kowhai next to the stream, was reward enough. |
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Sutton Foster abandoned her usual perky personna to play scared and scarred in Violet, and voters may reward her effort. |
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A good dog training program will focus on allowing the dog to learn just what is expected of it, and will use positive reinforcement to reward desired behaviors. |
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The Treasury said it would take into account these sorts of concerns, suggesting it would reward companies who reinvested their profits into their businesses. |
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On the other hand, Jesus points out that if believers faithfully practice almsgiving, prayer, and fasting then an unstated heavenly reward awaits them. |
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If he gave us accurate predictions of the future as a reward for figuring out the code, we are to believe he expects us not to use it to our advantage? |
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If those things can be done, I'd happily reward every member of Congress with an earmark of his or her very own. |
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Inalienable rights are not a reward for responsible behaviour. |
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Coaching broadens the mind with learning, motivates and helps employees achieve their goals, and offers companies a means of reward to retrain and retain valuable employees. |
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Therefore, if the law stipulates that it is necessary to reward people who find lost property and return it to its owner, it marks a moral retrogression of our society. |
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He speaks of the discipline it takes to care for a baby and the overwhelming reward that comes at the end of every exhausting day. |
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Their success is the fair reward for the long hours of practice. |
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The privacy and autonomy historically associated with the family is seen as a problem, something to be limited and doled out as a reward for appropriate behaviour. |
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For this disinterested behaviour their reward has been a campaign of vilification and innuendo which has left both of them feeling angry and betrayed. |
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It claims there have been 455 cases of vandalism, half of them in New York, and is offering a reward for information leading to the arrest of workers. |
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The charge came just hours after Crimestoppers announced it was offering its biggest-ever reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the killers. |
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He was hoping that the R5000 reward being offered for information leading to the arrest and conviction of those involved in the killings will bring witnesses forward. |
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Despite several appeals, including the offer of a cash reward for information, police have not yet caught his killer or killers, although they say the net is closing in. |
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Mr Fallon said IFA was fully committed to the introduction of a lamb quality assurance scheme which would properly reward producers for quality production. |
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Tactically, bear market rallies reward buyers of low quality stocks, which tend to be highly geared and react sharply to such short-lived momentum. |
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Amid those campaigning for Maloney and Boyd, there are a sizeable number of players who would prefer to reward the goal tally and skills of Hearts' Rudi Skacel. |
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The International Food And Beverage Creative Excellence Awards were set up six years ago to reward quality creative work done for clients in the food industry. |
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In the short-term, the stock market will reward stocks, but Wednesday's Institute for Supply Management's gauge will look at manufacturing strength. |
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I hope she does get another dog now that Papa's little Yorkie has gone to her reward or the house will bulge to the breaking point with boredom purchases. |
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Could it be that T. Herman Zweibel is going to his reward at last? |
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Previous studies had also traced the monkeys' ability to associate the visual cues with the reward to the rhinal cortex, which is rich in dopamine. |
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The Championships were marked by the determination of the judges to reward good training, good riding and the cooperation and obedience of the horses. |
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Where is there true reward and punishment in a world where so many innocent and righteous suffer while so many evil people seem to enjoy the good life? |
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I'd love to know how to reward folks for 'liking' my page with a coupon. |
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The appropriateness of traditional reward systems may be limited. |
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Its ascent makes a good introduction to the hill walking game and provides a fairly stiff afternoon's walk with the reward of extensive views from the summit on a good day. |
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In its gossipy pages, it is recognition and reward that are valued, not the pursuit of truth. |
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I insist on being read each and every one, so that I may duly reward each well-wisher with a sackful of sugar beets from the Zweibel ancestral home in Prussia. |
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I would reward you handsomely for safe conduct over to the capitol. |
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The only reward is the satisfaction of an intellectual accomplishment. |
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Even smaller companies were tempted to reward clients with treats. |
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Just impressing each other with their photo thefts appears to be reward enough for them. |
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We must not reward them by jumping on any of their various bandwagons. |
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A beer straight from the mini-bar seemed a fitting reward for a two-hour drive, or thereabouts, to our chosen destination, nestling on the Derbyshire-Staffordshire border. |
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She got out the thick oven mitts that she carried for such occasions, and picked up the jar with the intention of claiming the reward for herself. |
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Together, these findings indicate that MDPV has reinforcing properties and activates brain reward circuitry, suggesting a potential for abuse and addiction in humans. |
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It was a marvellous feat of organisation and the reward was to see the young people from five years of age to eight togged out in their individual club colours. |
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In turn, always happy to save money, corporate America will no doubt reward Republicans with loads of campaign cash. |
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By age 10, most were shaving downy body hair to gain extra speed and realizing the reward for a year of hard work was improvement measured in tenths of a second. |
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Patient and determined night fishing at Bigland Hall coarse fishery brought due reward for a skilled local angler who is pictured with his best catch, a 25 lb 2oz mirror carp. |
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This Tuesday, a bunch of vampires and would-be superheroes will knock on our doors and ask us to reward them. |
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He went to his reward still battling, still unbowed, still independent, still loving his Baby and family, still loving his football and his native place. |
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Although the fasts of the month of Muharram are not obligatory, yet one who fasts in these days out of his own will is entitled to a great reward by Allah Almighty. |
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His reward was a post as undersecretary in the Foreign Ministry. |
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Cultivating a bonsai tree requires some care and attention, but as a reward it brings tranquility to the mind, a feeling of being refreshed and, inner peace. |
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You should reward your more productive employees with merit-based pay, such as bonus or share option schemes, rather than increasing wage rates across the board. |
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He knew this was the doing of the Director, who had reported the theatre to Napoleon's secret police in return for a reward of 10,000 gold napoleons. |
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Their reward was to be paid highly and then retire gracefully and anonymously, with a state honour or two, to a place in the country, secrets kept and views unrecorded. |
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Meanwhile, the brain drain was being tackled by recognition and reward schemes for contract researchers at the early stages of their careers, she said. |
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In the 1950s, he brashly challenged psychologist B. F. Skinner's theory of language as a learned skill, acquired by children in a process of reward and punishment. |
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Perhaps now that society doesn't reward the maternal instinct in the way it once did there is a gap to fill and men, newly emasculated, are stepping into the breach. |
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No one likes having to try every object on every other one, because there's some obscure combination that will reward you with the solution to the puzzle. |
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Distraught pet owners have offered a reward to find the brute who slashed their cat with a knife and left it for dead with a 12-inch gash across its back and side. |
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Specifically, he has a bone to pick with grocers who use the turkey to reward the bargain-thirsty, store-hopping, emotionally-unable-to-commit customers. |
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It was my well-won reward after the trials on the road and the vexations by which for several years various officials had endeavoured to prevent my wanderings in Tibet. |
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There is a special beginners' area, replete with bunny slopes, free drag lifts and the reward of a confidence building blue run after a couple of days. |
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And it is the contrast between that hedonic state and the expectation of reward when the discriminative stimuli appear, that determines the relative value of those stimuli. |
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They know that forms of discipline which reward good behaviour, rather than punishing the bad, are more effective, safer and promote better relationships at home. |
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At home, the reward of having cheated death is tempered by new concerns. |
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To reward their troops, the Conquistadores often allotted Indian towns to their troops and officers. |
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The story takes place in the Dutch city of Haarlem, where a reward is offered to the first grower who can produce a truly black tulip. |
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Not all promotions simply reward trade channels with free goods, extra discounts off invoice, extra pack-ins, and so forth. |
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Both brothers saw the Channel reward of only a thousand pounds as insignificant considering the dangers of the flight. |
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The reward offered by Mrs. Hasbrouck for the detection of the murderer was a very large one. She is a woman of means. |
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Coloured and double flowered primroses, Auriculas and Primula denticulata, the drum stick primula, will all reward you well. |
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Edward was able to reward his loyal supporters, especially the Despenser family, with the confiscated estates and new titles. |
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The island of Malta was granted this status as a reward for loyalty to Rome during the Second Punic War. |
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He said that the intention had been to make Dafydd prince of Gwynedd, and that Dafydd would reward Gruffudd with lands. |
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King Stephen increased the number of earls to reward those loyal to him in his war with his cousin Empress Matilda. |
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George VI felt that the Orders of the Garter and the Thistle had been used only for political patronage, rather than to reward actual merit. |
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Montgomery was granted half of Conn O'Neill's land as a reward for helping him escape from prison. |
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Recently the jury have made some insightful decisions, going against the grain of architectural hero worship to reward the more thoughtful. |
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On 29 December, Joan and her family were ennobled by Charles VII as a reward for her actions. |
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The most important of these was the Swynnerton Plan, which was used to both reward loyalists and punish Mau Mau. |
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He had them build huge walls around the city and promised to reward them well, a promise he then refused to fulfill. |
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The reward is serving the public good after achieving financial success. |
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As a reward for his blithesomeness, he was destined to be blown around the ether, miserable for 49 days and pursued by hungry ghosts. |
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He received very little reward from his paymasters and of course no recognition for his services by the government. |
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Like many French officials, Romain Poite likes a proper scrummaging contest and he will reward the side that gets on top in that area. |
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Antiquated systems of measurement reward people based on seat time in school-based PD or formal degree programs. |
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While the market will bid up compensation for rare and desired skills to reward wealth creation, greater productivity, etc. |
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However, some studies have estimated the average risk and reward of bonds by rating. |
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Altered reward processing in the nucleus accumbens and mesial prefrontal cortex of patients with posttraumatic stress disorder. |
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End their foul business, and King Robert will reward you handsomely. |
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In 1663 the Province of Carolina was formed as a reward given to some supporters of the Restoration. |
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The structure is designed to reward the teams finishing nearer the top and the most consistent teams. |
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I never had a bribe or reward in my eye or thought when pronouncing judgment or order. |
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A substantial reward was offered by the Foundation for information leading to its recovery. |
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The poor blighter's reward for being caught and sentenced to death was a purseful of money. |
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Teach's corpse was thrown into the inlet while his head was suspended from the bowsprit of Maynard's sloop so that the reward could be collected. |
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The shampoo company teamed up with Century to reward fun, fairplay and memorable football moments from across the North-east. |
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Set up a reward system for yourself so that you are incented to tackle difficult jobs and complete them sooner rather than procrastinating. |
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Pixies are said to reward consideration and punish neglect on the part of larger humans, for which Keightley gives examples. |
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The Report came in the midst of war, and promised a reward for the sacrifices undertaken by everyone. |
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After a few runs of different reward systems, I enjoyed the star chart for the entire class because they are accountable as a team. |
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The other regions activated were related to emotion and reward and included areas deep in the brain called the insula and the cingulated cortex. |
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Hellman in 1997 to reward outstanding work in theoretical physics by FSU researchers. |
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In June 1804 he applied for permission to return home and as a reward for his service in India he was made a Knight of the Bath in September. |
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And why do you and all men regard or reward a loving thankful, obedient child, more than one that will scorn you and spit in your face? |
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He had done God's work by killing a man and would now gladly pay the earthly penalty, because he thought his reward would be in heaven. |
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The visitors began to hold a much higher line, passing and moving with greater urgency, and their reward was forthcoming. |
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The duke's fiefdom had been greatly expanded as a reward for his dutiful military service on behalf of the king. |
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Let us not assume such previous conjecturals, but rather consult and expostulate death, since death is the wages and the reward of sin. |
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This was no Blowsabella, this was no buxom, forward, romping girl, to meet with a reward for her folly. |
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I don't agree with it, but I'll abide by the decision to give the reward to her. |
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As with the above reward stories, topic redundancy causes uninterestedness, ineffectiveness, unimaginativeness, and the stalling of growth. |
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We are prepared to offer a reward of pounds 500 to get this field coil back and help the police convict those responsible for the theft. |
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Car insurance companies say they'll reward customers by trimming their collision deductibles after a few years of crash-free driving. |
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It's possible that a President Kerry could reward his firefighter backers by pouring endless federal dollars down a black hole. |
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Nursery winner Mr Good Guy went up 14lb for his win, and an 11lb rise to 73 was the reward for Fleet Captain finishing second in the rated race. |
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The new pay chart was designed to reward Sailors for advancing, instead of longevity in pay grade. |
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Yes, there had been some tough pedaling that day in the muggy summertime conditions of New England, but what a reward this was. |
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Then reward yourself with sumptuous dishes in the hotel's signature restaurant The Kailyard by Nick Nairn. |
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Plant a flowering dogwood tree and, chances are, an American robin will reward you with a clutch of skyblue eggs in late spring. |
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It's not often we get the chance to reward good service and The Kerching awards let us do just that. |
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Career advancement is the only reward element that has no correlation with job satisfaction of temporary workers. |
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A Astilbes love very damp soils and will reward you with feathery plumes of flowers every year in shades of pink, white, red and purple. |
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A MULTI-millionaire friend and adviser to PM David Cameron yesterday put up a reward for the return of his pounds 150,000 antique water fountain. |
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There is certainly the need to reward performance and offer incentives for success, but flogging a willing horse is not the way to do it. |
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What reward is this to our dedicated policemen who now risk their lives putting these pin-headed dimwits away? |
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Vodouisants believe that if the lwa are pleased with your actions, they will reward you with health, financial success, and all-around good luck. |
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The Lomita Railroad Museum was once a regular stop on our shopping trips, a little reward for my trainiac. |
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My mother, determined to short-circuit my outcry, would match my objections by pointing out an inherent reward for doing such work. |
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Offered a reward at the top, Dorsaz asked for the mule on which Napoleon was riding. |
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You must be seen by all your staff to reward perfectionists with regular public praise and thanks. |
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More than that it was a Stalinist device to awe and reward the populace, and give them an appreciation of Soviet realist art. |
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Using the reward will create discussion in the organization and the positive feedback will have followers work harder. |
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To get followers to work for the reward it needs to have some attractive desires. |
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With nostrils crossed, the moles crawled backwards and forth, searching for a reward they could smell but, bafflingly, could not locate. |
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That reward is property, for of useful and active industry, property is the natural result. |
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Skelton Green Pigeon Fanciers have offered a reward in an attempt to catch the culprits before they strike at another cree. |
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Throwing a ball for some lhasa apsos may not be considered a reward but lots of scratching and rubbing of the chest might be. |
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