The subsidiarity principle leads self-evidently to the conclusion that this is expenditure for the Member States or regional political bodies. |
|
It is self-evidently unacceptable to go outside the law that is decided by democratic institutions. |
|
This situation is self-evidently discriminating and is incompatible with the Treaty. |
|
It is self-evidently absurd for a candidate country to be treated differently through the formulation of special requirements. |
|
This proposal self-evidently does not cover people who are illegally present in the European Union. |
|
Where to draw the line, of course, is self-evidently difficult. |
|
What are the values of the society that we believe are self-evidently so important that they must at all costs be defended? |
|
But, as scrutiny of the volumes quickly reveals, the process of anthologization and categorization is neither simple nor self-evidently logical. |
|
The charm offensive was self-evidently in aid of something and eventually we found out what it was. |
|
But, regrettably, the matter was and still is self-evidently one of public interest. |
|
They assume that as postindustrialism has emerged first in their avowedly free-market economy, it is self-evidently a good thing. |
|
If the latter country wants to accept this offer, it is self-evidently obliged to offer the same to the Community and the former country. |
|
Mr Cohn-Bendit himself drew a subtle distinction between those who are self-evidently European and a shift towards Eurasia. |
|
It is self-evidently working time once you leave your house and made yourself available to your employer. |
|
The two concepts self-evidently overlap even though no conflict has ever been openly unleashed in Africa explicitly in the name of culture. |
|
Last week there was outrage over an academic's self-evidently preposterous argument about English teachers and the re-election of the Howard government. |
|
It is extraordinary that such self-evidently preposterous claims can be taken seriously by anybody. |
|
It is a performance that convinces you it is wrong to play the part as though the men's perceptions of her as a destructive fascinator were self-evidently correct. |
|
An equal share-out of society's goods is self-evidently the place to start from. |
|
But O'Hara was a reluctant reviser, unable to enrich material that already seemed to him self-evidently rich. |
|
|
One brief, unmitigated disaster later, Rangers were returning to the man who self-evidently could not win the trophy they most covet. |
|
The 1920s, self-evidently, were the era of the bottle party and the Bright Young Things, the Charleston and the shimmy, cigarette holders and mock Tudor. |
|
He regards it as self-evidently contemptible. |
|
If people really want to move, it is self-evidently a good thing that their qualifications should be valid even far away from home and that they should be able to take their pension rights with them. |
|
Our world is ultimately still dominated by an economic model that is self-evidently exhausted and has now reached a stage where it is itself generating crises and causing hardship to millions of people. |
|
My invitation to colleagues today is to seize this opportunity to create the change for which there is self-evidently such an appetite in this House. |
|
Finally, and self-evidently, election observation by national and international observers could play a big part in building confidence in the electoral process. |
|
Meaning, one was left to discern, that religion is self-evidently a coercive force for ill. |
|
The participation of victims in the proceedings is not limited to an interest in receiving reparations and their personal interests are self-evidently not limited to reparations issues. |
|
For almost everyone who lived through the 20th century – at least its middle half – the idea that freedom was consistent with the procedures of totalitarianism was self-evidently false. |
|
No explanation necessary, tbh: They're all self-evidently fascinating. |
|
Enjoying far more than cross-bench support, each is bandied about as though it not only had a self-evident meaning but was also self-evidently desirable. |
|