They're clones, all wearing similar long jackets, all with the same stern face and chilling stare. |
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Her smokebox door hangs open, with headlight peering sideways through the fog with a wall-eyed Cyclopean stare. |
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I stare absently at the pattern of the fabric on the seats, an angular blur of red, grey and blue. |
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While everyone else engages in some form of inward or outward dialogue, they stare abstractedly into space, oblivious to their surroundings. |
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But the campesinos in the market, the indigenous Quechuas and Aymaras, stare right through me. |
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I felt an urge to burp and belch loudly and then stare accusingly at one of those long haired chaps with earrings. |
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Stepping in front of him, her hand gently lifted his chiseled chin, forcing him to stare at her. |
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The sudden vibration of her phone caused her to jolt, earning an odd stare from the boy sitting next to her. |
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I tried to stare at him to inform him that he was putting me off, but he just gave me a friendly and encouraging smile. |
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I stare at my reflection in the mirror as I apply gentle pressure to the welt on my cheek. |
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It was hard to tell, judging from her vacant stare totally fixed on the old man in front of them. |
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In the present state of juristic opinion, I would not extend the doctrine of stare decisis any further. |
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They showed that they can stare adversity in the face and still come out on top. |
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I said out loud as I tried to stare a bit more at the map whilst driving at 40 miles an hour. |
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Crouching at opposite sides of a clay-floored ring, muscles taut and bodies glistening with sweat, the two sumo wrestlers stare each other down. |
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A couple of white-knuckled tourists, fearfully working their way up the cables, stare in amazement as he saunters past. |
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His tail is lashing wildly, as he eyes me coldly with a predatory stare, and snarls loudly. |
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In a darkened hallway, a young girl and her parents stare after the teenager tramping upstairs. |
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As he practically ran out of the barn leading the horse behind him, all I could do was stand and stare after him. |
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Will could only muster up a blank stare at this point, wondering if she was for real. |
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He would stare at her, apologising for leaving her on the landing that day, yet rebuking her for her behaviour. |
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As he continued to stare at it, he noticed walking from the wings of the stage a giant figure of a man. |
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I stare out the window, hardly recognizing our own house as Sam pulls into the garage. |
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Caroline merely tucked a curl behind her ear and withered him with a stare she had studied from Margaret Thatcher until he wilted completely. |
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Innocent blondes, corrupted by wolfish brunettes with mannish haircuts and tight, tight sweaters, stare wide-eyed at the reader. |
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I wrapped the soft towel around me and used my hand to clear the mirror to stare at myself. |
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I shiver as I pass the clothes boutiques, where assorted mannequins stare out like different species of plastic aliens. |
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It's been a week and he still regards me with that disconcertingly haunted stare. |
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Edella regards me quizzically, but I just stare right back at her with an equally confused expression. |
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Each table is decorated with carefully attended tealights which allow lovers to stare alluringly into each others eyes. |
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We spoke the same language, and he didn't stare blankly when I asked him a question about a topic like libel. |
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Mr. Stupak, 57, with a shock of thick gray hair and the stare of a law enforcement officer, is a Yooper. |
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I began to stare at him as if he were a reprobate, but I couldn't believe it. |
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Hundreds of people suddenly converge on a laundrette and silently stare at a washing-machine while eating bananas. |
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I continued to stare at him, willing him to ask me out, but he never did. |
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Deep blue eyes stare at me, cold and hard, and my heart is racing with fear. |
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Where More is the most abstracted member of the group, Patensen is the most engaged, though his vacant stare has an abstracted quality of its own. |
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The music seems to have somehow entered me, and as I stare into Maxim's clear blue eyes, the emptiness inside has become filled with the airy consistency of the melody. |
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Not for him the flared-nostril aggression of a manager-class cybercrat, or the wall-eyed stare of the technologist. |
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I absently waved with a smile and continued to stare at my schedule. |
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All it took was a stare and a crook of the eyebrow from any one of the quartet of West Indian quicks in those days for the batsmen to know that a bowler was upset. |
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Dragons on the neckline, at the wrists and at the hemline of the gown stare boldly outward. |
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This was our friend for the evening, the forlorn type who watches television with a thousand-yard stare, the rustling of his cagoule drowning out the voices in his head. |
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Though the photos are far from sexual, Lottie wears thick mascara as she flashes the camera a come-hither stare. |
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They found his level, intense stare more than somewhat unnerving. |
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They then hang over the gallery rail and stare into the abyss. |
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It's not so much that they are lairy or rude or stare at people, they just tend to be a bit loud when hammered and some people tend to take exception to that. |
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If you stare at a bright colour for a time and then look at a white surface, you will see an after-image, which will be the subtractive complement. |
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At the man's right was another woman with raven locks and a crimson stare. |
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These children stare wildly, their oversized eyes gazing upward, eternally unblinking in an attitude that recalls contemporary Symbolism. |
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Stare until columns of tiles oscillate rapidly back and forth, chaotically at first, but more rhythmically in passing. |
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In their midst stands a soldier with the Lebanese armed forces in a red beret, sporting an assault rifle and an unblinking stare. |
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He was always jocund and grinning, while I always just stare in annoyance. |
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He, evidently, did not know what he was in store for, because he was regarding her with a patronizing stare, most likely underestimating her abilities. |
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In the case of Steven Eugene Washington, nothing more than a blank stare made him a target for police bullets. |
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I was in front of him trying to talk him out of it but he was just looking at me with a blank stare on his face. |
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Strong, young, crisply uniformed, he or she would shake, sigh, stare blankly, or cry, recounting variations of this statement. |
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He lets her stare deep into his eyes, clasp his hands for meaningful conversation, caress his face, and even lean in for a kiss. |
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There is no stare decisis in that courts are not bound by precedent, although it is influential. |
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His eyes flick up and down, then it's like he notices my pokies and makes a point not to stare. |
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When company comes, you are not to pop out and stare, and then run in again, like frightened rabbits in a warren. |
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The principle by which judges are bound to precedents is known as stare decisis. |
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The rule of law applied in the jurisprudence constante directly compares with stare decisis. |
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As with all common law countries, Canadian law adheres to the doctrine of stare decisis. |
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I clapped Ehren on the shoulder and went away to stare broodingly upon that cramph of a shant. |
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Alone I cared for our mother who did little else but stare at taches on floor and ceiling. |
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For instance, if the child were having an absence seizure, it will probably be very brief and characterized by a blank stare. |
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The Professor was left to stare into the depths of his ancient hat, as if it were a vestiary expression of his present situation. |
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If you do a whole lot of it, you get sort of zombied out and you tend to stare at things. |
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Legal eagle Jimmy Wyler has the sort of steely stare that makes you want to confess to crimes you didn't commit. |
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Military drones, with ominous code names like Gorgon Stare and Constant Hawk, can monitor movement across an entire urban area. |
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The author of the new book Lost at Sea, The psychopath Test and The Men Who Stare at Goats chooses his favorites. |
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He gave an angry stare at the cameraman even as a security personnel tried to push back the lensmen who had virtually mobbed the cricketer. |
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After checking the room for other alienesque creatures, she sat down on the edge of the bed and began to stare at the phone. |
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There's nothing I can't deem binge-worthy if I stare at it long enough, but even I would make an exception for those cookies. |
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He showed a rather unblinking, lizard-like stare, except when grimacing, or during his rare paroxysms of blepharoclonus. |
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That fellow's new limousine is the centre of attention, as everyone stops to stare at it. |
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He stood up, wasting precious seconds and knocking his chair over as he continued to stare upward through the window at the Crown Vic. |
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With a staggering walk, ragged clothes, and a terrifying dead-eyed stare, the zombie is an instantly recognizable monster of the big screen. |
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Take off thine eye! more intolerable than fiends' glarings is a doltish stare! |
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And oft upon yon craggy mount, Where threat'ning cliffs hang high, Have I observ'd him stop to count With fixless stare the sky. |
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The doctrine of precedent which requires similar cases to be adjudicated in a like manner, falls under the principle of stare decisis. |
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In common law systems, a single decided case is binding common law, under the principle of stare decisis. |
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He was also infamous for his piercing stare, bullying, bursts of temper and, on occasion, his sullen refusal to speak at all. |
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The application of the doctrine of stare decisis from a superior court to an inferior court is sometimes called vertical stare decisis. |
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When a court binds itself, this application of the doctrine of precedent is sometimes called horizontal stare decisis. |
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This doctrine is similar to stare decisis insofar as it dictates that a court's decision must condone a cohesive and predictable result. |
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Louisiana courts, for instance, operate under both stare decisis and jurisprudence constante. |
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The doctrine of binding precedent or stare decisis is basic to the English legal system. |
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In the United States, stare decisis can interact in counterintuitive ways with the federal and state court systems. |
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The doctrine of stare decisis, also known as case law or precedent by courts, is the major difference to codified civil law systems. |
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When death seems to be grinning back at us from the netherverse, most meet his stare with fear, in their eyes. |
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When a breeding male encounters a subordinate family member, it may stare at it, standing erect and still with the tails horizontal to its spine. |
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The deadeye stare of the bassist was enough to make any normal person run. |
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My discredulous friend may stare, but let him take this paper for his guide, and go to Lurgan Street, and he will see one of four great ragged schools. |
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Their stare is dignified and resourceless, and recalls those lines of Celan rebuking the lifting of stones and the exposure of those constrained to cower beneath them. |
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Short reports of all Irish superior court decisions from 2011 can be found on the web site Stare Decisis Hibernia. |
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At the beginning of each session, Gladstone would passionately urge the Cabinet to adopt new policies, while Palmerston would fixedly stare at a paper before him. |
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Courts may choose to obey precedent of international jurisdictions, but this is not an application of the doctrine of stare decisis, because foreign decisions are not binding. |
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Stare decisis does not apply, and any new rules articulated will not be applied in future cases. |
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Misty doe-eyes stare accusatorily from every corner of the gallery. |
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Under the doctrine of stare decisis, a lower court must honor findings of law made by a higher court that is within the appeals path of cases the court hears. |
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When we were touring on a riverboat near Dandong, the truculent North Korean soldiers from the other side of the river gave us a steely-eyed death stare. |
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Binding precedent relies on the legal principle of stare decisis. |
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There is much discussion about the virtue of using stare decisis. |
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They take their little enjoyments on little means and with little things and don't let solemn big-wigs stare them out of countenance or speechify them dull. |
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The principle of stare decisis also applies in Malaysian law. |
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The difficult question is whether federal judicial power extends to formulating binding precedent through strict adherence to the rule of stare decisis. |
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Many lawsuits turn on the meaning of a federal statute or regulation, and judicial interpretations of such meaning carry legal force under the principle of stare decisis. |
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The eyes were lifeless, and lustreless, and seemingly pupilless, and I shrank involuntarily from their glassy stare to the contemplation of the thin and shrunken lips. |
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Terrifying eyes stare back at him, seemingly burning with fire. |
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In the Iberian peninsula esse ended up only denoting natural qualities that would not change, while stare was applied to transient qualities and location. |
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Macon hucklebucked eleven flights rather than risk one elevator stare. |
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Failing to understand the question, he gave me a blank stare. |
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The recognition of the authority of the institutional writers was gradual and developed with the significance in the 19th century of stare decisis. |
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The principle of stare decisis can be divided into two components. |
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Stare decisis is usually the wise policy, because in most matters it is more important that the applicable rule of law be settled than that it be settled right. |
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Stare decisis is not usually a doctrine used in civil law systems, because it violates the legal positivist principle that only the legislature may make law. |
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