Depression had a grip he admitted, and his problems were compounded by the stigma towards mental health and mental breakdown. |
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Nevertheless, the stigma of remediation continues to shape writing center identity. |
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When the gynoecium did not abort, F1 flowers were protogynous with the stigma maturing prior to the anthers. |
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For example, petals may wilt and abscise more rapidly after pollen deposition on the stigma or pollen tube growth through the style. |
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Cohabitation was still frowned upon, illegitimate births a stigma and the nuclear family the accepted way of doing things. |
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Researchers are concerned that the way in which HIV and Aids is taught in schools adds to the stigma. |
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These genes have multiple alleles and are expressed either in the stigma or in the pollen. |
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The organisers feel that the match could be a beginning for making a political statement on the disease and the related stigma. |
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By volunteering to go, prisoners would win a remission of sentence and efface the stigma of jail. |
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Economic realities have helped to remove the old stigma associated with renting. |
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It appears fully satisfied with the idea that renaming the Outreach Fund will eliminate the stigma of race and gender preferences. |
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Modern dress also looks anachronistic in a world where respectability is a prime virtue and cuckoldry a social stigma. |
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If marriage confers social status and respectability, adultery confers a stigma. |
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When Thomas came in the league, Lilliputian linebackers still carried a stigma, even though it was slowly fading. |
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Entrepreneurs were seen as chancers, but the stigma of setting up a business and risking failure has lessened. |
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The Romantics turned self-destruction into a literary convention, further weakening the stigma attached to the act. |
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It was perhaps more of a stigma for the children that mother was living in sin than it was for the parents. |
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Knowing the results show most are late, we hope less stigma is attached to finishing late, as it is the rule rather than the exception. |
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Once considered the answer to America's affordable-housing void, the mobile home just can't escape its low-class, trailer-park stigma. |
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The stigma attached by many religions to abortion I believe to be unfounded. |
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African Americans and Hispanics shared the belief that education would help reduce the stigma. |
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Joining a dating agency has no stigma, it is tantamount to joining a private members' club. |
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It was very unusual to be from a divorced family then and yes, there was a bit of stigma. |
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They mean much more for the disabled children, who grow with a social stigma in an unfriendly environment. |
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Due to social stigma attached to it even the best marital relationships can come under strain. |
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The Enterprise Bill will help to reduce the stigma associated with honest failures, including bad-luck bankruptcies. |
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Blacks could escape the stigma of racial segregation enforced on southern railroads and buses. |
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For general bathing, people used the public baths but shied away from the communal washing areas, which had a stigma attached to them. |
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In the medical profession the stigma around mental illness has rarely been addressed. |
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There are a number of factors that may keep men out of treatment, ranging from lack of self-identification to perceived stigma. |
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Jack is trying to overcome the stigma of his megaflop movie, Last Year in Katmandu. |
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Family support groups and consumers have come out in the open breaking the shackles of stigma and fighting for their rights. |
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In self-pollination, the flower is monoclinous and the stigma receives pollen from the anthers of the same flower. |
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Activity was also detected in the stigma, receptacle, and petal and sepal veins, and in siliques and developing seeds. |
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It just perpetuates the stigma that welfare recipients are lazy bludgers who need to be forced into work. |
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And the choice of placements totally eclipses the old stigma of office typist or work site skivvy. |
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However, remedial education often carries a stigma because of its association with underprepared students. |
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They were unswerving in affirming the power of education to change people's attitude toward HIV and remove the stigma. |
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It too was a place to hide from the social and moral stigma of unwanted pregnancy. |
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I walk round a free man and am cleansed of the stigma of being branded a murderer. |
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By motivating teachers and students about physics, he also hopes to remove the stigma that physics is boring and only for nerds. |
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But even that non-controversial success was not enough to eradicate the stigma of her past. |
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Many nonworking mothers, like myself, would tell you that the stigma lies with us. |
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And that is not taking into account the stigma and notoriety associated with divorcees. |
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But even monastic women, after taking the vows of chastity, obedience and poverty, could not he cleansed of the stigma of Eve. |
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With so many children and parents overweight or obese, there's little stigma attached to being fat. |
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Tom speaks candidly about the stigma attached to a person leaving the priesthood and on the family of the priest. |
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Over the last decade, being over 30 and unattached has more than lost its stigma, it has actually become a status symbol. |
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Flynn says that she and the team were determined to remove the stigma attached to working away from the office. |
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They said the stigma of mental illness had declined and that empathy was high. |
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The only effective way to avoid the stigma altogether is to embrace abstinence prior to marriage. |
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Nurses who have substance abuse problems, therefore, carry the stigma associated with this breach in professionalism. |
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You'd eliminate the vote splitting and erase the stigma surrounding both parties. |
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For generations, people who suffer with mental illnesses have had to endure a terrible stigma. |
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Information was not available on stress or on the stigma of single motherhood referred to in other studies. |
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And that has done more than anything else to reduce the stigma of this disease in many countries. |
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There is no longer any social stigma attached to soft drug use, and the statistics bear this out. |
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There is a negative stigma attached to some of these government housing projects. |
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She hoped the report would raise awareness and begin to reduce the stigma surrounding the children. |
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The latter approach could help diminish the social stigma associated with the disabled in Russia, she said. |
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A given pollen grain blowing in the wind is thus unlikely to land on a receptive stigma. |
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For many recreational users, prescription methadone doesn't carry the same stigma as the typical street drug. |
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The whole perianth was colored, the anther dehiscence was extrorse, the stigma was subulate, and the perianth was hexamerous. |
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As the pistil emerged from the bracts, the style elongated and the stigma expanded markedly in size and, finally, became receptive to pollen. |
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Stromules were also observed in epidermal cells of the style and the stigma. |
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It is glorious that paganism faces the reality that we are sexual creatures, without applying a stigma to our earth-based bodies and desires. |
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When the stigma lobes spread out, this pollen is then deposited on the inner stigmatic surface. |
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Owning slaves who grew cotton enabled some Choctaw men to avoid the stigma attached to field work, which was traditionally associated with women. |
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The stigma consists of a long band of receptive tissue along the ventral side of the carpel, covered by long unicellular papillae. |
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Fourth, in many circles association with parapsychology is a social and an intellectual stigma. |
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In spite of postmodernism's loosening of the modernist canon, the stigma against classicism remains robust. |
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Today, the hymning of mental frailty has significantly reduced the stigma of idleness. |
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There is a stigma that transsexualism is a lifestyle choice. |
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Ransome-Kuti's sense of social responsibility overrode his apprehension of the social stigma and opprobrium that might affect his extended family. |
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And, thanks to a host of women posting photos of themselves with their colostomy bags, the condition is shedding its stigma. |
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The social stigma of losing necessitated strategy, even chicanery. |
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All of those interviewed suggested various ways of coping with the social stigma of ending a family relationship. |
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But there are also many reasons for having abortions that generate far more judgment and stigma. |
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The lower middle class is a demographic group burdened by stigma. |
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There are advocates for decriminalization and working to remove the stigma associated with addiction. |
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On a Freudian level, this social stigma against bad mothers reflects a deep-seated anxiety about maternal relationships. |
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Julie's mum, Linda Norfolk, said the tragedy had left the family broken-hearted and told how her daughter battled for years against the stigma of the condition. |
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The history of larp as a hobby for the rich and famous illustrates the superficiality of its current geeky stigma. |
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Doing so perpetuates the stigma of mental disorder, discouraging persons with mental disorders from seeking care. |
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The supermodel seems unaware or dismissive of the societal stigma that is often attached to public displays of breastfeeding. |
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Not only do they often face disproportionate stigma, but also disproportionate responsibility. |
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Not only will it help people to need help, but also it will help overcome stigma because I believe if insurance covers mental illnesses, it will be all right to have them. |
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Analysts say that the stigma of the CIA's experiments with mind-altering drugs during the Cold War has long tainted the field. |
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He was in a new city, in a different province, a new school, new friends, and being the 1960s he was shadowed by the stigma of being raised by a single parent. |
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The perceived stigma of being a domestic violence victim is also a factor. |
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There's the stigma that you may be removed from your leadership position. |
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The aim is to remove the social stigma attached to the disease. |
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It was during this first conversation that erica realized how much stigma her HPV status had. |
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Elspeth Reeve on why the culture of humiliation and stigma makes matters worse. |
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Within-flower transfer of pollen from anthers to stigma was achieved by depressing the keel petal of newly opened flowers using fine forceps. |
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Look at your identity subjectively, being Australian does not mean you are Anglo-Saxon or we should place the stigma that Australians means English. |
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But stigma is an understandable attempt to deal with the fact that people do all kinds of lousy or naive or bullheaded things. |
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Each carpel has a terminal stigma and a basal ovary with a single ovule. |
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Black people have long labored under the stigma of savagery. |
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To be a woman suffering from a drinking problem in America is a lonely enterprise, defined by stigma and judgment. |
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Many simply find it easiest to wear their orientation like a badge, and undoubtedly their efforts to demonstrate their sexual identity alleviate the stigma of asexualization. |
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Many people suffer from the disease, and it was very brave of him to come forward like this, especially because of, like he said, the terrible stigma attached to it. |
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Diseases of the brain have always carried a social and cultural stigma. |
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The genus is characterized by tetramerous flowers with bithecal anthers, lack of pseudostaminodia, a capitate or poorly defined stigma, and pollen of the Amaranthus type. |
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An addict could be prescribed Dilaudid with out the stigma and resonance that a drug like heroin carries with it. |
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In the hierarchy of medical issues that carry stigma and fear, HPV has a unique place. |
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Myerson herself appears to have bought into that stigma, offering mixed to negative views on the Miss America pageant. |
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The style, with a narrow bifid stigma, extends above the anthers by 5 mm. |
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Joyce C. Tang talks to them about shaking the stigma of plural marriage. |
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The Fresh Start Wales campaign is encouraging pregnant women to use Mothering Sunday to address the stigma of smoking during pregnancy. |
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The stigma is rooted in homophobia, regardless of the orientation of the HIVer. |
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Individuals suffering mental health problems experience stigma endemically and cross-culturally. |
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Even though escort agencies are legal in the United States it seems there a social stigma related to them. |
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The organization's primary mission is to normalize and civilianize PTS in the hope to eliminate the stigma that takes so many lives. |
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In 2010, the BBC analyzed the stigma over men crying during Titanic and films in general. |
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Concession is an honourable act and does not carry the stigma associated with quitting, and also allows for more socializing. |
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The centre of the flower houses around 20 stamens and a single capitate stigma. |
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The caudicles may dry up if the flower has not been visited by any pollinator, and the pollinia then fall directly on the stigma. |
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Their acceptance was grudging, as they carried the stigma of bondage in their lineage and, in the case of American slavery, color in their skin. |
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In the case of the West Country however, it seems that also social stigma has for a long time contributed to this process. |
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Nowadays there is not generally any stigma attached to either pronunciation. |
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As well as pride in one's accent, there is also stigma placed on many traditional working class dialects. |
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In many places, where abortion is illegal or carries a heavy social stigma, medical reporting of abortion is not reliable. |
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Because of this, individuals with mental illness are also susceptible to stigma. |
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The patient with the latter carries an obvious stigma as the one less likely to be fully rehabilitable for social usefulness. |
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The third stigma is sterile and has developed into the rostellum, a sticky structure that aids in pollination by attaching the pollen to insects. |
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There's far less stigma attached to being single than there used to be, so fewer of us feel pressured into the quest for permanent coupledom. |
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Thus, the revised theory merely mitigates and obscures the untenability, harshness, intrusiveness, and stigma objections to the old. |
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More despicably, mothers often bear the brunt of the communal stigma. |
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The loss is due to the loss of marketability and rentability during the cleanup period only, and not to subsequent stigma, as here defined. |
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Today, the process has been digitized and the social stigma minimized. |
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The idea is to encourage players to identify potential issues and open up without stigma. |
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The one-time stigma about attending a technical school or community college to learn industrial arts is fading. |
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Nanomechanical properties of the stigma of dragonfly Anax parthenope julius Brauer. |
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A quadrangular four-lobed, persistent floral tube includes a single stout style with peltate stigma. |
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These serious mental illnesses are also associated with a great deal of stigma and discrimination. |
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And I think about the beginning of the end of stigma and gay bashing, internalized homophobia and closets, and lying about who we are. |
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With more education and awareness about the disease, specific communities have tried to eliminate the social stigma linked to cancer patients. |
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They should not care about the social stigma attached with some professions. |
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Such stigma is tightly bound with somatization of symptoms, or the manifestation of psychological illness as physical symptoms. |
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In a proletarianized intelligentsia with a mass audience, anonymity is the stigma of powerlessness, and powerlessness the punishment for anonymity. |
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This is regrettable as It reinforces the social stigma surrounding menstruation, thus encouraging a detrimental relationship with this physiological cycle. |
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Or must the country passively submit to that dulocracy in politics which has become a stigma upon the nation, and a shame to the intelligence of the people? |
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However, stigma often remained attached and there could be strict separations between slave members of a kinship group and those related to the master. |
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This occurs when the anther changes from a solid to a liquid state and directly contacts the stigma surface without the aid of any pollinating agent or floral assembly. |
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These diseases most acutely affect the poorest communities in underserved regions, causing disability, social stigma, economic hardship and sometimes death. |
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Some people, however, have become so wary of this construction that they have extended the stigma to any use of Jew as a noun, a practice that carries risks of its own. |
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Buyers were allowed to inspect naked men and women for sale in private and there was no stigma attached to the purchase of males by a male aristocrat. |
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A report by research group Mintel earlier this year showed half the population would not even consider using a dating agency because of the stigma attached. |
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The stigma is the problem for those who don't want to come out of the closet, because they'll be labelled as the floppy wristed pansies that everybody thinks they should be. |
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Its ovary is hypogynous with two chambers, stigma and style. |
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In this epidemic as in past Ebola outbreaks, survivors often face stigma, income loss, and both grief and survivor guilt over the loss of family and friends. |
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Pedicellate cylindrical upper ovary surmounted by a style emerging from a corolla and ending in a stigma divided in two very wide sensitive laminae. |
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Saffron is expensive because you can find its active ingredients, the antioxidant carotenoids crocin and crocetin, only in the three thread-like stigma inside each flower. |
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Women in Mauritania who press charges for sexual assault face the risk of jail because of poorly defined laws and stigma that criminalises victims rather than offenders. |
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Cohabiting for the purpose of marriage carried with it no social stigma. |
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