Also, to refuse to fold when a player knows that he or she is beat is stubbornness, not poker. |
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They are parochial in their attitudes, limited in their views and legendary in their stubbornness and resistance to change. |
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The Furies represent a guilty conscience and Medusa represents stubbornness that turns the heart to stone. |
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Her tragic flaw, depending on who you talk to in the family, is either stubbornness, selfishness or a love of suffering. |
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Persistence and tenacity, not to say downright stubbornness, are qualities that all tortoise owners will recognize. |
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Don't tell me that, as a nation, we can't distinguish courage from stubbornness, philosophy from platitudes, and an empty suit from a full one. |
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Is it willfulness, stubbornness, or just an attempt to be in control at the expense of everything and everyone else? |
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In a broader perspective, his stubbornness and inflexibility were immature and indescribably destructive. |
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There is a widely known stubbornness by these programmers in refusing to learn from the lessons proprietary software has to offer. |
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His stubbornness was taken by the augurs to signify the eternal nature of the boundaries of the Roman state. |
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Their national character contains a certain stubbornness, a necessary characteristic for contemporary folk artists. |
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Notice, though, that unshakeability does not have to equate with stubbornness or obstinacy. |
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A bad argument is like a bad marriage, marked by rage, perturbation, bewilderment, and stubbornness. |
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My theological orientation does not happen to be one which minimizes the stubbornness of man's depravity. |
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For rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft, and stubbornness is as iniquity and idolatry. |
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But his stubbornness during the last months of the war caused resentment after the war and some obloquy. |
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They simply want to get things done, and it's that steady, dogged persistence that winds up being viewed as stubbornness. |
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But his own stubbornness got the better of him and he refused to admit defeat. |
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Ignorance, fear, inertia, and stubbornness remain to be overcome. |
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I was committed to my plan out of sheer stubbornness if not near-poverty, and once I changed into some cutoffs and got on a southbound bus to Tulum, I was feeling much better. |
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Fuelled by a spirit of adventure, perseverance and a certain degree of stubbornness, the enterprise has grown over four generations. |
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I'm not sure whether this is stupidity, stubbornness or braveness on his part. |
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It shows me the example of the absurd magnificent stubbornness of the vegetable kingdom. |
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Pug lovers find playfulness, stubbornness, and intelligence as their pet's true colors. |
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Portuguese Pointers are tenacious hunters that cover terrain with single-mindedness and stubbornness, ensuring that no stone is left unturned. |
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Elsewhere too, Mariah Gale does her best as Juliet, with flashes of passion, desperation and coltish stubbornness. |
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The reason for the skin's stubbornness is the stratum corneum, a superficial layer of fat that has evolved to resist permeation. |
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Some people find out their self-righteousness and frameworks, but just keep them because of their pride or stubbornness. |
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I believe that it is not a sound practice to negotiate in a way that rewards deception, stubbornness, dirty tricks, and taking risks. |
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We can no longer approach Security Council reform with stubbornness and inflexibility. |
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For Roach, acting with self-professed stubbornness, the bike was just another challenge to be overcome. |
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It saddens me to see this kind of perseverance or unhealthy stubbornness in the government. |
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It appears that, once again, ordinary citizens will end up paying for the authorities' stubbornness and ignorance of the law. |
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With stubbornness and consistency, we have given impetus to enlargement by establishing clear dates, requirements and staging posts. |
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No matter how long its stubbornness or confusion lasts, that darkness will never be as enduring as my eternity. |
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The energy and stubbornness of these persons would be better used in some other, more focused and peaceful purposes. |
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Those who are not yet born again need to cast off their stubbornness and admit that they are grave sinners before God. |
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The matter isn't the justification of such allowances but the stubbornness of those who, as indicated by Lenin, lead to revolutions! |
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And even when by our stubbornness we sometimes miss opportunities, the Lord in His grace continues to love us and still desires to guide. |
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Try to find a way to turn her stubbornness from a weakness to a strength. |
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With all the stubbornness of the Plantagenets, Richard refused to yield. |
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He saw no virtue in stubbornness, and he could never have taken pleasure in the refusal to act on something. |
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There is no excuse for my carelessness in handling this situation, nor my stubbornness in delaying acknowledgment of my errors. |
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Trying to approach this gentle and mannerly retired professor about what seems to be going wrong, Miller encounters the deep stubbornness at the core of his being. |
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Anyone who's interested can learn something about the limits of political manipulation and the public's stubbornness just by visiting the nation's squares and marketplaces. |
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But what both men had in common was a streak of rugged individualism, stubbornness, and personal vision. |
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In a remarkable show of stubbornness, his office stuck to his initial statement in response to inquiries from reporters. |
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But an unquenchable thirst for victory allied to sheer stubbornness has got this Celtic side where they are and they weren't for ending this game minus all three points. |
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The Fullers persevered out of stubbornness, but more important out of an abiding love for their adopted continent. |
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With the headstrong stubbornness of youth, I was sure I understood. |
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Gwen, who is too heavy on the bleach at the end, and melts away into indeterminate paleness, survives through the excellent stubbornness of her direction. |
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He was remembered for having an absolute fearlessness in confronting authority on matters of principle and a complete stubbornness if he believed he was right. |
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That is they kept quibbling and prevaricating and showing stubbornness. |
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Mr Denktash, a tubby lawyer of 74, who is excoriated for his stubbornness by peace-mongering diplomats the world over, brims with self-confidence and bonhomie. |
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Call it pride, stubbornness or maybe naivete, but men especially tend to keep at it until the job is finished — or, too often, until disaster strikes. |
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That studies must be directed and structured, in order to avoid the problems posed by excessive casualness, by stubbornness, or by confused thinking, is evident and that is why a plan for studies is being prepared. |
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No doubt Mrs Larkin has displayed a certain stubbornness, rebelliousness even, in defying the enforcement notice. |
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If stubbornness can qualify certain characters, love can also show it. |
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Because of the minister's stubbornness and poor judgment, the City of Ottawa is still waiting for light rail and could be forced to pay hundreds of millions of dollars for breach of contract. |
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This is stubbornness verging on a denial of democracy, when it becomes clear that the Commission is daring to trot out the same proposal already rejected by Members of this Parliament. |
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Michael White writes: To stay in public life for 26 years after being rejected resoundingly by the electorate and one's own party suggests either implacable determination or bloody-minded stubbornness. |
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In his biography of 1980, Edward Gregg presents the Queen as a woman of invincible stubbornness, who was the central figure of her age. |
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In the Middle East, people are aware that 'something is wrong' and are beginning to demand accountability from their governments, although officials still tend to respond with arrogance and stubbornness. |
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He also exists in us as our rigidity and stubbornness. |
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We can be glad about one thing: thanks to the stubbornness of the Prime Minister and his party, the Chief Electoral Officer had no choice but to act. |
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Every breach of this principle unintentionally but inevitably rewards the criminal stubbornness which is spinning out the conflict at the expense of so many innocent victims. |
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To stick with the policy unbendingly, is to make the same mistake of policy stubbornness that led India to its present predicament. |
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The keys to this success are once again our flexibility, our typical entrepreneurship, our innovative creativity and the stubbornness with which Recticel presses ahead even in difficult circumstances. |
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I can't apologize enough for our stupidity and our stubbornness. |
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They should overcome their stubbornness and admit defeat. |
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They faced great resistance, however, from members of the different professions: lawyers, notaries and doctors fiercely opposed the entry of women into their ranks and their stubbornness lasted for many years. |
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Mr. Speaker, exhibiting stubbornness to fund safe and legal abortions overseas is a major step backward and it puts us on a very dangerous path, because it puts ideology to the forefront. |
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Sortu, the non-violent separatist movement that emerged in 2011, may have to drag ETA towards peace yet again. That would be welcomed by Madrid, but government stubbornness carries risks. |
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At a time when virtual space rules, Rottenberg reminds us of our actual solidity, of the material stubbornness of the body and so of the systems it depends on for nurture. |
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From the enchanting Princess Cupcake Jones series comes this new title in which immovable stubbornness meets implacable determination, and melts with charm in the experience. |
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