All of her teachers had sympathy on her, since she was their favorite student, they allowed her to retake tests and makeup missed work. |
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As to walking through tough bits of town, it's not sympathy I was hoping to elicit for anyone. |
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Such sympathy was profoundly misdirected, comforting aggressors rather than victims. |
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She has universal name recognition and a deep reservoir of public sympathy. |
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Thus, if we are to associate Hawthorne's explanation of sympathy with any genre, it should not be with either romance or sentimental fiction. |
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The book is something of a tour de force in creating sympathy for a character who, properly speaking, ought to arouse feelings of contempt. |
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I can only hope that it may arouse interest, some sympathy and understanding for fellow human beings in wretched circumstances. |
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Sam patted his back in fake sympathy before pushing back her chair to leave the table. |
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As a Liberal, Adelard Godbout was a supporter of Mackenzie King, the prime minister of Canada, and a royalist in sympathy with the British cause. |
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Jay nods and I see that his joking expression has been replaced with a look of sympathy. |
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Channel those emotions as you read this, and send me all your love and sympathy. |
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They are also astute at maintaining public sympathy by regularly deserting the picket lines to save lives. |
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In the few seconds before my lucidity gave way to blind panic, I felt no little sympathy for the poor chap as he faced this calamity. |
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He was a kindly man with much sympathy for refugees from totalitarian countries, whose misdirection of science he detested. |
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We all want to be decent, human beings, and not stick a shiv in the formerly bloated hillbilly heroin junkie, but that sympathy is misplaced. |
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I just feel like I am coming across as a seeker of sympathy or a bewailer of my woes. |
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Watching them work, they felt a surge of sympathy for the soldiers who alternated in pairs as they screwed the augers into the semi-frozen earth. |
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The shards of glass that have fallen inside the booth rattle in sympathy with the grinding percussive rhythm. |
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All I can do is offer tea and sympathy and resist the urge to nag him to go see a dentist. |
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Rodzinski conducts both of them superbly, with complete sympathy for their melancholy and eruptive Magyar ethos. |
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There's an innate tappable sympathy for the underdog, in sports as well as investment. |
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To express any form of sympathy for them makes a mockery of what I feel for their victims. |
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Deirdre murmured, a tear tracing a path down her cheek, from sympathy, or from the bruises Alana was probably inflicting, he had no idea. |
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In this heartland of rice paddies and small towns, family means a lot and sympathy for the recently bereaved even more. |
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Votes of sympathy were extended to all the members who were recently bereaved. |
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I am deeply moved by reading this story and my deepest sympathy goes out to the person who wrote it. |
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Of course he was going to have a sniff at the first piece of totty that showed him any sympathy and consideration. |
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She was much beloved of many here, although unionists had many problems with her irreverence and perceived sympathy for Irish nationalism. |
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On behalf of my family, I'd like to express our deep appreciation for the overwhelming care and sympathy we have received. |
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Up to this point, she has carried the movie on a relatively tolerable level of interest, having gained some sympathy from the viewer. |
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Thinking in terms of the usual to and fro, Joe Duffy's team dredged up a couple of callers willing to feel a vague sympathy for Burke. |
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At the group's last meeting, sympathy was extended to his wife, Alice, and family and a minute's silence was observed in his memory. |
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The staff was cagy, but confirmed my suspicion with slight, knowing expressions and small tight smiles of sympathy. |
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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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Liberal and egalitarian in sympathy, they eschewed class analysis for civic meliorism, in keeping with his own social democratic values. |
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After the horrors in Madrid there was a huge amount of media coverage and worldwide sympathy. |
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The tick-tock of his misdeeds indicates that he shrewdly exploited his bosses' sympathy for his psychological problems. |
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Attempts have been made to subordinate sympathy to self-love, but they appear to me perverse. |
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Possibly, this sympathy could appear somewhat self-indulgent, or over-dramatic, if not actually absurdly histrionic. |
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Holmes only chooses subjects that excite his curiosity and sympathy as well as his literary admiration. |
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The domestic theatre is her strength, her writer's eye picking out the daily victories, everyday meanness, with sensitivity and sympathy. |
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I went to a bar where the bartenders know me and would give me sympathy drinks for free. |
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She expressed sympathy for the poor bar person who has to calculate that, while another 20 or so customers wait to be served. |
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Markus and his third-class version of guilty sympathy made me more incensed and panicked than Tom's threatening and blackmailing ways. |
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But my sympathy is entirely with him in the matter of this guy squirting water into his face. |
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Immorality prevails as sympathy for the unfortunate diminishes into thin air. |
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Mr Lillycrop, who has complete sympathy for under pressure dentists, pleaded with those who hold the purse strings, to deal with the problem. |
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Few can have sympathy for a team who starts a match as if they are already one up. |
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It is at this stage that the plot thickens and sympathy for some parents vanishes. |
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I'm finally back in my room and feeling a special sort of sympathy for Iditarod mushers. |
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Military units raised by the Crown in the mid-18th century were not in sympathy with the Jacobitism that pervaded the majority of Highland clans. |
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Although he is a rogue and a rascal, Abagnale is treated with warm-hearted sympathy throughout the film. |
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Umberto D appears as a remarkable accomplishment today, a film that evokes our sympathy for its protagonist without sentimentality. |
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Its developers worked in unusual sympathy, preserving the watercourses, mature trees and shoreline that were, and remain, the site's patrimony. |
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Deepest sympathy is accorded to her loving family and all that regret her passing. |
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Husband Brian offered no sympathy but couldn't wait for the peace and quiet. |
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I don't think anyone has sympathy for what was undisputedly a racist statement. |
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Since then we've donated to various causes to salve our guilt or conscience or out of sympathy. |
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But then the man turns out to be a laid-off engineer who's putting on an act to gain sympathy. |
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Those interjections were very reasonable, and the Minister was simply putting on an act to try to get some sympathy. |
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But they can expect little sympathy from the anti-globalisation protesters, already skirmishing yesterday with the police in south-west France. |
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The alternative story is that St Peter threw a John Dory back into the sea after it had engaged his sympathy by making distressed noises. |
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They express their profound gratitude to those who sent Mass cards, letters and cards of sympathy, floral tributes and phone calls. |
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Deepest sympathy is extended to his sons Micheal and Richard, mother Mary, brothers, uncles, aunts, nephews, nieces and a wide circle of friends. |
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Inconsolable, she struggles to find meaning in her work or the well-intentioned sympathy of her mother. |
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Another aspect of relief operations is the welter of frenzied calls by the media to evoke sympathy and monetary and other contributions. |
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The Triple Alliance of transport workers, miners, and railwaymen was in existence by 1914 and had a strategy of sympathy strikes in place. |
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I have sympathy for the circumstances they found themselves in, but just a second, let me make this absolutely clear. |
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Perhaps that's why they didn't seem to have any true sympathy for how I felt. |
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She has a fondness for rascally men, a distaste for bossy wives, and a sympathy for anyone who leads with the heart instead of the brain. |
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I don't want to be mean and uncaring, but there is only so much sympathy and concern to spread around. |
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The Standard joins the many friends of the bereaved children in extending consolation and sympathy in their great affliction. |
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Thus, the novel's obsession with sympathy and its thematization of philanthropy are part of the same project. |
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The sincere sympathy of the community is extended to her family, relatives and friends on their loss. |
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This accomplished and supremely readable book commands our sympathy and evokes a regret for what might have been. |
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The gain was in authorial sympathy and readerly involvement, as well as the dispersal of interpretive possibilities. |
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Considerable sympathy and understanding was shown for the difficulties facing allied troops in Iraq. |
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Self-inflicted pain might enhance the masochist's sense of control over others by manipulating their sympathy or provoking a punitive response. |
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Deepest sympathy is tendered to his sons, daughters, in-laws and grandchildren on his passing. |
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My heartfelt sympathy goes out to all the families who have lost sons and husbands, fathers, brothers. |
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Our sympathy and prayers go out to them all on this anniversary of Kieran's death. |
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And I often meet with the parents of soldiers who were killed in action, and my heartfelt sympathy goes out to all of them. |
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A year ago, sympathy for the United States was close to unanimous across the planet. |
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There are plenty of false martyrs out there that are completely unworthy of our sympathy. |
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We should have sympathy for such a person, but that does not change the fact that his position is objectively wrong and sinful. |
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To all the family and relations deepest and sincere sympathy is extended on this very sad occasion. |
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Instead, she becomes a martyr and as she does so we start to lose sympathy. |
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There are animal rights campaigners who quite simply get no sympathy from me at all. |
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And sympathy isn't necessarily just a pose struck in order to kill him with kindness. |
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She will never reach the age when the tumults of young adulthood can be looked back upon with rueful sympathy and without anger and vengefulness. |
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The rumour then said that the failed registration was planned in order to make the leader look like a martyr and win the sympathy of the people. |
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He sounded so woeful, his expression so longing, that I had felt sympathy for him. |
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The only way in which I can recuperate my humiliation is to turn it into an amusing anecdote that elicits laughter or sympathy. |
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But every time you feel you might just have some sympathy for Archer he puts his foot in it again. |
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His eyes were pleading with her, sympathy and pity and wonder all at the same time. |
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He, of all people should know better than to park illegally in a disabled space and deserves no sympathy whatsoever. |
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All of us feel sympathy for employees at factories and plants who are made redundant by companies based in other countries. |
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Her stories are told without censure, and with sympathy for both children and parents, especially working mothers. |
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The eyes of the man standing beside the bed were welling with the vaguest mix of pity, anxiety, worry, sympathy, and pain. |
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Many of the political reformers with whom the artist felt instinctive sympathy supported the French. |
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I've often wondered how the Trots justify being led by someone who clearly has little sympathy for them. |
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The alienist thus comes into court with a friendly feeling towards the lawyers for the defense together with a sympathy for the accused. |
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The thread of disbelief in his voice was laced with a subtle smear of sympathy. |
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Nor does sympathy for what Americans are going through make us capitalist lackeys, stooges of Bush and Blair, or enemies of the Arab world. |
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He sighed, feeling sympathy for a man who had been totally in love and now was suffering the misery of total rejection. |
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This meant genuine sympathy when things went wrong and rejoicing at one another's achievements. |
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While the plight of parasitic lice and mites are unlikely to attract outpourings of public sympathy, more charismatic insects are also at risk. |
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We extend sincere sympathy to his mother Maisie, sister and brothers, relations and many friends. |
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We extend to all her sons, daughters, grandchildren, relations and friends our heartfelt sympathy. |
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Thomas was watching her with relief so palpable that she ached in sympathy. |
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In spite of his less than friendly attitude toward the man, Carson couldn't help feeling some sympathy for the poor guy. |
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I have the greatest sympathy for this poor woman in her tragic loss, but just think about it! |
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We have no shows of sympathy for the poor man trying to fit everything into 24 hours. |
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Such prisoners will probably not express contrition or remorse or sympathy for any victim. |
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Lamb undertook the charge of his sister, who remained liable to periodic breakdowns, and she repaid him with great sympathy and affection. |
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It is a testament to the quality of the actors that they were able to wring rudimentary sympathy out of this stupefying script. |
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I thought it was great in a way because I thought, gee, maybe we can get some sympathy for the press going finally. |
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We expressed sympathy for her being short-staffed on such a busy night, and she asked if we liked free stuff. |
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Please do not support their anti-social behaviour by misreporting the situation and seeking sympathy for their cause. |
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No one made me hot lemon drinks or brought me books to read, or showed the slightest sign of sympathy. |
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We feel deep sympathy for such children and lament their continuing misfortune. |
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To his wife, his daughters, and all his extended family, we tender our sincere sympathy. |
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The best thing about this movie was that it reversed the polarity of our sympathy while also deepening it. |
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As well as tea and sympathy, they were lavishly attended on by waiters bearing fine wines and sumptuous snacks in the palace's state apartments. |
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I have great sympathy for him, as far as the press are concerned, because the press are pretty beastly to all the royal family these days. |
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Occasionally, I lose my bearings and permit myself an ounce of sympathy for Republican chairman Reince Priebus. |
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It would appear that when it came to the bottom line, Washington was not overflowing with sympathy. |
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We're meant to feel sympathy for a man who walked out on his kid some 14 years earlier, who once even beat his wife after a vicious yelling match escalated. |
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At the same time, I also felt some sympathy for an 18-year old who sounds a bit freaked out by the Blogosphere's focused attention on her quotidian activities. |
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Even if Nichols cheats a bit about a few details, he makes his main characters tragicomically true to life, racily human enough to wrest sympathy from the sourest souls. |
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I have said that the circumstances do not deserve one jot of sympathy. |
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She is a natural listener and it is easy to imagine her in a white coat with a stethoscope in her pocket, dispensing sympathy and stern wisdom at the bedside. |
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And not only were these books wonderful reads, but the author's heart was always in the right place, with a special sympathy for the misfits and the emotionally wounded. |
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Gloria entered Artie's office clutching her wounded arm, hoping it would buy her a little sympathy before he reamed her for her disappearance earlier that day. |
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There is little room for sympathy when chief executives screw up, particularly if shareholders, employees and customers are left holding the baby. |
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The council objected to a window design that was not in sympathy with the traditional shop windows or cottage windows of the vicinity and the application was refused. |
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They could well have calculated that winging Chen was the best way of unleashing a sympathy vote for the Green cause that would yield them an avalanche of cash in lost wagers. |
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Much of the public support grew out of sympathy for Polly Klaas, a young girl who was kidnapped and murdered in California by a recidivist criminal. |
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Like most kids, I had my own experience of alienation, but the urge to merge with the crowd was stronger than any sympathy I might have shared for another outcast. |
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Sincere sympathy is extended to his nieces, nephews and relations. |
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McGrath carefully charts her increasing sympathy for the people she is required to spy on, and her growing belief that it is the big corporations that demand penetration. |
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He met Lenin and clearly felt some sympathy for the Bolshevik leader. |
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A pupil of Domenichino, he was most in sympathy with classical art, but he also appreciated the Baroque, and enriched his narratives with anecdote and vivid detail. |
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The mass sackings led to sympathy action by 1,000 British Airways ground staff and the halting of all BA flights at Heathrow Airport for more than 24 hours. |
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But among ferocious ideologues, similar roots are no guarantee of mutual sympathy when schisms occur. |
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Since Monday, Nation Hahn has received an outpouring of sympathy notes on his Twitter page. |
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Being a parent myself has given me both additional sympathy and some hands-on experience with things that seem to be effective. |
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Her arrest and detention for uttering the Shema ought to find no sympathy from any Jew. |
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I am not condoning corporal punishment but some sympathy must go out to the teacher whose patience must have been taxed to the limit and which seems to have snapped. |
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Players grumbled that Johnson had sneaked offside before netting the equaliser but, if they were looking for tea and sympathy from their manager, they didn't get it. |
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If kids don't know the difference between right and wrong by the time they are 15 there's something seriously wrong with them or they need discipline not tea and sympathy. |
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A great dissatisfaction towards the weak Manchu government was shown in reports published during the time, as well as sympathy for the plight of the locals. |
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His specialties are attracting the sympathy of the jury for his physical pluck and amusing it with his lively wit. |
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There has also been an outpouring of sympathy and shared stories from other women who have been victims of stalking. |
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Deepest sympathy is extended to her family and the Marist community. |
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Figuring the outlaw as the martyred victim of both tyranny from without and treachery from within, oral tradition solicits sympathy and even pity for the people's hero. |
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The bag contained a teddy bear, some fruit and some clothes but magistrates had no sympathy and banged him up for 10 days under public nuisance laws. |
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His family members would like to extend there heartfelt appreciation and thanks to so many people who attended the funeral, sent messages of sympathy and Mass cards. |
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He looked at us searchingly, a doleful expression demanding our sympathy. |
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Those who erected barricades were more intent on securing the sympathy of opposition politicians for immediate objectives than taking charge of government. |
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I'm sad to see the last of the poppies, and I feel a deal of sympathy with the plants that are suffering under the drought, but I'm also enjoying the sun. |
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Unfortunately, he ends up more involved than the viewer, because the leading characters are self-obsessed, self-pitying and lacking in redemptive sympathy. |
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She needed to be tough, and sympathy would only throw her off guard. |
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Few people who knew the Cleveland kidnapper have expressed sympathy over his suicide. |
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But Jenkins doesn't resort to sentimentalising her to generate sympathy. |
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There is no sentimentality in his sympathy for his characters. |
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Their site's message board contains a mixture of sympathy and criticism. |
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The fact that most audiences end up feeling some degree of sympathy for Mother Courage irritated Brecht to no end. |
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Zelaya's ouster was controversial, and his supporters counted on leveraging his image as a coup victim into a sympathy vote. |
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In this case, it removes any traces of sympathy I might have had. |
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Don Brash wouldn't have minded paying the dry cleaning bill to get the mud out of his suit, because that particular assault just gave him public sympathy towards his message. |
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Producing affective switch points between two simultaneous registers of sympathy and ridicule, minstrel performances catalyze confrontations within social relations. |
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Behind her, Jenny stood meekly and her eyes shone with sympathy. |
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I in turn don't contain even the merest trace elements of sympathy for the ambitious, vain and greedy trendoids who masquerade as contestants on these shows. |
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While we lament our loss, and express our deepest sympathy for her children and mokopuna, we must all treasure and uphold the legacy she leaves behind. |
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Robbie was rejected by his brothers and sisters, and only his mother showed a modicum of sympathy. |
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And what you know can just as well be a source of sympathy as well as a provocation to unmasking. |
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He champions what looks suspiciously like a lost cause, courts clubs who have no sympathy for his plight and casts about for players who don't exist. |
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He said that only deep and real sympathy for both sides in this conflict would ever yield anything of value. |
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And too many parents are left muddlingly only among those who express sympathy and criticism, and don't help them along the road of seeing the gifts. |
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The first moment after a disaster, we do not need news anchors unchained to any news, no shred of useful information, but plenty of unctuous sympathy. |
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The look in her eyes was one of sympathy but also understanding. |
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He left us these stories, unexcelled in accuracy and sympathy. |
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We are left wondering whether they had anything more to offer than tea and sympathy. |
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In the view of some cops, perps merit little concern or sympathy. |
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He advocated principles of commercial freedom but also showed sympathy for the working class. |
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Bright received many letters and telegrams of sympathy from the Queen downwards. |
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There was simply no way we could reach her but, out of sympathy and Samaritanism, I figured a course and distance on the chart, just in case. |
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Plucky pensioner Esther Rantzen's sympathy sobbing for distraught cave dweller David Van Driver was toe curling. |
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Solatia payments are given as an expression of sympathy toward a victim or his family when there is no legal mechanism to make a claim. |
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Whatever Shakespeare's degree of sympathy with such inversions, the play ends with a thorough return to normative gender values. |
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Or is it Cameron's Tories, stuffed with Old Etonians who have little understanding of ordinary people's problems and even less sympathy? |
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The early vote affords Peres' Labor Party a chance to capitalize on the broad wave of sympathy created by the Nov. |
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A MOTHER of two set fire to her own terraced house in a cry for sympathy and a bid to be rehoused. |
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She did not weep on cue in public when Monteith died, or seek sympathy. |
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The tourist made a complaint to the police and, despite sympathy, the sentry was confined to barracks for ten days. |
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This shows us that Hume's justification of justice as an artificial virtue is in conflict with his associationist system of sympathy. |
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According to a new study, Asian elephants recognize when a herd mate is upset and offer gentle care and sympathy. |
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While many people will have little sympathy with junkies the methadone programme is a vital tool to stabilise drug users. |
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Yet if it's a non-famous person, they're called alkies and junkies, and there's no sympathy whatsoever. |
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In shahnameh, the old people's faces of Wisse and Agrirath are so attractive that the reader Feels sympathy about them. |
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Rita Ora is really milking the sympathy she's getting for having her wisdom teeth removed. |
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We as a nation should show sympathy to those suffering in war-torn countries who are looking for a better life for their families. |
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Friends are a comfort in misfortune, but one should not make them unhappy by seeking their sympathy, as is done by women and womanish men. |
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It is an awful thing to find your efforts supervacaneous when you are so far away from home and friends, sympathy, and help. |
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The IOC expressed sympathy but ultimately rejected the request. |
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His successless attempt earned him sympathy, condolences, and an occasional good-natured ribbing. |
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The people, in sympathy, are themselves repetitive and unglamorous. |
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He is callous and unfeeling, with no sympathy for either the animals in his experiments or his subordinate, Stephen Powell. |
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I have no sympathy with those smokers who moan on about having to go outside pubs and clubs to light up their ciggies. |
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Despite sympathy for the Confederacy, France's own seizure of Mexico ultimately deterred them from war with the Union. |
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Many people sent cards and flowers in demonstration of their sympathy. |
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The Finns were embittered over having lost more land in the peace than on the battlefields, and over the perceived lack of world sympathy. |
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He had a great love for humanity and deep sympathy with the downtrodden and oppressed. |
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Every little pine needle expanded and swelled with sympathy and befriended me. |
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Lewis's experiences in World War I, and his sympathy for the cause of Irish independence, brought him to Welsh nationalism. |
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If they want to express solidarity and sympathy, they tend to seek common features in their behavior. |
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This work was concerned with how human morality depends on sympathy between agent and spectator, or the individual and other members of society. |
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Some maintain that arbitration avoids prejudiced juries and sympathy verdicts, but such remarks may merely reflect their utterers' antijury bias. |
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Wreaths with messages of sympathy for the casualties were displayed on the coffins. |
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The conspiracy, known as the Rye House Plot, backfired upon its conspirators and provoked a wave of sympathy for the King and James. |
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Gilbert shows sympathy for his protagonist, the son of a thief who, brought up among thieves, kills his girlfriend. |
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During the English Civil War, King Charles fled to the Isle of Wight, believing he would receive sympathy from the governor Robert Hammond. |
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Simpson's argument is that substitutability is a better term for understanding the political significance of Wordsworth's poetry than sympathy. |
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On the behalf of the citizens of Canada, may I extend to you an expression of our combined gratitude and sympathy. |
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Fans won't have much sympathy that the unbanned journalists had their prematch meal withdrawn on match days. |
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He was able to gain sympathy from both the urban and the rural masses through Gandhism. |
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The Trade Disputes and Trade Unions Act 1927 banned sympathy strikes and mass picketing. |
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Now we are obliged to work from a new point of departure, and dictate to Turkey, who has forfeited all sympathy. |
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He also shows rare sympathy for the chief inspector and his comic domestic life. |
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Like the appeals to sympathy and generosity, the appeal to civic-mindedness attempts to capitalize on benevolent feelings. |
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He provides an alternative view of rural England in the age of an Industrial Revolution with which he was not in sympathy. |
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But having managed, himself, in the constrictive conditions of St James' Park under Mike Ashley, can he afford McClaren any sympathy? |
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Letters of sympathy were sent to the families of the victims. |
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A MOTHER was sent a sympathy card from a clinic where she had an abortion which contained scans of her foetus. |
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But Fieger said the officers seized Correa's pain medicine, a sympathy card and her rosary. |
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Tut-tuts of sympathy and regret are the general response as the brain short circuits from sensory overload. |
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Such counterpoints to the original outweigh the excesses of sympathy. |
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Shelley emphasises domesticity, romance, family, sympathy, and compassion in the lives of her subjects. |
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After a few days I found my sympathy with them rather than with the employers. |
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Even Lemon, for all her protofascist beliefs, wins our sympathy. |
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Catherine refused to accept Henry as Supreme Head of the Church in England and considered herself the King's rightful wife and queen, attracting much popular sympathy. |
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This argument about cheapness was the one with which she most successfully met Theobald, who grumbled more suo that he had no sympathy with his son's extravagance and conceit. |
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Deepest sympathy to Jonathan and al l the family on the sad loss of Linda. |
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Also to thank the emergency services that attended my late Husband Ron, family, friends and neighbours, floral tributes, donations to the Heart Foundation and sympathy cards. |
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This paper argues that the misologists are presented as a type of protoskeptic and that Socrates in fact shows covert sympathy for their position. |
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They received practically no support or sympathy from those they met, including family members, who were terrified at the prospect of being associated with treason. |
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Blessed are the poor, the sick, the crossed in love, for at least other people know what is the matter with them and will listen to their belly-achings with sympathy. |
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Charlotte taught, and wrote about her students without much sympathy. |
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She only replied with a laugh, and he evidently deemed futile the bid for sympathy on the score of religious or irreligious fellowship, for he recurred to it no more. |
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Another point is that although their love is passionate, it is only consummated in marriage, which keeps them from losing the audience's sympathy. |
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Want a little cheese with that whine? As if we are ever in control anyway. Hard to have sympathy for an attitude like that, yet how many of us really do have that mindset? |
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Despite her sympathy for the revolution, life for Wollstonecraft become very uncomfortable, all the more so as the Girondins had lost out to the Jacobins. |
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Mary glossed Percy's political radicalism as a form of sentimentalism, arguing that his republicanism arose from sympathy for those who were suffering. |
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Emin spoke out angrily against what she perceived as a general public lack of sympathy, and even amusement, at the loss of the artworks in the fire. |
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No throngs of faithful followers greet him when he deplanes, though one or two always come up to say a word of thanks or to offer sympathy for his fight. |
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What Eadred thought of the matter or how much sympathy he bore for his brother's godson can only be guessed at, but it seems that he at least tolerated Olaf's presence. |
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At the limits of the novel, in Walton's restricted epistolary voice, sympathy is possible only in its textually and novelistically recreated form. |
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More sympathy for career criminals from the bleeding-heart brigade! |
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Mary Shelley's works often argue that cooperation and sympathy, particularly as practised by women in the family, were the ways to reform civil society. |
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Thomas was indulged by his mother and enjoyed being mollycoddled, a trait he carried into adulthood, and he was skilful in gaining attention and sympathy. |
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But she is not getting a lot of sympathy at the moment and I fear the result of her trial reflects all the unjustness of that prejudice against the discarded wife. |
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He showed signs of sympathy to Puritanism, attending the sermons of the Puritan chaplain of Gray's Inn and accompanying his mother to the Temple Church to hear Walter Travers. |
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