Collectively they were called tergiversate particles because they were so ambiguous, misleading and illusive. |
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To tergiversate is the act of becoming renegades, to force them to do an about-face and to change their minds. |
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If the ego-self is able to pretend to be interested in others and if it is able to approach them with tact to achieve its goals, it remains different from the coherent-self that, by definition, cannot pretend or tergiversate. |
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It would be advisable to think that in this context we can only and briefly recall duties and opportunities offered to our Enterprises which have no more time to tergiversate. |
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The officials soon concluded that the easiest way to remain on good terms with the court was to elude responsibility, to tergiversate, to prevent results. |
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