Or, to put it another way, he was the gate-crasher, the interloper, the thief who stole the thunder. |
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Or to put it another way, I want to borrow from the concrete world and project it into the realm of the abstract, where the lyric exists. |
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A closer look reveals quite clearly that this is a pseudo joint paper, or, to put it another way, that it is falling apart at the seams. |
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Or, to put it another way, why didn't we move the goalposts? |
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Or to put it another way, it appears to have been a nightmare, as I would like to assume that I do not spend my nights pondering economic data. |
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On the other hand, it is most difficult to assess the relative importance of the causes of depopulation or, to put it another way, to ascertain to what extent the respective causes contribute to the rarefaction of the fauna. |
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Or, to put it another way, whether the government's eyes for embarking on high-minded adventures of the Libyan kind are bigger than its stomach for resourcing them. |
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The strategy naturally anticipates an increase in the primary surplus and, to put it another way, using growth potential essentially in order to reduce taxes. |
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That decision will be the one which is least morally objectionable, or, to put it another way, involves least disrespect for the values which figure in the case. |
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It was, to put it another way, quite astonishing to see how much, and to what at extent, the party-state depended on lies. |
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The Liverpool dressing-room in the 1980s had a reputation for its cutting wit, or piss-taking to put it another way. |
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Or to put it another way, sweeping helps make the stone not curl. |
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Or, to put it another way, Ronald Fergus, middle aged, overweight, underhaired and slightly lacking in the marbles department, was in his kitchen chatting. |
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Or, to put it another way, moolah, poppy, shrapnel and spondoolicks. |
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Or, to put it another way, to zombify the host and reprogram its brain. |
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To put it another way, outputs are the means to an end, while outcomes are the desired end itself. |
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To put it another way, the work is self-referential to the extent that language and the poem are Pastior's only subjects. |
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To put it another way, if neither side had nuclear weapons, they would be at war right now. |
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To put it another way, science also rejects the flat-earthers, the breatharians and the creationists. |
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To put it another way, no law should be immoral, but not all of morality should be enforced by law. |
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To put it another way, critics of the faith-based approach may claim that their only issue is with religion. |
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To put it another way the Canadian control sector of the industry was too weak to profit from any opportunities provided by forced divestiture. |
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To put it another way, we want to know what our bodies are capable of and we want to make comparisons with other athletes or people. |
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To put it another way, do we have the desire and, especially, the courage to work hard at changing what must be changed while we still can? |
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To put it another way, contingent-claims pricing is relative pricing, which should be free of risk preferences. |
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To put it another way, it implies that the country actually has more than one-party system, and that quite different patterns of party interaction may be found within these different systems. |
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To put it another way, these traditional appellations may be freely used with reference to other quality wines. |
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To put it another way, in America and Great Britain, the neoliberal turn depended on huge industrial confrontations. |
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To put it another way, how can the nonphysical give rise to the physical without violating the laws of conservation of mass, of energy and of momentum? |
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To put it another way, it is reasonably arguable that excising the victim's identity constitutes a minimal trivial derogation from the requirement of openness. |
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To put it another way, we may need to tell one another and ourselves major whoppers, and not just little white lies, to replenish our interest in life. |
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To put it another way, energy must be put into something to get it moving, and usually, the more energy that is put into an object, the faster it moves. |
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To put it another way, here we go again with the systematic bleeding of Central and Eastern European countries by big investors, particularly from Western Europe. |
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To put it another way, a pair of dice isn't broken if it rolls a seven. |
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To put it another way, a hat burns on the head of every self-denier. |
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To put it another way, Lyne argues that Shakespeare's plays feature characters that think through tropes. |
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