Many immigrants had faced countless, well-meaning but ineffective approaches to integration, so their skepticism was understandable. |
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Sometimes well-meaning people around us want us to be the same as we were before the death. |
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The biggest damage to health has instead come from hypochondria and well-meaning but misguided attempts to help people. |
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At the same time, a large number of highly educated and well-meaning people are well aware of the absurdity of the situation. |
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However, we recognize that it takes a lot more than well-meaning statements to make change happen. |
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She was no wisecracking dame like Rosalind Russell or goofy, well-meaning wife like Irene Dunne. |
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Political organizations and movements, however well-meaning, have their own agendas. |
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Over time, however, these same factors can begin to negatively impact the mental and physical health of these well-meaning professionals. |
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On the contrary, it welcomed well-meaning criticism and suggestions from other countries. |
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But well-meaning parents often stop us from doing these things out of fear that it may adversely affect our health. |
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Your work shows that action changes attitudes towards disabilities more than any well-meaning public relations campaign ever can. |
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He was a quick-witted, well-meaning man who went with the stream instead of having the vision and strength of judgment to stand out against it. |
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The service is well-meaning, gentle and friendly, but not completely polished. |
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Such a political climate has been created that well-meaning people are even afraid to talk about it. |
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Blind dates fixed up by well-meaning friends can be a pain, if not a disaster, and making contact through a dating agency can be a bit intense. |
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Instead, like well-meaning Pied Pipers, we play our tunes hoping the children might follow us instead of the other guy taking them off the cliff. |
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Service was very well-meaning, even though it was a little fussy at some points and a little lost at others. |
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He was a liberal-minded and well-meaning man, with severe limitations as an artist. |
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The only signs of life were the shiny tiles of the driveway, washed daily by well-meaning neighbors. |
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I too have well-meaning friends who concern themselves with what I eat or don't eat. |
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Society became flooded with well-meaning do-gooders who bumbled about in the most hopeless manner. |
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Thus, there was little a well-meaning band of foreign do-gooders could achieve by meddling. |
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Despite the fervent hopes of many hard-working and well-meaning ostriches, the problem refuses to evaporate. |
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Many well-meaning parents invest in new wall-to-wall carpeting in the nursery to create a cozy and fall-proof environment for their baby. |
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The power of the book comes, though, from the poignant descriptions of the well-meaning but disconnected members and friends of the family. |
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The authors of the top 50 list explain how a well-meaning idea got out of control. |
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All of this makes even the most well-meaning junior soldier more confused and more uptight. |
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In the weeks and months to come, we will hear the voices of well-meaning people beseeching the victor to compromise with the vanquished. |
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But many are beginning to regard such sentiments as little more than well-meaning rhetoric. |
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Enter director Renny Harlin, who injects this well-meaning material with a crass, brittle cynicism. |
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We've been told, by countless shrinks and well-meaning friends, that marriage is no everlasting bed of roses. |
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These well-meaning campaigners are chronically tone-deaf to pop cultural semantics and subtleties. |
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And it is David's well-meaning employment of Sheila as a secretary that leads to his ruination. |
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It also started a trend which saw the country as the mist-covered heather-clad mountains of home, peopled by well-meaning rustics. |
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What politician is going to call what the public perceives to be a well-meaning group of tragedy-stricken widows a gang of frauds and liars? |
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We in the Western nations long ago recognized autocracy in the public sector as poison, no matter how well-meaning the autocrat might be. |
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These sources are, according to the figures represented, reliable, authoritative and well-meaning. |
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When even well-meaning people get together in hierarchical, committee-rich structures, they do beastly things and call it progress. |
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She and her friends strive to assimilate the vague information provided by their well-meaning but sinister guardians. |
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I have heard well-meaning Bengalis complain that Vilayat Khan only spoke pidgin Bengali despite having spent a good part of his life in Kolkata. |
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His well-meaning wife also once performed an exorcism in my kitchen, but that's another story. |
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Worst of all, though, are well-meaning liberals who assist in this subterfuge. |
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We shall be keeping a critical but well-meaning eye on this work during the course of next year. |
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Now, thanks to a well-meaning TV movie from the USA Network, we get a historical docudrama about this flamboyant, fearless leader. |
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Sometimes well-meaning family members try to restrict information about the illness in order to maintain hope. |
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The boy is well-meaning enough, but he usually ruins things one way or another. |
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It allows for fine-tuning and self-selection of migration flows, yielding far better results than even the most well-meaning bureaucrats could ever achieve. |
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Can't we sometimes accept that they're just well-meaning socialists who can be excused a little excitability because they're young and passionate? |
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How had I, and countless other well-meaning teachers and educational professionals, managed to spend three years marching down this terrible educational cul-de-sac? |
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The nave but essentially well-meaning Peter's interaction with his flawed clients formed the centre of the piece and much of the comedy sprung from the dynamic duologues. |
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Too often, the well-meaning efforts of the international community tend to be at cross purposes, thereby undermining the collective effort. |
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While she has no illusions about being saved by a Prince Charming, she chooses to date a gringo from school, the well-meaning Jimmy, a practical, sensible choice. |
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In the wrong circumstances, for example, making a well-meaning, good-natured joke at someone's expense can cause the person to lose face. |
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If there were other social forces tending toward it, then no well-meaning legislation could have prevented that. |
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I don't know the answers but I do know that they need to come from communities, not imposed by well-meaning government or outsiders. |
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This leaves projects open to abuse, either by well-meaning dilettantes or intentional disrupters. |
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While Hollywood used to signify a spectacular vulgarity, the influential American cinema now has a stifling and well-meaning tastefulness. |
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Dagwood is kind, dutiful, diligent, well-meaning, but he has completely given up any claim to authority. |
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Fear of damnation, not well-meaning exhortation, is the only way to right sinning ways. |
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She said that various well-meaning individuals tried to get the kids aside and probed further, questioned them. |
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The Secretary-General's advice was well-meaning and sincere. |
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This is how it works in a partnership between well-meaning countries. |
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Experience has demonstrated that many skilled, fair and well-meaning police and prosecutors have fallen prey to self-serving and manipulative informers. |
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They all come off as well-meaning but ultimately unlikable guys. |
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The Greens are not the well-meaning oddballs we thought they were. |
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Exploitation from well-meaning agencies whose mission is to offer help is counterproductive. |
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Truly staggering amounts of money, from a variety of well-meaning friends, disappeared into his labyrinthine system of debts, leaving nothing to show. |
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The more generous among these caped-crusader types view Schneiderman as well-meaning but misguided. |
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After these well-meaning moments they are left alone to hibernate with their own devastation. |
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It is erroneous, insulting to the mostly well-meaning officers in this country, and impedes constructive discussion, and change. |
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Her father was genial, well-meaning and only mildly traditionalistic. |
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A lot of those people were well-meaning but really, really screwed up. |
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And yet even for the most well-meaning parent, there are no guarantees. |
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He perceives the sounds of evil intent where others detect only well-meaning enthusiasm. |
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Under the plans, instead of money being given to vagrants, well-meaning shoppers can put it in yellow collection boxes dotted around the major stores in Swindon. |
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A well-meaning if politically incorrect secretary at Harvard compared Huang to Charlie Chan. |
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They might not grab the headlines of the national news media but they will a lot harder to dismiss as anarchists or well-meaning but naive cranks. |
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Others argue that highly suggestible people are having the multiple personalities implanted subconsciously by well-meaning but misguided counsellors. |
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I understand that well-meaning people are sometimes importuned to write such letters on behalf of those who aren't in a position to respond themselves. |
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Eagerly, the man lifted the whole basket over the fence, and the woman watched open-mouthed as her entire stock of weekend provisions disappeared into the well-meaning neighbour's house. |
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Moments later I nearly have my head sliced off by a foam Viking axe thoughtfully presented as a useful historic present by a well-meaning aunt. |
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Today, a brain operation for premenstrual syndrome might seem barbaric, but there were many well-meaning doctors in accordance with the idea. |
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I drift around, and the meandering invariably ends when a well-meaning hostess taps me on the shoulder and points me in the direction of the men's room, wrongly assuming that is where I wish to go. |
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Once again, minority language education rights should not be left to the unfettered and undirected discretion of local school boards no matter how competent and well-meaning they may be. |
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And as you'd expect of such a well-meaning multicultural bunch, they speak the international lingo of cultivated jazz-fusion, all elegance, mellowness and consideration. |
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Somehow, in the decades of confused apologetics and well-meaning attempts to refine an infallible methodology, we forgot two essential dimensions of the search for Joseph's son. |
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My two sons have been indoctrinated by their well-meaning public schools to believe that college is a punishingly difficult pursuit of knowledge. |
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And then you only have to contemplate a well-meaning group of MPs meeting the immovable object that is Peter Dutton, and the former immigration minister, Scott Morrison, and you see the fruitlessness of the exercise. |
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Many well-meaning people growing in wealth and strength turn out to be diabolic when such wealth and strength are not shared with the surrounding life. |
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His suggestion of a tri-partite committee is well-meaning, but inadequate. |
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The recognition that racial bias is a human frailty of good, well-meaning people can promote a more constructive discussion of the problem of racially biased policing and it can direct us toward effective interventions. |
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Sometimes in the process they motivative the radical fringe of society or even well-meaning citizens. |
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Bengali speaks with courtly floweriness even when sticking the knife in, and Thompson's well-meaning British bluntness was not appreciated. |
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In the hands of a genuinely well-meaning Arts Council, it also means 'power', exercised by some genuinely well-meaning quangocrat. |
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Our readers who practice professionally in these fields could provide parameters of activity for the non-professional, so as not to exacerbate already tragic situations by well-meaning novices. |
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This, combined with the Board's well-meaning, but ill-advised involvement in day to day operations, created an extremely stressful environment for staff. |
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Wilbur sees another little washback nearby get picked up and placed in the ocean by a well-meaning beach-goer. |
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Mr Abbas has been well-meaning but is himself a ditherer. |
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A well-meaning but clueless stoner, just released from prison, couch surfs at his sisters' homes in an enjoyable but lightweight comedy. |
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I strongly wish that well-meaning persons who might, for a moment, have been lead astray, will welcome this call to fidelity and unity of the Church. |
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What follows is a lot of clattery, only intermittently funny comic riffing by Rogen and Franco as they play bumbling but well-meaning bourgeois nerds who are forced into physical action. |
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There's a preponderance of bad-faith arguers launching tiresome straw-man attacks, sure, but even the well-meaning can ruin a conversation by barging in demanding answers to basic questions. |
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The individuals and executives involved in these various agencies are extremely talented and well-meaning, but it is a rickety, over-administered, gargantuan, and increasingly ineffective operation. |
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Others are going about our streets, like well-meaning but beslept watchmen, calling the hours of midnight, while the morning is paling their lanterns. |
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These well-meaning programs are both making it easier for grad schools to raise tuition and for potentially high earners like physicians to flee their debts. |
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