The King Canute mentality, which I believe is damagingly ingrained in City Hall, can no longer hold back the tide of change. |
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Pieces are delicately crafted, with full use made of the wonderful texture and colours ingrained in the wood. |
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This process manifests itself in a certain attitude that seems to be ingrained in a disproportionate number of Scottish acts. |
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His father was a pattern maker at a steelworks in Sheffield and a strong work ethic became ingrained in his own set of values. |
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Those dualisms are still deeply ingrained in common sense, which is why pragmatism is so counterintuitive. |
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This is because they are so widespread and deeply ingrained in both the public and private sectors of the economy. |
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In my view, efficiency is implicit in the concept of sustainability, which is ingrained in the bill's purpose and elsewhere. |
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Values such as respect, fair play and a love of the game are ingrained in the philosophy and implemented in community activities. |
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One answer resides in the belief, still ingrained in our civitas, that Americans have a shared sense of purpose and destiny. |
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By contrast, business intelligence and action lag behind the current business activity if business processes are ingrained in rigid and brittle software systems. |
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The belief in a positive attitude is so ingrained in American thinking. |
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Internal stains in teeth, for example tetracycline stains, are extremely resistant to bleaching because the stain is so deeply ingrained in the teeth. |
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They learn ways of working with low mood or dysphoric feelings that are different from the more automatic ways often ingrained in depressed people. |
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This aspect of international law is deeply ingrained in the training and conduct of our military. |
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It presided at its birth and remains deeply ingrained in its corporate culture. |
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As discussed in Chapter 13, mobility is deeply ingrained in modern lifestyles. |
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This Court believes that Indian Constitution reflects this value deeply ingrained in Indian society, nurtured over several generations. |
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Polling is ingrained in American politics, but it does not come without its problems. |
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Her profound testimony tells you everything you need to know about how inequality and unearned privilege remain ingrained in Scottish society. |
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Some residues become irremovably ingrained in the material or remain on your clothes. |
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The male actors, rather subversively though, even changed their genders, as if to destabilise the rigid distinction ingrained in the reconstruction of male and female bodies. |
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Maslany is so deeply ingrained in the DNA of orphan Black that without her incredible performances, there would be no show. |
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Linguistic ability seems to have firmly been ingrained in Narang's family for his wife teaches Hindi and his son is well on the way of being a Sanskrit scholar. |
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Spirituality is more ingrained in the Aboriginal culture then in mainstream culture. |
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The reality is that inequality between men and women is ingrained in social norms and values around the world. |
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The reason art can do all this is because it is ingrained in all aspects of life and in the human condition. |
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The barriers to Aboriginal participation in the federal electoral system are deeply ingrained in the political system. |
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It must be accompanied by an overall policy likely to ensure that this concept becomes ingrained in citizens' behaviour. |
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These views are ingrained in the minds of many and have developed over years and generations. |
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Out of long habit and the conduct that my training had ingrained in me, I immediately dropped a curtsy, despite having been caught off guard by the unexpected introduction. |
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However, street culture was all consuming and within a short period of time, an individual out for a quick solution, became ingrained in the culture. |
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This collegiality was deeply ingrained in our psyches long before the advent of global institutions and organizations that brought scientists together to address both intellectual and societal problems. |
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Potato crisps remain the most popular savoury snack in the UK, with consumption heavily ingrained in many Britons' diets. |
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For others, gender bias is ingrained in the measurement process. |
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But feistiness is ingrained in News Corporation: it will not disappear if the chairman-boss becomes a mere chairman. Mr Murdoch will not be the last builder of a media empire. |
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Accomplishing or moving significantly toward the objective meant a reversal of centuries-old assumptions and practices that had been ingrained in Canadian society. |
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Anglo Irish, or the zombie bank as it is called here, is so ingrained in the black humor of Ireland that a song and dance production about its collapse is set to open in Dublin in November. |
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As with any partnership, issues may arise, but in the spirit of cooperation so ingrained in Inuit culture, they are usually quickly overcome in favour of what is best for the lost or injured party. |
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First, a sense of honour is deeply ingrained in the Tetouan region, as shown by Pierre Bourdieu's research on the Kabyle and Raymond Jamous' on the Rif Berbers. |
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Most importantly, we conduct this massive undertaking with a very deliberate and unwavering commitment to safety, which is ingrained in everything we do. |
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Despite its status as a separate employer, the Parks Canada Agency has retained all Treasury Board policies, which are well ingrained in the organization's culture. |
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It's difficult to forge a lasting partnership between former adversaries, it's hard to change habits that have been ingrained in our governments and our bureaucracies for decades. |
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However, the concept of absolutism was so ingrained in Russia that the Russian Constitution of 1906 still described the Tsar as an autocrat. |
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Although legally proscribed in 1994, the procedure is still widely practiced, as it is deeply ingrained in the local culture. |
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The claim the Great Wall is visible from the moon has been debunked many times, but is still ingrained in popular culture. |
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As an Army Nurse, Navy Wife, and Army Brat, I have been ingrained in the military procedures. |
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Slightly weathered, a tinge overexposed, perhaps just out of step with the rest of the frame, back projections have become ingrained in our cultural ideography. |
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The battle against inflation has to be fought now before if feeds into wage increases, via expectations, and becomes ingrained in the price formation mechanism. |
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The powers and limitations of the Act, part of that balance I spoke of earlier, are ingrained in the employees from the moment they start working for the Service. |
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The problem we are dealing with here is deeply ingrained in our society, not just in far-off, distant societies which have particular religious views in relation to women. |
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Experts agree that television watching is ingrained in our everyday lives. |
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These three cuisines have become so ingrained in the American culture that they are no longer foreign to the American palate. |
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So, I wanted to see it through to a certain point, so that it would become really ingrained in, or part of, the section, that we would have an ongoing mandate to look at some of these issues. |
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Despite his disgust, he feels unjustified in holding the natives morally responsible for a practice so deeply ingrained in their culture. |
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One of the major obstacles is the notion of masculinity, which has long been ingrained in social norms and value systems, and this entails both physical and psychological domination. |
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In particular, the political institutions which constitute the backbone of the democratic system will only give rise to a true democracy if citizen participation is deeply ingrained in their structure and functioning. |
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A focus on energy efficiency and clean energy is fully ingrained in the ways that communities are planned, designed, built, operated and revitalized. |
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Asparagus growing is deeply ingrained in the local culture of the production area, where growing techniques are handed down from one generation to the next. |
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Lincoln's status as the quintessential self-made man and his legendary rise from obscure backwoods beginnings to the presidency are deeply ingrained in the American imagination. |
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They immediately became ingrained in the public consciousness. |
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Between the surreal calm and subtle customs surrounding the elaborate and often painstakingly designed hookah, its tradition soon became ingrained in Turkish culture, providing pleasure to millions. |
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Scatological humour is ingrained in us from a very early age, so anything that includes parping is bound to be a winner among new readers. |
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Only the horrible smell remains, imprisoned in the earth reddened by blood, in the shreds of viscera that straggle on the ground, ingrained in the blankets that had carried the dead. |
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The lessons I learned at school were firmly ingrained in my mind. |
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Engineering was also institutionally ingrained in the Roman military, who constructed forts, camps, bridges, roads, ramps, palisades, and siege equipment amongst others. |
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