Argue the point all you want, but virtually every modern car bar the hardest TVRs have understeer dialled in to safeguard the occupants. |
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Argue the acceptable character of the terrorist attack, and you are rightly eviscerated. |
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Argue the point all you want, but virtually every modern car, bar the hardest sports models, have understeer dialled in to safeguard the occupants. |
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Argue why the stimulus was necessary to begin but say that when stabilization occurs, deficit reduction must be a bipartisan goal. |
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In legal terms you might argue that they should be treated differently but in moral and ethical terms I see no difference. |
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He shrieks where he should argue, and hurls vulgar epithets in my direction. |
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We do not argue that public comprehensives jettison their professional and technical programs. |
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However, if we were to intelligently and informatively argue the point to the extreme, we would find it makes absolutely no sense. |
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I would argue that the confusion between people and objects is the mistake of the fetishist. |
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Critics of such schemes argue that they offer too narrow a definition of sculpture, pinning it down to a monumental tradition. |
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Consequently, Einstein and Infeld argue, the distinction between matter and fields is no longer a qualitative one in relativistic physics. |
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There is a wonderful scene at the start of Lukas Moodysson's film when the inmates of the house argue about the washing up. |
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We will argue that courts should award full fair market value for property condemned by government and that such value must not be lowered. |
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Hunters argue that hunting and other field sports conserve the countryside and contribute to it remaining the way we expect it to be. |
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But other Washington players will argue for substantial government assistance conditioned on radical corporate restructuring. |
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Opponents of implementing the inquisitorial system argue the efficacy of the adversarial system. |
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They intend to argue that he is too sick to defend himself, while denying that he is mentally incompetent or insane. |
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Some pundits argue that we need to aggressively institute Keynesian policies, while forcing the banks to lend. |
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He didn't want to argue so it was easier just to placate her until she went away. |
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The integrationists will argue it is only a matter of training, the separatists will argue it is a matter of control. |
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Caribbean mango connoisseurs argue over which variety is the most luscious. |
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One can no longer argue that human suffering is certain and preordained without being judged conscienceless, even inhuman. |
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She looks up at me with a plastic smile, almost challenging me to argue with her. |
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Indeed, I would argue that the King is the absent thing at work in this literary cabal, hidden by its very conspicuousness. |
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Perhaps we are now in a better position, after our interlocutions with Douglas and Balthasar, to argue this more fully in closing. |
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The other two are gratuities, and while one could argue both gratuities and platitudes are pleasantries, that doesn't make one the other. |
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They argue that his contributions are nothing more than a continuation of Stalin's positions. |
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I find it hard to understand the contrary position, but I would not argue against it. |
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So although some journalism professors may worry that military embedding is subverting the media, I would argue the contrary. |
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Some authors promote the idea that maladjustment, particularly in later life, is virtually inevitable while others argue the contrary. |
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I would argue that the evidence shows quite the contrary and I will lay out some of that evidence here. |
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Lepper and Malone argue that control is an essential part of intrinsic motivation. |
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The health authority will argue that other factors, beyond the hospital's control, were probably involved. |
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Yet some prominent thinkers argue that patents and copyrights are unnecessary government intrusions in the market. |
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Like the 2-party system itself, there is little reason to argue that corporate charters are inviolate. |
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Enjoy a glass of wine, discuss, argue or simply listen and soak up the convivial atmosphere of this book gathering. |
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We weren't going to argue, as the big white flakes of fish proved mouthwatering. |
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Some people argue that direct-to-consumer advertising has played a major role in some of the big drug flameouts in recent years. |
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To argue that the world of 1919 was worse than that of 1914 is to miss the point. |
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If the US can be persuaded to keep supporting global treaties, ministers argue, it will not retreat into dangerous isolationism. |
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Ivory-producing states argue that the sale of legal ivory can offset the considerable costs associated with elephants. |
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Opponents of corporal punishment argue that frequent physical punishment interferes with the teaching of nonviolent modes of conflict resolution. |
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To explain some of his observations Newton had to argue that the corpuscles of light created waves in the aether. |
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Well, I would argue that if that were true, there would be no need for this bill to be on the floor of the House today. |
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But you do flop every two plays and you mostly have no reason to argue since most calls go your way, no? |
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After hours poring over the documents I think it entirely justifiable to argue that one man acted as an agent provocateur. |
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Having gold inside their investment portfolios has given these investors a feeling of security and comfort, and who would argue with that? |
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A three year old is verbal enough to argue and negotiate with parents about why she doesn't want use the potty. |
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The actor portraying the central character in that film wasn't a disabled person either but I would argue that it didn't matter. |
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Some may argue that flow and power don't go together, but I'd counter with that being a fallacy of the modern Big Move surf culture. |
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Some modernism aficionados argue that the Long Wharf Advocacy Group is too modest in its counterproposal. |
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We argue that, on the basis of their relative timing of emplacement, the foliated intrusions may be placed into two broad suites. |
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Russ, I can't argue with your pointing out my strong inclination towards the artier end of post-punk. |
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Mark likes to follow his nose on these things, and I never argue with his results. |
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Many argue this would keep the country moving while suitable public transport alternatives are worked out. |
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Football, and I would argue the country as a whole, is a little less colourful for the loss of one of it's greatest men. |
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It is in their interests to argue for a policy of dialogue with so called rogue states. |
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The ability to articulate and argue and the right to do so are not givens, but areas of considerable complexity and dissent. |
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Modern academics argue there are no givens, all is a social construct, but we suspect they are wrong. |
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I opened my mouth to argue with him, although he was right, but Timur's next words forestalled me. |
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If all we do is say, we will only loan you the money, then we can never argue to those countries that they've got to forgive those debts. |
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Instead they argue that creation science fits the evidence every bit as well as the alternatives. |
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They end up carrying a criminal record for a crime many argue their partner committed. |
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Some advocates of the heavy drug enforcement argue that drug use is criminogenic. |
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Some critics of this letter may argue that at 19, I really have no right to speak out. |
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The history of free speech in this country is the history of winning the freedom to argue about religion. |
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I have never heard the member argue for a referendum on genetic engineering, or on free-trade agreements for that matter. |
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Critics argue that crowdfunded companies won't be as carefully vetted or transparently documented as traditional ones. |
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I'd argue that the best leaders are capable of moving frictionlessly from one mode of operation to the other. |
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I wouldn't quite say that, but dogs don't argue with you like people do, and they always make such a frightful fuss when they see you. |
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An American rapprochement with Iran is essential, he would argue, but the real fulcrum should be Najaf. |
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However, they do argue that to be acceptable, such non-provision must fulfil two conditions that rule out involuntary euthanasia in practice. |
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They argue the existing avenues are no substitute for a full-fledged appeal division of the refugee board. |
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Cynics argue that sports people and associations are guilty of opportunism during this time of crisis. |
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To ignore the last two elements in the chain is, some would argue, more damaging than eschewing responsibility for the planet. |
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In doing so, they argue for an e-business management team to coordinate projects and formulate strategy. |
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Have you ever noticed that the gasbags who go out of their way to defend him are the same people who argue that he should be fired? |
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Both attorneys argue the Board and its chairman have, in media comments, effectively prejudged the issues under investigation. |
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I'd argue that Australian women, in particular, aspire to look more like healthy, glowy girls than some emaciated model. |
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Some reformers argue that the city should go further and completely deregulate the market, allowing anyone with a car to pick up passengers. |
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They argue that water needs could be met by dredging existing reservoirs, using water from nearby cities, or desalinating ocean water. |
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In its defence, the police service would argue a history of underfunding has led to a desperate shortage of officers across the board. |
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Some experts argue that the deterrent effect of a punishment like caning is more potent than the current penal system. |
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More radical eco-activists argue that carbon offsetting is a distraction from the need for us simply to stop flying and producing and consuming. |
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He would argue that their effectiveness depends on the support of major powers. |
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I personally would argue strongly for the right of anyone to differ with me. |
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How absurd and self-defeating it would be to argue that artists should or can continue to grope blindly, trusting to accident or mere intuition. |
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I would argue that what links these modern elegies is the focus on a relationship ruptured prior to death. |
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Those who argue that the activity should not be policed more strictly than direct mail in the post are wrong. |
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The theologian, however, could argue that there are instances which might validly call for emendation. |
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Could not one analogously argue that the Suspension Clause authorizes suspension in times of dire national emergency? |
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Critics argue it was only Lottery money and government cash that prevented the Games from being a financial disaster. |
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The conservationists argue the vehicles endanger life and damage flora and fauna. |
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But from my perspective I would argue that is is hard to place a value on the sheer enjoyment, excitement and pleasure you brought to so many. |
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Not knowing how to argue in Mandarin, it is very difficult to dispute any bill or when you think you have been overcharged. |
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As usual, they don't try to argue with the post as a whole or dispute its principal themes. |
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Mr Haughey's solicitors dispute this conclusion and argue the monies came through Mr Traynor. |
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They are engaged in tax avoidance, which is entirely legal, though you might argue it's morally dubious. |
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The practical upshot is much the same, of course, so you could argue that it's a distinction without a difference. |
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In this framework, I will argue that an enunciative split is central to the production of both Bugul's and Molloy's exilic selves. |
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A child who is able to argue with such infallible logic is perhaps a tad old to be toting a dummy in public. |
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This, I would argue, is true even of Epicureanism, although the case is certainly complicated. |
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The literal meaning of this piece of doggerel is similar to saying that someone would argue that black is white. |
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Some argue that the current shows really do exemplify black life and culture. |
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The residents of the neighbouring estate, however, oppose the netting, which they argue will make them feel caged in. |
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Yet, there are people who argue as if doomsday is near at hand when they confront evidence of such increase. |
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The partisans argue that objective social science is impossible because sociologists cannot transcend their own ideologically constrained world-views. |
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To the extent that globalization constrains states or renders their policies ineffective it has the effect, many would argue, of undermining democracy. |
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They argue that the interprovincials are nothing more than an expensive waste of time which do nothing to improve overall standards within the game. |
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You could argue that he was a brave gallerist, exhibiting artists that other galleries were too afraid to exhibit themselves, but then again maybe not. |
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I'm not going to argue that this is an error-free motion picture. |
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I would argue that its economic future would be jeopardized by elimination of the currency board and that a better course would involve full dollarization. |
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Those supporting free markets would argue that there is excessive use of these tools to influence markets and that they will in fact cause more problems than they solve. |
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Pluralists began to argue that links between financial centres around the world were now closer than cities within the state had been in the past. |
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I argue that the relationship between past success and convergent thinking may depend on the attributions that groups generate to explain their shared success. |
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I argue that one of the most pressing human rights issues for the new century is the continued devalorized commodification of Mexican-origin populations. |
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We argue that gradience is an inherent feature of language representation, processing, and learning, and that natural language exhibits all degrees of gradience. |
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Of course, no one would actually argue with such crudity, but there is a kind of discourse that can come perilously close to adopting that caricature attitude. |
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Thomas and Loader, for example, argue that new technology inevitably leads to new forms of deviant behaviour that arise in order to exploit new opportunities. |
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Pa had frowned a little at that, but Miss Inger had given him back a look that definitely said she was in charge of gumdrops and Adam's father had better not argue about it. |
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I cannot argue the case for Deptford copperas before the mid-17th century, but it was clearly a long-standing works when taken over by the Crispe family after the Civil War. |
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Some might argue that a man being impaled, flayed alive and left to bake in the desert could hardly be categorized as wholesomely edifying entertainment. |
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I could argue that if you had a sufficient outlet for expressing your true selves in your fleshly, corporeal lives, then your blogs would be redundant. |
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Now, labor economists argue that additional benefits are necessary. |
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I struggled flimsily to argue as he gesticulated erratically before me. |
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The president will remain under pressure to encourage Beijing to float its currency, currently pegged to the dollar, which experts argue makes imports artificially cheap. |
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One by one they argue the reasons they're not guilty of a cornucopia of offences ranging from illegal parking and moving violations, to tossing their garbage on the wrong day. |
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In all such cases, I will argue, political discrimination can be understood in terms of certain corrigible cognitive errors that characterize prereflective xenophobia. |
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It is hard to argue that one act creates customary law when the classical concept of custom comes from long usage and recognized scholarly comment. |
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Then it seems that you could argue that, in the above scenario, Charlie just wouldn't be around unless he is compresent with the other tropes that form the object. |
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Is there any parent who would argue for, or countenance, the early evacuation of one sick child from an Intensive Care Unit bed in favour of their own child? |
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We have only to note the way groups of workers use widening or narrowing differentials in the pay structure to argue for wage increases to see the truth of George's statement. |
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She said it so politely that there was no way I could possibly argue. |
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We would argue that without knowing anything about dilution of respiratory droplets in water vapor, the interpretation of condensate data must remain in serious doubt. |
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I discuss in relation to cross-cultural spoken and written data two such features, and argue that they may well lead to some form of pragmatic failure. |
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People are still held accountable for their actions, be it the simple breaking of a window, or the murder of a foreign dignitary, people cannot argue fate made them do it. |
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Certainly, at face value you could argue that there is nothing astounding about the findings of this comparison between display advertising and inserts. |
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He won't argue if you tell him the company's prospects are dim either. |
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Surely, the eschatologists argue, this petition stands as conclusive proof that for Matthew and Luke the Lord's Prayer is an eschatological prayer. |
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Advocates of more minimal government might argue that people have every right to such food as they can obtain through fair market exchanges and gifts. |
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What this article does argue is that the first-class or de luxe resort hotel market was not the most profitable or the best long-term investment for the companies. |
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Indeed, I would argue that it has already happened to some degree, as student loans have democratized the college degree and worn off some of its cachet. |
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I argue that, in addition to organizational dynamics, the analogy of family relationships may also be fruitful for understanding gender in modern religious denominations. |
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I'm not going to argue creationism, evolution, and all that stuff. |
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Yet, while these opponents of abortion argue their position as a God-given, universal, moral imperative, religious groups are by no means united on the issue. |
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Supporters of CAP argue that the economic support which it gives to farmers provides them with a reasonable standard of living. |
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They argue that this accounts for the high number of burials in the area and for the evidence of trauma deformity in some of the graves. |
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Toynbee and James Burke argue that the entire Imperial era was one of steady decay of institutions founded in republican times. |
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Some argue that having impedance mismatch is difficult for programming intensive applications. |
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Various interpretations emphasize different dates, entire periods, or argue that the Reformation never really ended. |
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Proponents of a codified constitution argue it would strengthen the legal protection of democracy and freedom. |
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Many environmentalists argue that GDP is a poor measure of social progress because it does not take into account harm to the environment. |
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Nevertheless, Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri argue that it was neither a strictly economic nor moral matter. |
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Recent research, including work by Mike Davis and Amartya Sen, argue that famines in India were made more severe by British polices in India. |
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Proponents argue that this helps reduce the income gap between the rich and poor. |
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Many B2B white papers argue that one particular technology, product or method is superior for solving a specific business problem. |
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I wasn't typically a huggy person, but I knew better than to argue with anyone in Bones's genetic line. |
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Some archaeologists argue that some of these bluestones were from a second group brought from Wales. |
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Adherents of this school of economic thought argue that the scale of the problem is much less severe than is popularly supposed. |
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Others, like Charles Taylor and Will Kymlicka, argue that the notion of the autonomous individual is itself a cultural construct. |
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Many argue that the structural adjustments that it forced were of great importance. |
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They argue that however significant the empirical research, these studies use the term race in conceptually imprecise and careless ways. |
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Critics argue that this has led to the destruction of local culture and disturbance of once quiet sites. |
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Physical anthropology texts argued that biological races exist until the 1970s, when they began to argue that races do not exist. |
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For this reason, critics argue that therapies that rely on the placebo effect to define success are very dangerous. |
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The peculiar presbyornithids were used to argue for a close relationship between flamingos, waterfowl, and waders. |
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Gardeners argue among themselves about how necessary chitting is, but I do chit my seed potatoes. |
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Of course, a contented mind is a perpetual feast, and many argue that it is better to live with a bad situation than move to an even worse one. |
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They argue that the BBC can distort the market, making it difficult for commercial providers to operate. |
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Owen found at the tailor shop opportunities to discuss and argue topics with workers and customers. |
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One might argue that the Soviet posters made in the 1950s to promote the wealth of the nation were in itself a form of pop art. |
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Furthermore, many feminists argue that the advent of VCR and consumer video allowed for the possibility of feminist pornography. |
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You could reasonably argue that Brown himself should carry the can for much of the regulatory failure of the banks. |
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Most canoe aficionados would argue that motorizing a canoe removes the pleasurable aspects of traveling in one. |
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Some would argue that a moped is little more than a motorized bicycle, but others would disagree. |
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Historians argue about when the Roman Empire began to peak and ultimately decay. |
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Some members of the movement argue that Messianic Judaism is a sect of Judaism. |
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Kronasser and Meid argue that language change results in the occurrence of contronymy in natural language. |
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We argue there are two major ways in which dialecticism influences emotional complexity in East Asian cultures. |
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Atheists argue that there is no experiential confirmation for the existence of a god. |
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I will argue that this phenomenon may help partially to explain the increasing extravagance and decreasing folkloricness of these works. |
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Kimball was never one to argue with a comrade's eyes and ears, not even those of a gormy jeezer like Connolly. |
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Ewing argued that it was offensive to Scots to argue that an English region had the same status as an 'ancient nation' such as Scotland. |
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Other historians argue that Henry II's empire was neither powerful, centralised, nor large enough to be seriously called an empire. |
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Now, I am going to argue that the contrastivist should accept a further condition on the knowledge-relation, a further relativization. |
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Anne did not argue, and confirmed that the marriage had never been consummated. |
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Other authors argue that there is a lack of evidence about Shakespeare's religious beliefs. |
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He was the first major figure to argue that mankind had evolved language skills in response to his changing environment and social structures. |
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Only a Job's comforter would try to argue that yesterday's stock fall announcement could bring anything good. |
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Most historians argue that the escalation in size and scope came from two sources. |
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Others argue that reason was generally held in high regard during the Middle Ages. |
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By contrast, opponents of the retention of the business vote argue that it is a cause of institutional inertia. |
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Other scholars argue that these differences are superficial, and that they tend to undermine commonalities in the various Caribbean states. |
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Holiness Friends argue that early Friends, including George Fox's message of perfection, is the same as holiness. |
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The authors of the study argue that this is one reason why the belief in witchcraft persists. |
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It is very difficult to make a monkey out of policy makers who can read and write and can argue a case logically. |
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Feminist literary critics argue that the blame for the family feud lies in Verona's patriarchal society. |
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I think it's much more realistic that they would argue and that there would be problems. |
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They argue that the chase itself causes fear and distress and that the fox is not always killed instantly as is claimed. |
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They further argue that, while hunting with hounds may cause suffering, controlling fox numbers by other means is even more cruel. |
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Two prominent Canadian authors argue that government at times has to intervene to ensure competition in large and important industries. |
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Some argue that waiting lists result in great pain and suffering, but again evidence for this is unclear. |
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This led Easton and others including Robert Steele to argue that the text spurred Bacon's own transformation into an experimentalist. |
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Azar Gat is among the scholars who argue that China, Korea and Japan were nations by the time of the European Middle Ages. |
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The proposal has aroused opposition from Cricket Wales and Glamorgan County Cricket Club, who argue such a move would be financially disastrous. |
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The laws have been resisted and challenged by Democrats who argue that they exaggerate the dangers and incidence of voter fraud while impermissibly sacrificing voter access. |
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I argue that no amount of curriculum tinkering and academic committeeing will cause us to rise from these doldrums and to the environmental occasion. |
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Though a gentle sigh, which stole from the bosom of Nancy, seemed to argue some secret disapprobation of these sentiments, she did not dare openly to oppose them. |
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Others argue that they continued to the end of the fifteenth century, as there were several plots to overthrow Henry and restore Yorkist claimants. |
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The proposal has aroused strong opposition from Cricket Wales and Glamorgan County Cricket Club, who argue such a move would be financially disastrous. |
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Some biographers of James argue that the relationships were not sexual. |
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They argue that most modern English translations are based on a corrupted New Testament text that relies primarily on the Codex Sinaiticus and Codex Vaticanus manuscripts. |
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Serious concerns have been raised about 18C's effect on freedom of expression. In this book, the authors argue that s 18C is too broad and too vague to be constitutional. |
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Hobbes in particular went further to argue that political power should be justified with reference to the individual, not just to the people understood collectively. |
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Other scholars argue that the distinctions are more rightly viewed as indicative of sociolinguistic and register differences normally found within any language. |
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Others argue that the notion of a superpower is outdated, considering complex global economic interdependencies, and propose that the world is multipolar. |
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Historians generally argue that the first stage of the militant suffragette movement under the Pankhursts in 1906 had a dramatic mobilising effect on the suffrage movement. |
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The BMA argue that overworked and underfunded general practitioners have insufficient time to assess and properly treat patients with complex needs. |
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Others including Krishan Kumar, argue that nations arose only in the modern period and that England cannot be described as a nation until the late nineteenth century. |
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Some contend that archbishops and diocesan bishops are peers during their tenures in the House of Lords, while others argue that only the Lords Temporal are peers. |
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Critics argue that this will cause arbitrary fluctuations in the inflation rate, and that monetary policy would essentially be determined by gold mining. |
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Business cycle theory is used by Keynesians to explain liquidity traps, by which underconsumption occurs, to argue for government intervention with fiscal policy. |
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Some historians believe that the Mary Rose turned too quickly and submerged her open gun ports, whereas others argue that it sank due to its poor design. |
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More recent archaeological theories have questioned this migrationist interpretation and argue for a more complex relationship between Britain and the Continent. |
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Reluctance to have Conservative Party members argue against one another has seen some debates split, with Leave and Remain candidates interviewed separately. |
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For example, some people with autism argue for acceptance of neurodiversity, much as opponents of racism argue for acceptance of ethnic diversity. |
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It was argue that by asserting the historic episcopate the doctrine of the priesthood of all believers, stated in the 1932 Methodist Deed of Union, was being denied. |
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Opponents of a codified constitution argue that the country is not based on a founding document that tells its citizens who they are and what they can do. |
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They argue that Africans, or more accurately African elites, deliberately let European traders join in an already large trade in enslaved people and were not patronized. |
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De Situ Albanie, a late document, the Pictish Chronicle, the Duan Albanach, along with Irish legends, have been used to argue the existence of seven Pictish kingdoms. |
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Many argue that we must build a gender-free world, that is, a world in which society does not define and organize all people on the basis of gender categories. |
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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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Stuart Hall and Tony Jefferson argue that compared to other youth subcultures, the mod scene gave young women high visibility and relative autonomy. |
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This led radical republican groups to argue that Irish independence could never be won peacefully and gave the northern question little thought at all. |
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On the other hand, advocates of racing argue that without horse racing, far less funding and incentives would be available for medical and biomechanical research on horses. |
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Some might argue that Yugoslavia, as a mosaic of southern Slavs and other assorted Balkan peoples, ranked higher on the multiethnicity scale than Slovenia. |
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Supporters argue that it brings more checks and balances into the EU system, with stronger powers for the European Parliament and a new role for national parliaments. |
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Although church leaders argue they're trying to help the most vulnerable in society, some, including parishioners, argue they're helping the most lawbreaking. |
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Many proponents do not argue that everything should be privatized. |
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