Her production pinpoints the role of women as both products and perpetuators of the loyalist ethos with clinical accuracy. |
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He vigorously denies pressurising pupils, insisting the ethos is about making the work interesting, so they become self-motivated to learn. |
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As resistant as this is to the imposition of narrative coherence, a feminist ethos is unmistakable. |
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Let us take the lead in recognising the perniciousness of an ethos that thinks it is destined to rule the world. |
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The advice that women use barrier contraception clashed with the hospital's ethos, although the leaflet did say abstinence was acceptable. |
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But somehow the working-class ethos of Geneva, also called Hollands gin, or Square gin, survived long after Hogarth's Gin Street was bulldozed. |
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These boundaries determine who is in and out, pure and impure, and loyal and disloyal to the group ethos. |
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Apart from strengthening the sub-continental ethos for the sport, the tours ensured a degree of improvement in the approach and technique. |
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The growing ethos of it not being the winning, but the taking part that counts is one that Donnelly numbers among his dislikes. |
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The prevailing ethos on No Disco seemed a bit more thoughtful, a bit more arty, making the best of an obviously limited budget. |
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The 1780s saw the emergence of the Sturm und Drang movement, which attempted to overturn the ethos of the German Enlightenment. |
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The club's ethos of social inclusion and integration is reflected in the eclectic mix of nationalities represented within the team. |
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This arrangement is based on Steiner's Fundamental Social Principle and has been central to the Camphill ethos. |
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Punk music, with its live-fast ethos and objurgation of the status quo, never was meant to last long. |
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There is no extraneous body cladding, in keeping with the Swedish design ethos of simplicity. |
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Brave individuals and small organizations stood out against the prevailing developmental ethos. |
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My job there is to create an ethos of enjoyment, but you have to be clear in your own mind that you're building to an end point. |
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Perhaps he was talking of a Hindu song, reflecting a Hindu ethos in which the country is equated with the mother goddess. |
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We consider a correct understanding of ethos to be very important when using spokespeople in adverts. |
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Their willingness to lend a hand and to help a mate typifies the spirit of the Aussie digger and the ethos of the Australian Army. |
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Other studies show a close relation between a more egalitarian social ethos and closer community relations. |
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Although this unconference isn't free, many unconferences are, a fact reflected in their let's-build-a-stage-in-the-barn-and-put-on-a-show ethos. |
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Burns was a great admirer of the egalitarian ethos behind the French Revolution. |
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What, then, is the educational ethos in these schools, and what do they teach? |
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In this, they are merely extending the New Labour ethos on cleaning up the slough that is modern Britain. |
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Apparently the implications for broadcasting and narrowcasting, for social glue and public ethos, are enormous. |
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Constitutional or not, the ideals are part of the American ethos and creed. |
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Ireland may well become more neighbourly but will Ireland in fact return to its tourism friendly ethos? |
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It has a sense of solidity which is a reflection of the whole ethos of the car. |
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As ecotage, this is far more cold and calculating than the Merry Pranksterish ethos of Clausen's dread nemesis, Earth First! |
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I think that you are pushing at an open door, when you talk about public service ethos, and there is a price tag that goes with that. |
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There is mounting frustration with the anti-enterprise ethos of his administration. |
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For example, a bank launched a large-scale programme to create a new ethos of customer care. |
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I remember being glum and depressed, at first, about the new ethos of the early eighties. |
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This deconstructive agenda fits well with the play's stylized feel and the production's retro design ethos. |
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And the real thing is that the whole ethos, culture and drive of the company now is to put that right. |
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Much credit must go to the local community for the way they have embraced the ethos of community cohesion. |
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The new ethos that culture jamming taps into is go-for-the-corporate jugular. |
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The second factor is accommodation to the self-realization ethos, which implies the importance of the individual. |
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He founded a great regiment and the principles he founded it on and the ethos he left are just the same today as they were then. |
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It allows schools to build a centre of excellence, and use that specialist excellence and ethos to raise standards across the board. |
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And the way to do that is to get more people to go racing and become involved in the ethos of the sport. |
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Charlton and their manager have created an ethos that has kept the club not just afloat but positively buoyant. |
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The two married an industrial ethic to a modernist aesthetic, capturing an entire ethos in a single seat. |
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I tend to see the results as the by-product of an ethos where we encourage students to aim high. |
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The school's academic reputation and positive ethos attracts children from as far afield as Linlithgow and Alloa. |
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But aside from the odd moment, the album gets lost amid its pumped-up ethos of hard, hard beats, raw language and stereotypical outlook. |
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It is by no means a perfect system, but dissent and debate are recognised as an integral part of the university ethos. |
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Their ethos was that you had to treat the whole person, not just the cancer. |
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Of course, the small integrated schools will cream off a lot of the glory because of their name and ethos. |
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Moving with the times is very much part of the ethos of the magazine, and of course we must practise what we preach. |
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The music behind this story exudes an ethos of musical synthesis and reintegration. |
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Surely this is a time for a new ethos of leadership and people who think outside the box and foster creativity. |
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Raised in the rural ethos of Mayo, he grew up with an attachment to the land. |
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While success is born of a competitive spirit among pupils, that does not have to breed an uncaring ethos. |
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It was, after all, an ethos which could be portrayed as combining both a national and an individual ethic. |
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Betty Ford's zest for life and country ethos of hard work and helping others is obvious from the outset. |
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Innovation was quietly continuous, prompting an ethos of understated optimism. |
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The words of the responsorial psalm fit very comfortably with the vocal ethos of blues. |
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King Solomon's alliances are seen here not as threats to the pristine Mosaic ethos but as props to the peace. |
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I was aware that the school had a culture of discipline and an ethos of personal improvement. |
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Zouch Primary School's project aims to improve the experience of playtimes for pupils at the school, developing an ethos of mutual respect. |
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Yes, the film appeals as a pitch-perfect period piece that captures the anti-style and anti-authoritarian ethos of the Seventies. |
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The ethos is caring and ensures that everyone reaches their full potential. |
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Just about anyone who was not entirely docile and subservient to the ruling ethos could be locked up for life. |
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However, the last two seasons have seen Windermere's second team develop a strong team ethos that enables them to stage dramatic fightbacks. |
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The social tone and ethos of the school are both very positive as too is the overall quality of the actual physical working environment. |
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Both land and water dwellers believe in river spirits, and aquatic masquerades reflect a shared ethos. |
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These valuable resources will be managed through a local community structure working on the ethos of equal access to opportunities for all. |
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This isn't altogether fair on Liverpudlians, but there is something intangible in the ethos of that city's music which tends to annoy me. |
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And somewhere along the way, the street-cool ethos of the zine has evolved into a lucrative retail format. |
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Rodzinski conducts both of them superbly, with complete sympathy for their melancholy and eruptive Magyar ethos. |
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The ethos and cultures of Tamilians and Telugus are as different as chalk and cheese. |
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There seems to be an ethos developing that no one should take responsibility for any of their acts, that they should try to evade, avoid, deny. |
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One way to avoid poetics that encourage such reductive readings is for the poet to propose an inclusionary ethos. |
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The philosophy of the campaign echoed the ethos of his Department in the care of older people. |
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More importantly, the evangelistic ethos is supposed to infuse everyday life. |
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It was a feel-good tale that reinforced the ethos of a merit-based free society. |
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But, his critics wonder, does having a name synonymous with street art put him at odds with the anti-establishment ethos of it? |
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As aol evolved, this ethos of personalization began to permeate the entire user experience. |
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It is a product of the baby-boomer ethos, and if a sense of inevitability has dissipated, good riddance. |
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The best, or at least most successful, are bridging the gap between punk-rock DIY ethos and social-media savvy. |
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The son of a firefighter and a paramedic, Greg says he was brought up with the emergency services ethos and knew it was only a question of time before he too joined up. |
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When cocker took on board the black American ethos, he turned it into something completely different. |
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Go back as far as you like, you'll find literary theorists insisting that Lies Are Good while historians adversarially promote an ethos of Just-the-Facts. |
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The down-and-out rattiness of a previous generation's Beijing East Village has been replaced by an urban-pioneering, but thoroughly cosmopolitan, entrepreneurial ethos. |
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George Zimmerman pulled the trigger, but a larger ethos of devaluing life and the stereotypes of criminality loaded the gun. |
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It is not easy to identify all the parts of the alchemy, but we definitely have a club ethos, which includes the concept that nobody is bigger than the club. |
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The Yahwist also describes the breakdown of mutuality and relationship when we fail to adhere to that ethos, using human craftiness to exploit power. |
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A country so steeped in manmade misfortunes, so proud of its ethos of self-support, was caught unaware when nature struck. |
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Since much of the Vivaldi repertoire is concerti, I wondered at first how this one-on-a-part ethos would affect the shaping of contrasts between soloists and ripieno. |
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He has been a noted champion of republicanism, a political ethos that privileges the well-being of the nation over individual rights and liberties. |
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But very little of the ISIS ethos has to do with hitting the Freedom Tower or the Capitol Dome. |
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Foundational to Garver's argument is Aristotle's insight that the rhetorically relevant ethos is the one that is constructed in the rhetor's discourse. |
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What these things equate to are sometimes called libertarianism, a political ethos that is particularly American and is centered around small government. |
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The emphasis on freshness and simplicity laid forth by the governmental guidelines is in line with his cooking ethos. |
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The army of typists, filing clerks, cashiers and drivers were inefficient, reluctant to take initiative, and imbued with an ethos of red tape and routinism. |
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Kannadigas, Telugus, Tamils have all settled down here and contributed their own culture to mingle with the local culture to create a truly Bangalorean ethos. |
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The Depression and World War II fostered in the parents of baby boomers an ethos of thrift and sacrifice, along with a belief in a beneficent federal government. |
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It is still an ethos that is found in contemporary pubs, particularly in rural and remote regions, yet its cultural origins can be traced back to colonial mores. |
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How do you turn single-minded determination into team ethos? |
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I assume this has always been the case, but it seems the past decade has brought with it a shift in ethos, where no element of how you live your life can be left unanalysed. |
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Albany recoils from the savage ethos in which his wife lives, foreseeing both her own destruction and that of the universe itself as a consequence of unbridled self-interest. |
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These dolls express the ethos of their time, which has changed considerably in the 40 years since Barbie first wobbled out in her steep stiletto mules. |
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Education plus work, book learning and on-the-job skills training, with a strong ethos of service to the local community, was the educational philosophy. |
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The north invokes, partly of course because of Coronation Street itself, an ethos of down-to-earth good humour and a stoical acceptance of disappointment and tragedy. |
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She was head girl at Musselburgh high school and that ethos lingers. |
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In the world of private charity, the Victorian ethos is alive and well. |
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The ethos is based on caring, socialisation and education in a homely environment, and each member of staff shows endless patience, love and commitment to our children. |
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It has often been noted that German society retains a small town ethos, which arose in the early modern period under conditions of political and economic particularism. |
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Her books are also imbued with an ethos of tolerance and acceptance. |
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It would have trumpeted its belief that no matter who you are or where you come from, it is fundamental to the Australian ethos that each child gets a fair go. |
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Many people have given years of faithful service to Muintir Mhaigh Eo and have remained faithful to the ethos of the founding fathers of the Association all those years ago. |
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This communality is central to the ethos, where each house contains a mix of people who benefit from living together but have room to express their own habits and tastes. |
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Some enterprising grammar schools, such as Rugby, combined a changing ethos with a more commercialized approach to attracting pupils, by taking on fee-paying boarders. |
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This ethos also leads the faith-based programs to encourage extended social ties between their low-income clients and local religious congregations. |
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That is because changing the law would not only be an invitation to vigilantism but would run counter to the whole ethos of the common law tradition. |
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Even if Fletcher's play is a romantic island fling that offers muted criticisms of the western ethos, Doran's production intelligently views it through post-colonialist eyes. |
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As a beginning teacher, I cultivated an ethos of formality and distance. |
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An ethos of functionalism informed all of their furniture designs. |
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References to Marcel Duchamp, Frederick Nietzche and the Italian Futurists are all woven into Hitlers' artistic ethos, even though he claims to be an anti-modernist. |
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One of the key components of infusing warrior ethos and training core warrior tasks and drills is limiting the ratio of privates to drill sergeants. |
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A grasping and greedy ethos seems to be what grips most of our citizens. |
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Jodie stressed that the docu isn't designed to promote surgery as a quick fix, but she does support the ethos that we are free to change ourselves if unhappy. |
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Their projects are diverse, but the firms share a similar ethos. |
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But others, like the TV ad, called for ballsier, streetwise inspirations in keeping with the place-branding ethos. |
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He went on to study at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, then a recently founded college with a strong Puritan ethos. |
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The exclusion of anoblis and the presence of large numbers of country gentry gave the meetings a very provincial and at time yokelish ethos. |
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The problem, from a marketing standpoint, is the typical ICQer's anti-establishment ethos. |
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In August 2009, Wikipedia announced that it planned a move that many saw as a step away from its freewheeling ethos of anyone can edit. |
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The Marthoma church follows the West Syrian liturgical tradition, and is Eastern in the nature of its worship and ethos. |
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The ways in which characters were constructed is important when considering ethos, or character, in Greek tragedy. |
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However, Reynolds additionally discusses how one might clarify the meaning of ethos within rhetoric as expressing inherently communal roots. |
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In Norway, romanticism was embodied, not in literature, but in the movement toward a national style, both in architecture and in ethos. |
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His histories have an aristocratic ethos and reveal his opinions on honor, wealth and war. |
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His memory was enshrined in the political ethos of the Imperial age as a paradigm of the good emperor. |
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The dog-eat-dog ethos of the market has spread to the classroom were exam results and points matter more than students mental well-being. |
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This combination of punk ethos and vitriol makes this particular French export an electrifying listening prospect. |
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The ethos is all too easily misunderstood as an overprecious, bloodless, mindless civilization. |
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Changes are underway in the club structure to try to make it more attractive, whilst maintaining club ethos. |
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As you get older,you will see the evidence that your parent was a tyrant who loss their ethos and instead followed the path of moral corruptness. |
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The poem is similar in ethos to heroic poetry, with the emphasis on the heroes fighting primarily for glory, but is not a narrative. |
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What's more, Knudsen wrote, Apple's stogy, closed-off policy is in direct opposition to the free-spirited ethos of the company's late founder. |
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This movement has a Firebrand socialist ethos, however is not affiliated with the SSP or the Scottish Communist Party. |
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That success is not simply founded on the stakeholding ethos that has been instilled at every level of Admiral. |
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Rowell transformed the ethos of a club that had traditionally drawn its players from the immediate locality. |
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The ethos of the aristocracy as exemplified in the English public school greatly influenced Pierre de Coubertin. |
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With its subversion of linear time, Michael James Manaia presents Mick's socialization into the predominant male ethos. |
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Regarded as a major event in British culture, the festival is inspired by the ethos of the hippie, counterculture, and free festival movements. |
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Meanwhile Lindsay Gray, headmaster of the Cathedral School in Llandaff, Cardiff, said the school tie was important to his school's ethos. |
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It was because of such an ethos that we could infuse a sense of confidence and community among Santals who were struggling to survive. |
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Punjabi folk music imbued the play with the native ethos as the English setting of the Shakespeare's play was transposed into Punjabi milieu. |
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The core of Nepal is perceived as the Hill territory and its traditional cultural ethos is conditioned by Sanskritic Hinduism. |
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According to him, Romans, like other people, had an historical ethos preserved mainly in the noble families. |
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Chivalry and the ethos of courtly love developed in royal and noble courts. |
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The insinuations are nothing more than a cheap shot and demonstrate unfamiliarity with the rules, structure and ethos of AIBA and AIBA competitions. |
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The question arises from a limited ethos combined with its universalization, which transgresses its own limits, and its claim to authority over other ethea. |
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Much of the venerable gallery's ethos is predicted here, from the tone of amused overripeness, to the accent on instantaneity and life as cinematic. |
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In a sense, ethos does not belong to the speaker but to the audience. |
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Crafting an ethos within such restrictive moral codes, therefore, meant adhering to membership of what Nancy Fraser and Michael Warner have theorized as counterpublics. |
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In modern usage, ethos denotes the disposition, character, or fundamental values particular to a specific person, people, corporation, culture, or movement. |
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His extrovert craziness is an interesting counterpoint or safety valve to the ethos of prayerful silence and traditional solemnity which is so much part of Orthodox identity. |
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At the opposite pole, Hemingway proposed a brutal male ethos of endurance, nonconformism and individualism, and an epos of sheer physical force and adventure. |
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One of the three types of school forming the Tripartite System was called the grammar school, which sought to spread the academic ethos of the existing grammar schools. |
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The college was founded to be a center of academic excellence which, unlike many other colleges at Oxford, would also be based on a strong egalitarian and democratic ethos. |
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Following the ethos of the Sandford Principle, the Environment Act 1995 sets down how a priority may be established between conservation and recreational use. |
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When I think of a Soldier who embodies the ethos and values of today's Noncommissioned Officer Corps, Staff Sergeant John Wade Russell's name comes to mind. |
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These differences can, however, easily be explained by the differing ethos of dualist Gnosticism and Yezidism, which has been termed an anti-dualist religion by one scholar. |
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Growing Goodness' is central to the Burgess Harvest Veg brand ethos, and the baby ruby potatoes reflect this through their quality and wholesome flavour. |
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A combination of shyness, lack of business acumen, and a determination to stick to the DIY punk ethos of the time caused them to miss opportunities again and again. |
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During the stocktake, the industry had pressed for income support for upland farms but this ran counter to the ethos of Pillar 2-type schemes, said Mr Davies. |
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Twain's precocious and wayward protagonist is hailed as a depositary and a hierophantic flag-bearer of the broad frontier-territory-wilderness ethos. |
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What the Wales NHS needs is for nurses and doctors to be given the time to care for patients in an empathetic way and for an empathetic ethos within our hospitals. |
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The DPA argues that this is an activity that does not agree with the ethos of a National Park, whose purpose is to protect landscape from unsuitable development. |
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He said his food ethos has been inspired by molecular gastronomist Heston Blumenthal and he says he is the first Indian chef to use the science in his cooking. |
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The Communion is held together by a shared history, expressed in its ecclesiology, polity and ethos and also by participation in international consultative bodies. |
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