It has a fair share of scares and horror moments in it, ones that stick with you after the movie is over. |
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We concentrated on the failure of the trust to give the school fair treatment and adequate support. |
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This afternoon, I have been sitting down for a fair bit, and now my back is really sore again. |
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As they are two leagues above the local side it was, as it turned out, a fair and very entertaining game. |
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The fair Agnes also confessed to her share in the crime of passion, and the lovers eventually abjured the realm. |
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The fair was just as colourful as always with traditional horse-drawn wagons vying for space with modern caravans. |
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Since we'd done a fair amount of sinning together, her efforts came across to me as hypocrisy and I cannot abide a hypocrite. |
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It's even less fair to airbrush a 60-year-old celebrity and present her as someone who's managed to avoid the ravages of time. |
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Despite my fair skin and Aberdonian birth, I would far rather be too hot than too cold. |
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A fair process requires publicity about the reasons and rationales that play a part in decisions. |
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Yet is it really fair to assume that parents have abdicated their responsibilities? |
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This is fair enough, for what survives to us in the Fourth Gospel is the Johannine take on this event. |
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He has also lambasted the European Union and declared verbal war on whites who tell blacks in Africa how to run free and fair elections. |
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His passenger was white, with fair skin and hair that was shaved at the back. |
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Organised for the 19th year, the fair aims to impress on the young the need for judicious use of water. |
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But something about having to legislate those rules of fair play rankles me. |
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He was a vigorous adversary to opponents, but he was also a very fair and honest man. |
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I think teachers in Victoria are willing to continue and escalate job action if that's what's required in order to get a fair deal. |
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Plainly, if a fair trial is not possible, then it is not in the interests of the administration of justice to allow any action to proceed. |
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You spent a fair amount of time at the end of your presentation talking about changes between jobs, et cetera. |
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You stand up for professional values, fair play and justice during a controversy. |
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But it's not all about compensation, Mr Kelly said, as most people just want a fair hearing and justice. |
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The judicial system was not efficient enough and people rarely received fast and fair justice. |
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In a normal race, the runners line up on the starting line to get a fair start. |
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The first night at sea began calmly and William slept soundly but as the night wore on, the ship began to roll as she encountered a fair swell. |
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They expect no justice, no fair deal and no humanistic approach by the Indian leadership. |
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Such fairness demands a fair judicial process administered by an impartial judiciary. |
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I was tight to him and holding him, and to be fair to him he was just trying to shrug me off. |
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Suddenly he was fair game once more and there was more than just terrorism on the agenda. |
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The strict but fair door policy has continued to attract a well-dressed and stylish crowd. |
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She is a fair and just ruler, and she causes unending problems for me and my brothers. |
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How then will the court decide what is a fair and just settlement for Richard and Hyacinth? |
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It would be fair enough if the company made a mistake and fixed it, but waiting five years to get this sorted out is beyond a joke. |
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The fact that you have not had a fair trial is irrelevant if you are acquitted. |
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A basic predicate of jury service is the juror's ability to render a fair and impartial verdict. |
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Property and equipment are stated at cost at the date of acquisition or estimated fair value at the date of donation. |
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The cost of simply getting a quote or estimate for its repair will likely amount to a fair percentage of the replacement cost. |
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The developing jurisprudence in relation to Article 6 suggests that a reasoned decision is a concomitant to a fair hearing. |
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I think that's more fair to you guys because then I won't be jerking you around. |
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The most permeable soils are granular and consist of a fair amount of sand or gravel. |
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Once, however, Arethusa was not water or even a water nymph but a fair young huntress and a follower of Artemis. |
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Both joint ventures and private enterprises can register to run job fair businesses. |
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He was acutely aware of the hot blush that suddenly coloured his fair skin. |
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It also raises questions about the justification for this omissions liability, and whether citizens have fair warning of it. |
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This has probably been a fair accusal, in my opinion, but a notion that soon will be dying. |
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The ratings system can never be a fair and accurate measurement of a player's contribution to a game. |
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After watering the animals I go to the fair and work all day and come back home at 5-6 in the evening. |
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Only fair weather and a buggy could tempt me, and, if a little food was involved, I think I could find a round of golf quite agreeable. |
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He still has to be fair in grading his students, and he can lose his job if he doesn't do that. |
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Viewers in those days were agonized by his notion of justice and fair play! |
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Surely our fair city has a wealth of opportunities for those willing to shun the pub and the joypad? |
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This is a pure absurdity, as any fair reading of the pages we have devoted to such matters can demonstrate. |
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Meanwhile, I've heard a whole lot of people demand their fair share of fair treatment. |
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I'm not going to write about this here, because it wouldn't be fair and I don't believe in washing my dirty laundry in public. |
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Shops may offer a range of accessories or even extended warranties that can be worth a fair bit. |
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After last week's stramash at Craven Cottage, it is fair to say that Rangers don't go a bundle on gentle warm-ups. |
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However, in 1904 academic painting still dominated state-sponsored salons, and a world's fair art exhibition was inherently nationalistic. |
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At the pre-natal stage both parents should read up on the subject and have a fair idea of what to expect once the child arrives. |
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It was hard work driving the cattle to the fair and standing all day with them. |
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But we expect loyalty and have no qualms about throwing someone out of the group if they don't play fair with us. |
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He could read the shame in Drake's voice and had a pretty fair idea of what had transpired. |
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Those influenced by a mutable quality in their horoscope also enjoy learning, play fair and are diplomatic and well-liked by others. |
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But from now on, a fair salary is going to be whatever it costs to get qualified people in the profession. |
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While such criticism is certainly fair and reasonable, the calls for Little's scalp as manager border on the absurd. |
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It is time a new young keeper was selected and given a fair run at the top. |
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Ultimately, taxation is the only fair and secure way to mobilise the wealth of the well-off for the benefit of the disadvantaged. |
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It is also fair to say that every club in every sport probably has a wally or two in their midst. |
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It's a fair assumption that he's aware of my existence simply because the community at my college is close-knit and talky. |
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There are some good jokes and the simple story is fair enough as it is. |
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I was making a fair amount of mistakes trying to learn the arrangement while playing along with the band. |
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The Mikuole Festival is essentially a fair of the livestock raisers. |
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Only a handful of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans found their way to a job fair intended for them, reports colby Buzzell. |
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This whole process has been railroaded through and we are seeking a fair and reasonable industrial solution in the interests of the public and firefighters. |
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Business leaders know that fair but stable and competitive after-tax profits go hand in hand with job creation, investment and increased productivity. |
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Three young Bhutanese men are preparing for a street fair with a live concert. |
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I am anxious to see the registry run in a fair and above-board manner. |
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The spiritual guru also stressed the need to understand the essence of human self and every man or woman should have a fair knowledge about body composition. |
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Even as he churned out works decrying the evils of capital, he was extremely entrepreneurial and owned a fair amount of property. |
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The council is the watchdog established to set, monitor and enforce standards in all areas of general insurance, including the fair treatment of customers. |
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Wardrobe, mannerisms, and intonation are fair game, and Chu certainly has his detractors there. |
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It would be fair to say that, while we conversed amicably for what was a very long session, our views on international politics were not in accord. |
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It's not fair to stereotype a whole group of people based on one person you don't like. |
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They can say that they're not giving up on their goal of making the better-off pay their fair share in taxes. |
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It is almost impossible for anybody to find out how much the companies hold in orphan assets, never mind a fair price for waiving your rights to the money. |
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The impressions of many Yokohama prints are often fair to poor. |
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I pledge to conduct a full and fair investigation and to give the grand jury all of the information necessary to do its job. |
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And in his conversation he displayed a quick, agile and fair mind. |
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These products are obtained from fairly traded sources, where producers are paid a fair price that covers production costs and a basic living wage. |
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With this decision, the Board reaffirms its strong commitment to the Olympic ideal of unity through sport, and fair and balanced treatment of all athletes. |
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She had medium length, raven hair, deep purple eyes, and fair skin. |
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Free and fair elections also include a well-informed electorate. |
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If the population can see that there is an institution that delivers fair justice within a reasonable time, then it can make a certain contribution. |
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A fair balance must be struck between the protection of the individual's fundamental rights and the demands of the general interests of the community. |
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I suppose that was fair enough, and quite honestly, I enjoyed the walk. |
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The faces below him were a mixture of men, elves, fair folk, and dwarves. |
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A Mexican mix has only a few ingredients but a fair amount of chili powder, and the heat factor promotes controlled nibbling. |
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The flat income tax was seen as a way to create fair taxation. |
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Saves a lot of time, does that, as well as a fair wad of money. |
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Cut the templates by carefully sawing to your lines with a jigsaw or on the band saw, then fair and smooth the curves with a rasp and 150-grit sandpaper. |
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The 50 stalls set up at the fair are abuzz with nervous activity. |
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One of backcountry skiing's well-kept secrets is that skiers get caught in avalanches with fair regularity, though they are often small and rarely fatal. |
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Of course, the hoteliers jacked their prices up to the roof and did catch a fair number of those believing the annual myth propounded by the would-be profiteers. |
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This assumption, by and large, was a fair one, justified by our particular experience. |
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Organisers are also looking for community organisations to run antiquated fair games such a quoits and bob-the-apple to add to the atmosphere of the day. |
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He is on trial along with three others, and Bogucki is blowing the whistle on government practices he says are not fair play. |
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Meanwhile, selection strongly favored responders that accepted fair or hyperfair offers. |
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The Queen's health remained fair until the autumn of 1602, when a series of deaths among her friends plunged her into a severe depression. |
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It was not a fair trial as both his defence, and deportment at the time of defence bears out. |
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Jennifer. Jenny with the light brown hair. Jenny-fair, their high school French teacher had called her, and fair she had been. |
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Oh, this is a fair place to spend eternity. The air smells like honeysuckle. The wind in the pine trees makes a joysome sound. |
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Between depressions, there are often small mobile anticyclones that bring periods of fair weather. |
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These figures do not give a fair indication of the total population of the specific ethnic groups associated with each country. |
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The Hoppings, reputedly the largest travelling fair in Europe, takes place on Newcastle Town Moor every June. |
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Leander, he would have lived many a fair year, though Hero had turned nun, if it had not been for a hot midsummer night. |
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The lord made a boast of his libertinism, and frequently avowed that he held all women to be fair game. |
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The 1930s brought hard times but the company remained in fair financial health despite the Depression. |
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Busworld Kortrijk in Kortrijk, Belgium, is the leading bus trade fair in Europe. |
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To a fair pair of gallows, there to end their lives with shame, as a number of such other losengers had done. |
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Catherine was quite short in stature with long red hair, wide blue eyes, a round face, and a fair complexion. |
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As a result I find the mana weave to be a fair means of randomizing a deck provided it is done face down, and followed by 1 or 2 riffle shuffles. |
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It received the most journalistic attention at the fair and was awarded the bronze medal. |
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She later withdrew the fourth Harry Potter novel from contention to allow other books a fair chance. |
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Accordingly, the dean's office has been consulting with other graduate schools over the development of a fair means test. |
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In class, he hated mathematics, was fair at classics, and excelled at English and divinity. |
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In collaboration with the Frieze Art Fair, the fund buys works from the fair for the Tate's collections. |
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In some areas, coyote are considered fair game when hunting with foxhounds, even if they are not the intended species being hunted. |
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They gave pride of place to such moral issues as sportsmanship and fair play. |
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In popular culture the term is sometimes used to refer to a sense of sportsmanship and fair play. |
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They have taken action to make sure that they have fair and open tax systems. |
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It enshrines in statute the impartiality and integrity of the UK Civil Service and the principle of open and fair recruitment. |
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As for natural monopolies, opponents of privatization claim that they aren't subject to fair competition, and better administrated by the state. |
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Its mandate includes issues such as arms control and the promotion of human rights, freedom of the press and fair elections. |
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Some parents prepared goodies such as muah chee and rojak for the fair while others helped run the stalls. |
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Martin is regarded as one of the most visible celebrity advocates for fair trade, supporting Oxfam's ongoing Make Trade Fair campaign. |
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In 1822 he was struck with paralysis, but recovered a fair degree of health, sufficient to enable him to resume his studies. |
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As the number of people attending the fair dwindled its length was reduced from 10 days down to three or four. |
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In December 2002, Kenyans held democratic and open elections, most of which were judged free and fair by international observers. |
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Only the fair copy was written by him with the utmost diligence, in calligraphic handwriting, clearly and readably. |
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Neptunes in hempen wigs waltzed with the lean New Zealandress, who had stuck flowers from a hat into her fair hair, to impersonate Oceania. |
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Every accused person has a right to a fair trial, which includes the right. |
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The weekly market and biannual fair thrived, and in 1613 drew complaints from other towns whose trading in cloth was being severely affected. |
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The theme of the fair was technological innovation over the century since Chicago's founding. |
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As a result, the judge ruled that the defendants could not receive a fair trial and all 14 were acquitted. |
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They worked with other associations as well as the mass media to spread the message and create an awareness of their fair trade initiative. |
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The international fair trade label was introduced in 2002 to improve visibility for consumers. |
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The problem was to find a way to expand distribution without compromising consumer trust in fair trade products and in their origins. |
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Bryntirion has also produced its fair share of sporting talent, notably Gareth Llewellyn and triathlete Marc Jenkins. |
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There are also a fair number of Evangelical Church members and practitioners who reside on the island. |
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In a short time these first companies reached a fair producing quality, and films were soon sold outside Italy. |
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He inherited a fair fortune from his uncle, but owed it all before he came into it, and spent it twice over immediately afterwards. |
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He was tall and lean, with lank fair hair and a square jaw, togged out in tweeds and a checked shirt and scuffed, oxblood brogues. |
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Local support of fair trade was recognised in 2005, when Bristol became a Fairtrade zone. |
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His complexion was ruddy, his fair skin burnt from time in the sun. |
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What was thought obscure, perplexed, and too hard for our weak parts, will lie open to the understanding in a fair view. |
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There is also a huge variety of family attractions on offer including arena events a fun fair and roving acts. |
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The Office of fair Trading report, published in 1988, found Southern Vectis' behaviour to be anticompetitive. |
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For they all have white bodies and fair hair, and are tall and handsome to look upon. |
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Apart from the appendectomy, Nadal also had his fair share with back and wrist injuries, which contributed to his poor service speed. |
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We possess a fair amount of information on the origin of the code of laws of the Lombards. |
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Whereas he was of a fair colour, as they say, and his fairness passed into ruddiness on his breast particularly, and in his face. |
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The Mongols' extensive West Asian and European contacts produced a fair amount of cultural exchange. |
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Although Sir Albert had the full backing of the country's security forces, he called for free and fair elections. |
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I send you the fair copy of the poem on dullness, which I should not care to hazard by the common post. |
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In modern commerce, Guangzhou is best known for its annual Canton Fair, the oldest and largest trade fair in China. |
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It is the trade fair with the longest history, highest level, largest scale in China. |
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He is described as having delicate feature, large brown eyes, a thin high nose, fair hair and beard, and a soft gentle expression. |
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The fair trade system was initiated in 2005 with producers from Cameroon, Mali and Senegal. |
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It also holds the largest ceramic fair in Western Japan, the Arita Ceramic Fair. |
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The tale of Sir Gareth begins with his arrival at court as le bel inconnu, or the fair unknown. |
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Of body she was right avenant, Of fair colour, with sweet semblant. Her attire full well it seem'd, Marvellich the king she quemed. |
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The accused has the right to a fair and speedy trial by a local and impartial jury. |
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I ventured to hint that he was not quite a fair judge, as Churchill had attacked him violently. |
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Judges in an adversarial system are impartial in ensuring the fair play of due process, or fundamental justice. |
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Their purpose is to be fair to both parties, disallowing the raising of allegations without a basis in provable fact. |
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Article 6 does not, however, replace the common law duty to ensure a fair hearing. |
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An additional debate is to what extent environmental laws are fair to all regulated parties. |
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A fair amount of it is biological, but a lot of it is also circumstantial. |
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Jelly shoes were originally made for kids so it's only fair that they don't miss out on the trend this time round. |
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Although zorses were not around during Georgian times, fair organisers at Beamish said Zulu was the perfect oddity for this year's event. |
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They were cheekily copying art from the fair and selling it. |
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Lawyers for Kerins and Flannery claimed the committee was on a witchhunt and they would not get a fair hearing. |
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I DO not understand why J Wells thinks that Mrs Robinson would have a fair walking distance to the Wheatsheaf. |
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Whacked-out monsters litter the liner at every turn, looking great in 3D, and take a fair old battering before giving up the ghost. |
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And to be fair about it, that's not the only way that Jernstedt describes the remarkable Welwitschias of southwestern Africa. |
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Saida Saliem Harun, the chairperson for the state women association said free, fair and timely elections are vital for the war-ridden nation. |
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Noise is to sonic art what abstract painting is to visual art, so it's probably fair to think of it as abstract music. |
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Well, so far, he's not turned up any Lord Lucans, but he's had more than his fair share of Wallies. |
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A September show coincides with important events on the local calendar such as Berlin Art Week and the art fair abc art berlin contemporary. |
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Asante Real Estate Group offers full-service real estate services at a fair price in Los Gatos and Silicon Valley. |
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Our ancient word of courage, fair Saint George, inspire us with the spleen of fiery dragons! |
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I'd borrowed teach yourself Persian CDs from the library, and listened to them for six months. But it's fair to say my Persian was wojus. |
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Not desiring to be discovered, we found a fair road close by a wood, withtook ourselves out of it with all haste, and went towards a village. |
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God's sake, speak her fair and canny, or we will have a raveled hasp on the yarn-windles! |
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If you happened to be a Westchesterite without a boat, you could still sail to the fair aboard a cruiser out of Mamaroneck. |
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Some have taken the opportunity to scoff at those cheating Antipodeans because British fair play means such a scandal could never occur here. |
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I wept for myself, but resigned my soul to the tyranny of Time and Circumstance, well weeting that Fortune is fair and constant to no man. |
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But how will Hairy Biker chef Dave Myers fair when he's asked M to get sewing and make an A-line skirt? |
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Nor can we tell whether his rapt musing on unsucked teats and fair apples is prompted by the naked woman he is gazing at. |
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Life was neither fair nor unfair, neither cruel nor uncruel. Rather it was a tangible, real thing, precious, and not easily affordable. |
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To her mind, extreme compensation is a fair trade for the compromises of such a career. |
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Joseph, when he was sold to Potiphar, that great man, was a fair young springall. |
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The spiritual philosophy pulls them down, and opens again the fair fields of spiritual naturalism to the contemplation of thinkers. |
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As we worked to the southward, we picked up fair weather, and enjoyed smooth seas and pleasant skies. |
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Another school skive! I only realised this when my dentist's receptionist told me to expect a fair wait till I could be seen. |
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At the racecourse, I could tell Red Rum was very well in himself and looked set fair in the sunshine. |
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They would walk, on fair evenings, around the village, and discuss the theory of crop rotation, and the weather, and other such sensible matters. |
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Everyone on a team must pull their fair share of scutwork if the team is to succeed. |
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In the course of the last decade, a fair number of ancient rupestral horoi have been published from various sites in southern Attica. |
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When they utterly despair of a fair hearing or a just decision, they tend to stop talking and reach for the nearest brick. |
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Weather during harvest need not be as fair and dry as when harvesting for drying. |
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Many walkers will arrive on Swirl How via one of the surrounding fells, all four ridges carrying fair paths. |
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For a valley of its size, Kentmere has produced more than its fair share of famous families. |
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A charter for an Easter fair at Holy Trinity Church was also granted at the same time. |
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The fair rate is the amount that allows an average worker to be paid the minimum wage per hour if they work at an average rate. |
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Aluminum, brass and plastics can have poor to fair machinability characteristics for cylindrical grinding. |
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His dedication to his work, his family and his sense of what was right and fair lasted until the day he died. |
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It's only fair to note that during the toddler years, the nightmare phase is just ramping up for many children. |
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The committee tried to be fair and aboveboard in its hiring. |
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O fair midspring, besung so oft and oft, How can I praise thy loveliness enow? |
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His servant placed before him a slice of toasted bread, with a glass of fair water, being the fare on which he usually broke his fast. |
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Perhaps it is only fair to come clean at the start and confess that I found J.R.R. Tolkien's Unfinished Tales a disappointment. |
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Chinese names are not fair game, and no self-respecting comiconomenclaturist would include in his collection a Ho Hum, a T. Hee, or a Jim Shoo. |
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The village school was a fine school....He learned his reading and had a fair copperplate hand. |
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After the middle sister's call from a friend's house, her slice of cake was fair game. |
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Is not the plain way more easy than the rough and cragged? is not the fair way more pleasant and passable than the foul? |
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These potatoes, however, planted the next year, have a fair yield, untouched by the curl. |
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And time again My bluest lady fair Serenely still passed by And felt her goldlike Hair Ah! here a curlsome smile meekly awhile. |
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An entity does not automatically conclude that any observed transaction price is determinative of fair value. |
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The caliphs obtained a mighty empire, which was in a fair way to have enlarged. |
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We believe it is our duty to help these people, because we don't think they are getting a fair crack of the whip. |
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He appreciated the honesty, he appreciated the fact that I rang him and was prepared to be fair dinkum with him, and he heard what I said. |
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You can play the exercises pretty well on piano, fair enough, but can you play the movement expressively? |
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But for this government to load up funding to the wealthiest schools in this country is anathema to the great Aussie notion of a fair go for all. |
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I wasn't expecting much of Ms Dynamite at the start of the night, but fair play to her, she's got a great voice on her. |
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In good seasons the stream must have been a fair little river, and during flood time it had spread all over the flat. |
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And, hark! she whispers in the zephyr's voice, Lift up thy head, fair floweret, and rejoice! |
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What about criticism of 'freemixing'? Emerald has received a fair share of censure, Ali admits. |
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Who! he serve? 'sblood, he keeps high men, and low-men, he! he has a fair living at Fullam. |
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Hirst and Perry too have courted their fair share of controversy. |
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It was here that the concepts of sportsmanship and fair play were first codified into clear rules and regulations. |
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I am willing to pay a fair amount, but not to be mulcted in that vindictive way, and nuts to the Hellfare State. |
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If this requirement is satisfied, a fair hearing can be conducted without detailed disclosure of confidential information that might compromise national security. |
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The Alicorn. He be a winged unicorn, the finest equine flesh extant, the adoration of every fair and innocent maiden. For that steed I would give anything. |
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There are chance anfractuosities of ruin in the upper portions of the Coliseum which offer a very fair imitation of the rugged face of an alpine cliff. |
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In fact, there was a fair amount of stuff around in the 60s and 70s that can only be explained as cross-dimensional leakage from an Atompunk universe. |
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I'd got a fair bleeze going the night before so's to keep midges at bay. |
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Only they 'aven't got a fair chawnce even to agitate fur their rights. |
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Methinks, our garments are now as fresh as when we put them on first in Afric, at the marriage of the king's fair daughter Claribel to the King of Tunis. |
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He was walking at a fair clip and I was out of breath trying to keep up. |
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Both loving one fair maid, they yet remained constant friends. |
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There was a fair amount of cruising going on at the gay party. |
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When will we learn to distinguish between the fair and the foul? |
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Pretending to be slow is fair game. Pretending to be injured is not. |
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The Gaelic Athletic Association, fair play to them, want absolutely nothing to do whatsoever with that thingumajig football tournament in America. |
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He came to the stake in a fair black gown furred and faced with foins. |
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If you could reach your funk-hole, and crouch in it, there was a fair chance of your coming out of it alive next day to run the gauntlet of the Bapaume Road again. |
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Today we are apt to think of a fair as a mileless potpourri of trylons and flood-lighted futuramas, but in the yesterdays of our greatgrandfathers, a fair meant a cattle show. |
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At that stage any fears among home fans of a possession monopoly by Laudrup's side were proving groundless, with Cardiff having their fair share of the ball and territory. |
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I was a keen sportsman of a sort, an old-experienced fisher, a fair shot with gun and rifle, and in my hillcraft I might well stand comparison with most men. |
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It is believed, owing to the impunctuality of collections, that in no part of the United States does fair lending at private interest, upon real security, net six per cent. |
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We might be in with a shout for a fair play award and the club might win a certificate for having the cleanest toilets or best pies, but that's it. |
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The general pinkness of complexion and furbelows, the jimpness of the long trim waist, the uncompromising bands of black velvet, the showers of fair ringlets. |
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Nationalisation was the only way to repay those debts and ensure a fair deal for everyone, and he was willing to surrender his shares in Power Jets to make this happen. |
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The accord has a provision ensuring a fair industrial return to Canada. |
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I willingly confess that it likes me much better when I find virtue in a fair lodging than when I am bound to seek it in an ill-favoured creature. |
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The combined setup gave a fair approximation of the ideal events, at the expense of increased friction and wear, and the mechanism tended to be complicated. |
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On the date of issuance, the entity should record the loaned shares at their fair value and recognize them as an issuance cost, with an offset to additional paid-in capital. |
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He is said to have been a firm but fair man, who had a great love for the Crystal Palace, and soon set about restoring the deteriorating building. |
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He argues that she had a weak case that was not well presented, and though she may have met with sexism from her lawyers, she did receive a fair trial. |
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This was unpopular with Championship clubs because there was no fair and easy way for them to get promoted into Super League and it was seen as a closed shop. |
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The design of America's Cup Class boats is controlled by a complex formula which allows designers a fair bit of room to optimize for different expected conditions. |
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Barr successfully helmed Columbia to victory, and Lipton's noted fair play provided unprecedented popular appeal to the sport and to his tea brand. |
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In 1994 and again in 2002, they won the Hodgson Trophy for fair play. |
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And it ate up sheep and men and women and was a fair terror, and the King had his heralds cry a reward to whatever knight would ride and end the mischieving of the beast. |
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The shares may have to be underpriced, and the sales may not raise as much capital as would be justified by the fair value of the company being privatized. |
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Finally, this fair is multiplicitous in ways that few others are anymore. |
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On a mount triangular, as the island of Britain itself is described to be, we seat in the supreme place, under the shape of a fair and beautiful nymph, Britannia herself. |
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Many liberals also believe that the government should regulate businesses to ensure safe and fair working conditions and to limit environmental pollution. |
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Further measures allowed the extradition of officials for trial elsewhere in the Empire, if the governor felt that a fair trial could not be secured locally. |
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While scholars have discovered a fair amount of information about how Irish Kingship worked, relatively little is actually related by early Irish laws. |
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As there was no fair held in the Rhondda the animals would be taken to neighbouring fairs and markets at Neath, Merthyr, Llantrisant, Ynysybwl and Llandaff. |
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One of the biggest selling fair trade branded products in Britain is Cafedirect, who have used a variety of platforms to position their fair trade brand in the market. |
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The only way to increase sale opportunities was to start offering fair trade products where consumers normally shop, in the large distribution channels. |
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In 2009, fair trade coffee was sufficiently mainstream that Walmart, the world's largest retailer began selling it, and pricing it about the same as regular. |
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It's only fair that, from now on, you should pay more for oil. |
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Fortunately for all of us, the rhetoric of both cultural pessimism and postmodernism contains more than its fair share of exaggeration and overgeneralization. |
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Community activist groups in West Harlem fought the expansion for reasons ranging from property protection and fair exchange for land, to residents' rights. |
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Dining services at Columbia spends 36 percent of its food budget on local products, in addition to serving sustainably harvested seafood and fair trade coffee on campus. |
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A fair amount of it washes out through the Straits of Florida in the Gulf Stream and ends up in the Sargasso Sea in the Atlantic Ocean off the East Coast of the United States. |
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After defeating the Irish knight Morholt, Tristan travels to Ireland to bring back the fair Iseult for his uncle, King Mark of Cornwall, to marry. |
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He's always telling Beth about the enormity of his next gig and the extraordinary phatness of his latest beats, and to be fair he can drop a good tune. |
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The material record may be closer to a fair representation of society, though it is subject to its own biases, such as sampling bias and differential preservation. |
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Sallust and Tacitus are fair examples of Gracchan Annalists. |
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They thought the Chinese relatively fair skinned compared to the other Asian stocks because they kept mostly in towns and were protected from environmental factors. |
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In a fair political fight in which neither side wishes to take unfair advantage of an opponent, last-minute poison-pen circulars should be banned. |
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The silk of Catanzaro supplied almost all of Europe and was sold in a large market fair in the port of Reggio Calabria, to Spanish, Venetian, Genovese and Dutch merchants. |
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Hery Rajaonarimampianina was declared the winner of the 2013 presidential election, which the international community deemed fair and transparent. |
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In the presidential election of 1999, opposition leader Abdoulaye Wade defeated Diouf in an election deemed free and fair by international observers. |
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Seville is internationally renowned for the solemn but decorative processions during Holy Week and the colourful and lively fair held two weeks after. |
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Inaugurated in the spring of 1957, the fair is a major event for the city. |
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