Although the larger centers are similar in generalities, the specifics may differ. |
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The frequent use of such abstract generalities is a distinguishing feature of the Goethian style. |
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Aristotle himself advises us not to spend too much time over these generalities but rather to concentrate on the different functions of the soul. |
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The brainy part of the movie is best when dealing in generalities, not specifics. |
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This time around the presidential candidates have also gotten away with generalities and general statements. |
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The conflicts are easy to see once the discussion moves from generalities to specific cases. |
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I know we will be speaking in huge generalities, but generally speaking, what type of people want to be journalists? |
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It's a greasy argument that's so long on generalities and so short on specifics. |
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Since I was talking generalities rather than specifics, it wasn't my intention to spend a lot of time searching and counting replies. |
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I''m going to write in generalities and then I'll fill out the rest of the story. |
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Several other speakers delivered generalities and platitudes, many of which ignored the honored president entirely. |
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It concentrates instead upon specific generalities that are losing relevance in today's game. |
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It demands moving beyond generalities to a clear vision based on specifics. |
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She has blurred specificity and social commentary into charged generalities. |
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And rather than speak in generalities, she's prepared to talk about specifics. |
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Now, I do not know where this is taking us but we cannot, in this area especially, speak in terms of abstract generalities. |
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She tries never to attack the person, just the behavior, and to identify concrete problems and solutions rather than generalities. |
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But only a few candidates have gone beyond generalities to offer specific proposals. |
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So where am I going with these generalities and abstractions that praise the specific and concrete? |
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But there's many a slip twixt cup and lip as one goes from generalities to specifics. |
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In short, what we have here is a veritable orgy of vacuous generalities and meaningless slogans. |
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Instead, his speech to the UN assembly was full of high-sounding generalities and evasions. |
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Such generalities conceal significant taxonomic heterogeneity at the kingdom level. |
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Kerry talks in generalities because he is alone and comes from nowhere and lives among servants and lackeys in hotel rooms. |
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They shirked responsibility, put the blame on others, finding refuge in generalities and then in an unthinking bustle of activity. |
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I think every individual situation is just a little different though they have generalities. |
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When one strained oneself to listen to the speaker one could make out that some important male writers were speaking in generalities. |
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Since no one can cover all the facts about anything in such little bits of time, information must be delivered in generalities shorn of details. |
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But, instead of standing there using vague generalities, it would be interesting if you would tell us what these old marrowless truths are, that we are nourished on. |
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But her style is often clumsy, particularly when she discusses generalities, and I was worried by apparently unjustified discrepancies in transcription of schwa. |
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In that case, the fate of the human animal is sealed by the relation between predicative particularities and legislative generalities. |
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The 33-page document, published on Tuesday, provided a superabundance of generalities and concepts, but remained abstract on firm spending targets. |
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He breaks little new ground and sticks to broad generalities, offering little in the way of examples or research to prove his point. |
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In his TV interview he offered little detail, leaning on generalities about restoring French confidence. |
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The letter was cast in airy generalities but its import was clear: forget about the Fischler reforms. |
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Transposed directives and national reform programmes must consist not just of generalities but of genuinely focused and measurable choices. |
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Try to be as detailed as possible avoiding generalities and escaping from constructive involvement. |
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This makes it difficult to articulate how the team makes a contribution beyond vague generalities. |
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Otherwise they may sit down and they may talk about generalities without any tangible movement. |
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Specific questions about specific projects to determine eligibility are asked and generalities are avoided. |
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This is a platform long on generalities and short of specifics. |
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And this is the effect our doomsayer strives to acheive with his generalities. |
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The outcome is a hotchpotch report which strings together universally known generalities. |
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The Liberal pattern has been to tantalize with messages to make Canadians feel good as offer generalities and hints of a political direction. |
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I was talking in generalities in terms of IP being a two-edged sword to a certain extent. |
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He spoke in generalities, terms that would be contained by this legislation. |
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The notion that the minister in his comments to the media spoke in generalities and not in specifics about what was contained in the bill, as the parliamentary secretary just asserted, unfortunately is not accurate at all. |
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The problem of unrepresentativeness affects other groups with power to fill in the generalities of human right treaties. |
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Two-page letters that are specific and informative usually outpull one-page letters filled with generalities. |
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The report of the Steering Committee engaged in generalities and lacked both empirical data and an understanding of the intergovernmental nature and international character of the United Nations. |
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In an effort to contribute to the debate and move beyond generalities, it enters into many of the complex details, both of the climate change regime and of the human rights institutional machinery. |
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Nothing can be more deadly in a business letter than faltering and fumbling, or spreading yourself over a lot of generalities, or wandering off into vague profundities. |
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It usually proved impossible, however, to get agreement to more than bland generalities, especially in those departments that are really loosely-knit federations of semi-autonomous branches. |
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The report spoke in generalities on the issue of torture, whereas there had been very specific complaints of torture at the hands of Tunisian authorities. |
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There must be no bastardizing or hybridization, no accidental grafts between these two generalities, genres, or genealogies. |
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All the same I am afraid if we simply adopt the British proposals, we shall escape the Scylla of over-vague formulas only to encounter the Charybdis of over-vague generalities. |
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Code articles deal in generalities and thus stand at odds with statutory schemes which are often very long and very detailed. |
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If the speaker hides behind abstract principles or generalities, or refers only to other people's experiences, the participants will follow the speaker's lead. |
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It cannot shed much light on the personality of a president and how presidential personalities effect governing and management. Science, being what it is, trades in generalities. |
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Instead, she chose to gloss over the subject and speak in generalities. |
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Nonetheless, some generalities are possible. |
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Companies should be conscious of these generalities so that barriers which might prevent potential or actual employees from successfully entering the workforce can be anticipated. |
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Instrumentalists, and I am speaking in generalities, regularly work with metronome tempi for etudes, scales, orchestral excerpts and other passages. |
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