Particularly, the milkmen are able to impress upon the customers that the milk they bring is from a single cow or buffalo. |
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The retriever was stretched out on the back seat, and she wanted to impress upon the dog that he must remain there. |
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They are carving up wheat fields with ever more elaborate designs to impress upon us how intelligent they are. |
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While he was alive, his developments were still dynamically in progress, as he repeatedly tried to impress upon his students. |
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Last but not least, I should like to impress upon member States the importance of the high-level segment. |
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Leadership from coast to coast could get together and impress upon their respective governments the need to deal with this issue. |
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Drill instructors impress upon recruits that pain is weakness leaving the body. |
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The Council and the Commission should impress upon the Member States concerned the need to speed up their transposition procedures. |
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I should just like to impress upon you once more that this exercise should not be dealt with in a technical, bureaucratic or formalistic way. |
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We will continue our efforts in this regard to impress upon the government the imperative for change. |
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Feedback also served to impress upon the offices the importance of planning timely project audits. |
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I must impress upon each of you that the privilege of Lions membership also entails definite obligations. |
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Perhaps it was to impress upon their followers a sense of the supernatural. |
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Our obligation is to impress upon the student that he faces certain needs which are inescapable. |
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That would impress upon States parties that submission of a report was a means, rather than an end in itself. |
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The relevant health professionals should impress upon their patients the importance of strictly complying with the prescribed dosage. |
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This is the perspective which we want to impress upon the future trade negotiations. |
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They took the occasion to impress upon President Kravchuk the urgency with which they viewed the shutdown of Chernobyl. |
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This is your opportunity to try again to impress upon him the extent to which your life is affected by pain. |
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We wish to impress upon all conflicting parties that they should carry out their obligations under international humanitarian law. |
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We need to impress upon them how important they are to us. |
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His real aim, however, was to impress upon me his view of the refugees. |
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And if there is one message I want to impress upon you today, it's this: transportation safety increasingly relies on the cooperative efforts of stakeholders. |
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I hope, over the next few months, that we will have an opportunity to impress upon our colleagues in Parliament and ministers in the various Member States the importance to us. |
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I also want to impress upon this House how pleased I am with one of the committee's unanimous recommendations, which is on the road to excellence of the Canadian Olympic committee. |
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On its part, the Commission has seized every opportunity to impress upon the Somali authorities on the need to do all they can to facilitate the work of the humanitarian organizations and access to needy populations. |
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As regards the importance of the EU to South Africa's foreign policy, South Africa needs to continue to impress upon the EU the importance of its continued commitment to African, AU and NEPAD programs. |
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His career as editor had been long enough, however, for him to impress upon the minds of the French public the imminency of the Prussian Peril. |
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Such a one is very apt to leave his impress upon his scholars, as the waffle-iron is impressed upon the cake that is baked in it. |
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However, it deems necessary to impress upon the State Party the importance of delivering the reports in a timely fashion and with sufficient detail. |
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The refusal was not unexpected but served to impress upon Martel's forces the unreasonableness of the Neustrians. |
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However, I must impress upon the Security Council that the continued success of the International Tribunal rests upon its ability to retain its highly qualified and experienced Judges and staff. |
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But both will impress upon voters that things should be better. |
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