I don't think the current malaise is a catastrophe on the order of Black Monday. |
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The castle's demise is part of a general malaise within SNH that has affected the whole of the island, he said. |
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Shouldn't we be examining these techniques as a treatment for our own malaise? |
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Can China help lift the world's poorest region out of its deep economic and political malaise? |
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Prior to the most recent malaise, some stock market cheerleaders had been talking in terms of a rally. |
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Very often the initial eruption is accompanied by fever, malaise and what appear to be sore gums. |
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Humiliation or manhandling of officials is not the solution to this malaise. |
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His meditative films reflected an unease with the modern world and a feeling of malaise in western society. |
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He had malaise, lethargy, and poor appetite but no history of night sweats. |
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So it's vaguely disappointing that I am probably suffering from a disappointingly vague malaise. |
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He's certainly improved from his involvement at the start of the season when he got caught in the general malaise of the team. |
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It was an act of fiscal machismo, which many in the party believe is the root of the current mid-term malaise. |
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The disease has an insidious onset and presents with fever, malaise and weakness. |
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Two people, a husband and wife, work out their marital malaise by literally trying to kill one another. |
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Ostensibly hard-hitting and media-savvy journalists invariably focus instead on symptoms of the underlying malaise. |
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Given that, at Christmas, the world is full of beautiful women titivating themselves, I think my malaise is understandable. |
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While there are no real dead spots, a midtempo malaise falls over the otherwise strong batch of songs. |
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What about the general malaise, the mopiness and lethargy that accompany a wide range of illnesses? |
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Patients may be asymptomatic or may have symptoms of fever, malaise, myalgia, and hepatitis. |
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Fever, malaise, myalgia, and upper respiratory tract symptoms or infections characterize influenza infection. |
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They still appear to be unsatisfied that Barnes's departure will cure the malaise which affects the club. |
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Other symptoms include fever, joint and muscle pain, malaise, urticaria, and pharyngitis. |
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Normal reactions to smallpox vaccination include erythema, edema, regional lymphadenopathy, fever, malaise, and urticaria. |
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Some patients also report dysthesia or neuralgic type pain in the buttocks or legs and malaise with fever. |
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The trip to the surgery taxed me more than somewhat, along with the malaise that comes from being prodded and poked. |
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Just a nibble on a Rich Tea biscuit in the morning would soon banish the malaise. |
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This medical malaise incidentally is most suffered by wicket-keepers who have to squat hundreds of times a day during a match. |
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But let's enjoy this band now, before they sell out and become like the rest of the malady-ridden malaise currently polluting our hit parade. |
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A susurrous gloom cloaks these stories as if the country's collective malaise traveled on the wind. |
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The November 6 vote is a symptom of a far deeper malaise in Australian politics. |
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Initial signs and symptoms are generalized malaise, chills, fevers, headaches, arthralgias, and a nonproductive cough. |
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The prodrome may include malaise, chills, a feverish feeling, anorexia and irritability. |
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I want to argue that the discipline is constitutionally fated to suffer from a quiet melancholic malaise. |
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Ironically, a cozying up to the current government may have led to the perceived malaise. |
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The first symptoms of rabies may be nonspecific, flu-like signs, including malaise, fever, or headache, which may last for days. |
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It almost explodes with good cheer, cleverly disguising its inner malaise with vigorous positivity. |
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Deficient spleen Qi is shown by a sense of malaise or fullness in that area. |
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Patients usually recall a nonspecific prodrome of malaise, fever, and chest pain, especially in viral or idiopathic pericarditis. |
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There is often a systemic prodrome of fever, malaise and myalgias one to two days before the appearance of lesions. |
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The patient also may have profound malaise, severe headaches, myalgias, and vague abdominal pain. |
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Typical features of infectious mononucleosis include fever, pharyngitis, adenopathy, malaise, and an atypical lymphocytosis. |
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These consequences of unprecedented growth in population undoubtedly played a part in the general malaise out of which disaffection grew. |
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But its victory was now tinged with malaise, for it was accompanied by an ever greater disengagement of its citizens from public life. |
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However, now he had returned to England, he had developed generalised muscle aches and pains and a vague malaise. |
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But no amount of whitewash and tarmac can hide Georgian society's deeper malaise. |
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There followed a novel which was praised by Taki in the Spectator for its angle on the Western malaise. |
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Police checked the area, finding only the usual ambient aroma of free-floating malaise. |
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Fever, night sweats, malaise, myalgia, and arthralgia are common in all types of vasculitis. |
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Another aspect of Germany's malaise, however, is the low opinion the public has of its politicians. |
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Tick-borne diseases typically begin with a low-grade fever, headache, malaise, and possibly a rash. |
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The unemployment rate provides one indication of the Japanese economic malaise. |
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It is easy to see how these long term weaknesses are aggravating the current malaise. |
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Geldof's frustration at the highly volatile media sector's malaise is clear. |
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The African Book Famine emerged as one depressing aspect of widespread educational malaise. |
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High malaise scores in adulthood were also significantly associated with higher risk. |
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It is this same distortion of values which is at the root of the malaise in general practice. |
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She has exteriorised her affliction by simulating it in her self-portraits through blurred grainy patches, thus ridding the body of physiological disease and social malaise. |
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The antidote to the malaise of modern law, it seems, is a leap of faith. |
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That got him thinking about child stars as symbols for a larger malaise. |
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Lynne, my wife, had a persistent productive cough, fever, and malaise. |
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Following an incubation period of five to 21 days, patients with enteric fever usually present with sustained fever, anorexia, malaise, and vague abdominal discomfort. |
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Patients with giant cell arteritis often have a variety of other symptoms, such as malaise, fatigue, low-grade fever, anorexia, weight loss, myalgias or arthralgias. |
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If these signs occur in conjunction with lymphangitis, fever, malaise and anorexia, or if they increase over a baseline level, infection should be suspected. |
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Moral equivalence and malaise, rather than red-hot ideology, motivates haydon. |
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Yet because the government has been tardy in its response, the initiative was lost, and it's likely the current economic malaise will only get worse. |
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Such errors are symptomatic of a deeper malaise in these programmes. |
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The visit of the barques, brigantines and schooners also seemed to drive off some of the tourism malaise created by a July shrouded in fog, damp and rain. |
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Evidence of the malaise now afflicting the established institutions in our society is all around, from parliament and the police to the monarchy and the churches. |
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The patient began to experience malaise and pain in the upper abdomen. |
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Located in the dusty backwater of Datong, a provincial city in northeast China, the movie depicts a global village in the throes of millennial malaise. |
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It is a nostalgic, old-fashioned novel that nevertheless reflects the malaise of its era and prefigures our own technophiliac age. |
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Let us refuse to let this day of dying fade into memory and the malaise of resignation to things as they are. |
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Romney's malaise, likely, is the result if an uninspiring vision and a shaky economic message. |
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Technically, other TV characters are having a much more indulgent time with their midlife malaise. |
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But repeated tests create a uniform sort of busywork, which can turn quickly into malaise. |
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Generally speaking, the weakness of December 2004 is a continuation of an overall cinematic malaise that has infected multiplexes and art-houses this year. |
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What a relief, what a salve for my own anxiety, to have a president again who doesn't suffer from existential angst or malaise, or who doesn't show it if he does. |
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There was a rumour, a whisper, of a deeper malaise in the state. |
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Minor toxic effects, such as stomatitis, malaise, nausea, diarrhea, headaches and mild alopecia, are common but respond to folate supplementation. |
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It was no mistake that the only decade to rival the 1930s in terms of prolonged market malaise was the 1970s, another era defined by interventionist wage and price policies. |
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Other symptoms may include fever, malaise, anorexia, and weight loss. |
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He has since experienced several episodes of unexplained myalgia, fever, malaise, arthralgias, and discrete knee joint effusions. |
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The country's current economic problems are symptoms of a deeper malaise. |
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Alack of fresh faces and a chronic shortage of midfield flair has added to the malaise. |
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On December 9, another son of patient 1, who lived in Monrovia, had fever, headache, and malaise and sought care at hospital A in Bong County. |
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Female patients usually complain of malaise, dysuria, dyspareunia and leukorrhea. |
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Clinical signs include pyrexia, malaise, kinesalgia, opsoclonus, ataxia, and myoclonic encephalopathy. |
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Common symptoms of infection with the virus include mild headaches, maculopapular rash, fever, malaise, conjunctivitis, and arthralgia. |
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Mason's failing marriage left him in a general malaise and with a sense of apathy, both of which interfered with his drumming. |
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Radius plans to develop the compound as a new therapeutic drug for osteoporosis and malaise such as hot flashes associated with post-menopausal disorders, etc. |
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As Lazarus argues, these novels suggest that racial unity and remembrance of the precolonial past are the only solutions to neocolonialist malaise. |
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These films... are evidence of a deep cultural malaise. The need to make them and the desire to consume them are symptoms of a contemporary sickness unto death. |
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Systemic symptoms include fever, chills, malaise, nausea, vomiting, arthralgias, myalgias, headache, anorexia, abdominal pain, weakness, and convulsions. |
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Other eggs lodge in the liver and other tissues, eliciting immune responses and causing the abdominal pain, fever, and malaise that mark schistosomiasis. |
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Summer has the young monk, now 17, becoming hot and bothered by a beautiful young woman who has been brought to the monastery to recover from a spiritual malaise. |
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Inam ul Haq javed's poetry is the quality of humor and its meaningfulness, the wit and wisdom which highlight the serious social malaise in a lighter vein. |
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When liver function worsens and presents with symptoms such as jaundice, malaise, ascites, edema, hepatic encephalopathy, it is called decompensated cirrhosis. |
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The clinical symptoms of H1N1 influenza in most cases are similar to seasonal influenza, such as fever, cough, sore throat, rhinorrhoea, headache, muscle pain, and malaise. |
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