Do these schools have any idea of the feelings of revulsion a statement like that on their websites provokes? |
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Diet drinks can be even worse than non-diet, because they contain saccharin which provokes hyperactivity even more. |
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Because humans are aware that animals are mortal, being reminded of our animality provokes this paralyzing anxiety. |
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Genetic manipulation of food products provokes strong emotions whenever it is discussed. |
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Military encirclement and the bombing of markets and waterworks provokes hunger, thirst, and slow death for millions. |
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It is not surprising that filicide, the killing of a child by a parent, provokes strong feelings. |
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It is also counterproductive. Exerting pressure arouses mistrust and provokes fresh attacks from the Church's critics. |
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Cromwell's name resonates down the centuries and provokes strong reactions to this day. |
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Climate change is the environmental fear that provokes the greatest degree of apocalyptic prophesy. |
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At other times it provokes genuine, childish delight, the wonderment of having stumbled across a secret. |
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It is she who provokes the rupture between Freud and Jung which enabled the latter to venture deeper into the unconscious. |
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This provokes an artificial crisis which is used to discredit the unions by placing the blame directly on them for the crisis. |
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Whereas the caged specimens evoke a comfortably detached curiosity, the uncaged native provokes a fear that demands surveillance. |
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Deconstructionism is one of the words that provokes a strong reaction from both sides. |
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From a design point of view, something about their absolutely neutral formal character provokes strong reactions. |
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The term brings to mind, rather, the importance of kinship relations in primitive societies, and provokes an invidious comparison to England. |
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While the film was not the director's usual sci-fi, gory, effects driven fare, it still provokes a great deal of thought. |
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Jaspers's emphasis on the importance of form over the content of psychopathology provokes the authors' ire. |
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It is only when we learn of his guilty secret and hidden background that the casting provokes deep reservations. |
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Even the whisper of new equity or debt offerings provokes warnings of downgrades from rating agencies and investor stampedes. |
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It provokes a range of responses based on two radically different perspectives on the issue of child abuse. |
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The tension between his attitudes and those of his church provokes more fertile questions than does the assumed harmony. |
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And rather than cajoling audiences with fear and prejudice, it provokes them into reflection and debate. |
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In some quarters, the prospect of consolidated communities provokes a deep-rooted fear of losing local control and community identity. |
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Whatever reaction it provokes, there is an obligation to history to unmask an apparent lie of this magnitude and establish the truth. |
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Exposure to the particular stimulus provokes anxiety, which may include a situationally bound panic attack. |
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However, industry insiders have say that the company is flying a kite to see if this plan provokes any interest among operators. |
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In place of serious and measured lament, then, the book provokes more and more comedy at its promiscuous and preposterous poor-mouthing. |
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Human curiosity seems the obvious answer, and eavesdropping creates that narrative lack which provokes curiosity. |
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What provokes this post is that someone from the church is on the phone right now, mocking me for not being able to shoot or hunt. |
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The very delicacy of their situation is what provokes the attention-seeking behaviour. |
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Sadly, the result could be a kitchen so demandingly hi-tech it provokes even domestic goddesses to kick holes in stained glass windows. |
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The spirit of a jealous person is one of impurity, which takes on an evil quality that provokes real, perceptible damage to the envied person, animal or property. |
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Such an attitude expects no rebuffs and overlooks those it provokes. |
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The instantaneous nature of the net then provokes a prompt response. |
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It's unfair to suggest that he deliberately provokes dressing room conflict, but he's not the ideal chap to apply soothing balm when it breaks out. |
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For all his digressiveness, he constantly selects and shapes, for he ever desires to maintain control over the emotions that he provokes in his reader. |
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His predicament, with its eerie prefigurement of the present, provokes a closer look at the crossroads in which culture and finance intersect. |
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Another first for Lexus: an engine whose sound at full throttle provokes goosebumps. |
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It's a very rum go, and in the end, despite the occasional hoots of sardonic delight which it all provokes, it just makes you feel a bit depressed. |
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As soon as the austro-german troops have withdrawn, the government of hetman Skoropadsky runs away and provokes the fall of his regime. |
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One and a half hours after having added the rennet which provokes the curdling, the curds are cut into four pieces. |
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The music provokes through its languor, even disturbs through its extreme sensuousness and we end up adoring its gracefulness. |
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If a player, in playing within the rules provokes an excessive contact, then the contact will be judged to be un-sportsmanlike. |
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His rhythm tracks are intended to stimulate your medulla oblongata, which in turn provokes an involuntary tapping response in your foot. |
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In our survey, de-fasciculation is frequently performed with succinylcholine that provokes fasciculation. |
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This situation in turn provokes a fundamentalism, which demands orientation, it fosters emotion, because the mass as a unit wants to be led. |
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Staff must abstain from any behaviour which provokes suspected or sentenced offenders in their charge. |
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To read about these enigmas bordering on the supernatural gives us a strange thrill, enriches us, provokes our curiosity, invites us to voyage. |
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Each traumatic event which perturbs the dura mater, provokes the perturbation of the function which is controlled by the affected area. |
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What's worrying is the attitude of the North, which provokes kneejerk reflex of a block of countries. |
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The Energiewende raises costs, unsettles supply and provokes resistance at grass-roots level. |
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Accommodationists respond by arguing that promoting integration amid deep diversity provokes conflict. |
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In a sense, it did a mild indignity to uncommonly elegant music and to a story that endears in some ways and provokes in others. |
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One of them, salat olivier, almost provokes Proustian tears from a Ukranian-born friend across the table. |
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This process provokes a thousandfold expansion of the oil surface so that it can be absorbed intensively by the skin. |
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Similarly, phototherapy now exists to relieve sclerodermia, a pathology which provokes cutaneous lesions. |
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The superimposed and juxtaposed backgrounds and foregrounds reveal a depth that provokes the eye's curiosity. |
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It provokes a sudden decrease in glomerular filtration rate, an increase in nitrogen products as well as an imbalance of electrolytes. |
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Beside creating shade, vegetation transpires water and thus provokes natural cooling through evaporation. |
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While some protest that the question is unimportant, it still provokes strong feelings. |
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This is an elegant and clever moment where gender transcends class, and it provokes tears in the audience. |
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Heating the recipient provokes an increase in pressure with a risk of bursting. |
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Literature such as this provokes and encourages children to partake in these activities that are detrimental to their health. |
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It is in order to wonder why transgenesis provokes so much questioning, whereas conventional selection has never aroused any reaction. |
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Being at the same time a shining beacon and an observation tower, the work provokes a debate on what art is within a gallery. |
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The louche action and the changing of colours it provokes are even more beautiful. |
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The imprisonment, or even arrest, of a parent usually provokes strong reactions in their children. |
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Any inaccuracy or infringement on her individuality and her work provokes a strong response. |
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This is rather a sign of our times, which provokes us to re-think our mission and our faith itself in the perspective of dialogue. |
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The revelation of Anske turning down offers from interested publishers likely provokes other aspiring novelists to facepalm as they flail under a pile of rejected query letters. |
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Keith lusts for Scheherazade and Lily provokes and even encourages him toward her. |
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What is it about exercise that provokes the desire to get leathered? |
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They can hardly be surprised when their own behavior provokes a backlash. |
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So too with a vaccine that provokes a specific immune response aimed at a specific RNA sequence. |
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Fierce competition often provokes a rush to judgement, a sense of perpetual crisis and a frantic chase for stories, sacrificing the process of reflective maturation. |
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The music is Beethovenian in the depth of feeling it provokes. |
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For my technologically illiterate mother, the idea of paying bills online provokes as much anxiety as throwing something away. |
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This is also the preferred tactic of Ann Coulter, who provokes liberal indignation with Pavlonian preciseness. |
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The individuals quarantined may in each case be perfectly healthy, but the suspicion that they are harbouring disease provokes the application of quarantine procedures. |
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This oversensitivity to being slighted in turn provokes the desire to rectify one's situation through retaliation, by lashing out at the offender. |
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Uttering a cross word about Lefty usually provokes the same kind of reaction as wresting a child's favorite overstuffed teddy bear from his or her arms. |
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The movie provokes a lot of smiles and chuckles, but few belly laughs. |
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A job with plenty of dust, which soon provokes respiratory problems. |
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This is the factor that provokes the fear of anticipation in the mind of the child who is the subject of the bullying, and that can be so harmful and cause long-term damage. |
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But that depends on how much they trust Mr Blair these days, not much. Mr Blair retains an almost mystic faith in his powers of persuasion, touchingly undimmed by recent experience and the cynicism he now provokes. |
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For me, an important anniversary always provokes deep thought. |
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There proved to be little in the way of forceful reactions to the document itself, contrary to what one might have imagined given the nature of a subject matter that often provokes bitter debate. |
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Consequently, in the event of sickness, disability, old age, unemployment, widowhood and any other involuntary situation which provokes deprivation, every person has the right to be looked after. |
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After hearing the pope's story, however, Dante again preaches against the greed of simony that so provokes him. |
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It provokes biological reactions that can be both beneficial and harmful to the body from the moment exposure to its rays is not carried out in moderation. |
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The moustache scribble à la Heiner Brandt is synonymous with handball in the country of the world champions. The drawn moustache is jarring and provokes a second look. |
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The physical violence, considering this one to be any not accidental action that provokes or could provoke a physical hurt, disease or risk of enduring it. |
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Europe needs to toe the same political line where admitting refugees onto its territory is concerned and needs to act together to stamp out the underground activity which this provokes. |
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Starting in the 19th century, nationalism emerges as the engine of international relations and it, combined with revolutionary, or reactionary, ideologies, provokes strings of war and genocide. |
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It's a question of choice. Personally, I think it's good that something like that exists because it stirs things up and provokes anti-Popstars movements like punk and grunge. |
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For all audiences, the message should prominently and concisely present a statement that captures the main idea or pose a question that provokes thought. |
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He explains that he composes his paintings somewhat as a ballad which prompts reflexion, provokes, bemuses and always arouses a multitude of questions. |
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There is also an increase in pressure reflexes, i.e. a stimulus which affects the palm of the hand provokes a reflected hyperflexion in that hand. |
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In the mouse, this provokes an increase in the occurrence of lung and stomach tumors, as well as those of the foreskin in males and of the clitoris in females. |
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Various factors may be at the origin of asthma attacks, notably cigarette smoke which provokes bronchial hyperexcitability which is known as intrinsic asthma. |
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The formation of ice sheets is the same as for glaciers: an accumulation of snow resulting from insufficient melting provokes the snow to be squeezed which expulses the air that it holds and transforms it into ice. |
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Their disappearance provokes a near-riot among the population in a country where the unit's expeditious methods and its daily roster of victims have, for over a year, been fruitlessly denounced. |
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If a woman provokes her own abortion, she is liable for the blood money. |
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A black comedy that provokes mirthless laughter with modest means. |
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Trichomas vaginitis provokes a foamy yellow-green discharge. |
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German unification quite understandably provokes thoughts of an economic giant at the centre of Europe, unamenable to the wishes and worries of neighbours to its east and to its west. |
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In the United States, Canada, everywhere, every new technology inevitably provokes a political confrontation between alarmists and the scientific community. |
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While the classic Zen koan has no real answer, it provokes many questions when it comes to the power of partnerships. |
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That is why the addition of water provokes no louche action. |
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People may be more likely to stumble upon a page which provokes a comment on a given topic on a large wiki than they would be likely to have that comment provoked while browsing a smaller wiki. |
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The poorly regulated or illegal trade in weapons fuels conflicts, violates human rights and international humanitarian law and provokes and exacerbates situations marked by violence throughout the world. |
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Sustainable development requires movement away from established ways of doing things, and this inevitably provokes resistance from groups that worry that their interests will be harmed. |
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As for Tony Blair: whatever some people say about his record, especially on Iraq, he is simply not in the same league as Thatcher, or even Brown, as a leader who provokes an extreme response. |
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The faster the neutron, the fewer break-ups it provokes. |
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It provokes democratic and anti-racist sentiment. |
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Conscious awareness of pain provokes muscle guarding and splinting. |
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From my point of view, what provokes the crisis that we find ourselves in is the fact that the contradictions and incongruities in our relationships can no longer be sustained. |
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To the poet the meaning is what he pleases to make it, what it provokes in his own soul. |
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The only emotions this art provokes are anger and disbelief that anyone could be so insensitively dumb. |
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What he later dubbed the Oedipus complex presents the child with a critical problem, for the unrealizable yearning at its root provokes an imagined response on the part of the father: the threat of castration. |
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Our pride means firstly the wish to proclaim that we shouldn't be ashamed of our decision not to kill animals for our consumption, that we will no longer be intimidated by the jibes that this choice provokes. |
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The limited access to housing provokes strong local politics. |
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Muslims in Wiltshire say they will hold the controversial group Islam4UK responsible if a proposed march provokes a racial backlash in the county. |
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This tragedy of the commons provokes a capitalization process that leads them to increase their costs until they are equal to their revenue, dissipating their rent completely. |
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Clearly, it is this imbalance, and not the procreative revolution that it provokes, that constitutes the lamentability of this future for Forster's narrator. |
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These provide a very high level of braking performance and are usually the element which provokes the greatest reaction from drivers new to the formula. |
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And when a body of film challenges and provokes audiences, defying easy interpretation or categorization, then the appeal of auteurism is even stronger. |
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