Proximate preparation is all that transpires generally from, say, late October through December, in terms of anticipations and plans. |
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We may become so obsessed with our ability to anticipate future events that our anticipations may seem to be real to us. |
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It was the aroma of the Christmas cake baking that triggered the anticipations and excitement. |
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This erotics of identification invariably frustrates the viewers' anticipations and appeals instead to their puzzle-solving abilities. |
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Older people I think are probably in a stage of life where the anticipations of death are more frequent. |
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She has also started to conceptualise the passage of time, filling her constant conversation with memories and anticipations. |
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Remember the anticipations of catastrophes brought about by computer meltdowns. |
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This simple reality is hidden from view by early philosophical and theological anticipations of mass schooling in various writings about social order and human nature. |
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By the fall of 1929, U. S. stock prices had reached levels that could not be justified by reasonable anticipations of future earnings. |
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But anticipations of victory, however rational, were premature. |
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This movement is in line with the group's anticipations and the comments published in the 2003 annual report. |
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A brand is a well-differentiated concept for providing consumers with a benefit that will arouse motivating, exclusive and incomparable anticipations. |
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Storytelling thrives on limits, inhibitions, social conventions, a world of anticipations and outcomes. |
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The width of the band of fluctuation is supposed to let the exchange rate fluctuate with the fundamentals, without causing destabilizing anticipations. |
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The anticipations of farmers however are not naïve, and the producers of field crops know how to use past observations to make a significant estimate of what will happen the following year. |
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The resulting physical view arguably contains anticipations of the fundamental character of modern physics, and certainly anticipates modern theory of homeostatic systems. |
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And after all these happy anticipations, what do I get? |
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Turning, as he often did, to evidence from literary and mythical texts as anticipations of his psychological insights, Freud interpreted that source in terms of Sophocles' tragedy Oedipus Rex. |
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There are distinct anticipations of positivism in ancient philosophy. |
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What are your market anticipations for the consulting arm? |
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They change this picture completely: prices depend more on anticipations, apprehension of the context, attitudes to risk, etc., just like on all fi nancial markets. |
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The anticipations of the shopkeeper were realized, and his rooms soon became notorious through the charms of the sprightly grisette. |
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Many men give themselves up to the first anticipations of their minds. |
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