It only defers its end by disrupting the social event with which it begins. |
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It's a teleological structure, but the successful continuation of the presence of the interactive focus defers and ultimately defeats the telos. |
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It defers commencement by only a couple of months, but that couple of months is vital in terms of principle. |
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Everyone defers to him, especially his main man, a clubfooted ghetto intellectual known as Smush, and the other members of Smush's ragtag crew. |
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Scrap steel recycling conserves energy, defers the development of less economic mineral resources, and eases the burden on municipal landfills. |
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The Bloc Québécois has called for the elimination of the waiting period, which defers eligibility by two weeks. |
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The delay defers for two years the moment when the company will achieve profitability. |
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The Corporation only defers costs for projects when it believes they are more likely than not of being completed. |
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Competition law generally defers to other laws and regulations if they are inconsistent. |
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Even after he warms up and becomes an enthusiastic dad who defers to his son, he is more shark than cuddlesome papa bear. |
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He underscored that having two terms does not generate continuity, but rather defers the gap by a single assessment period. |
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He defers to the law at all junctures, just as Emmett King used to when he read to his family from the Iowa code books. |
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This is a U. S. trust that defers payment of tax until the death of the second spouse. |
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The very generous-I would even say munificent-amendment moved by the hon. member for Burin-St. George's defers the decision by one year. |
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If an error occurs during the execution of the VI, error out defers this error. |
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A factory has produced a product and supplied it to the retailer, then the retailer defers payment for three months. |
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Answer 1: If your partnership arrangement defers the control of your licence to someone else, then it is a controlling agreement. |
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This plan defers the payment of your taxes while helping you save up faster than in traditional savings accounts because the interests are also tax sheltered. |
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One of the girls in the video, uploaded by mother Tara Willmott, tries to tell a boy that it's raining, but he defers to his mum's assessment that is in fact only drizzling. |
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But they also fear Mr Sadr. In Qom, Iran's main seminary town, Mr Sadr's few supporters rally around Ayatollah Kazem Haeri, the cleric to whom, at least notionally, Mr Sadr defers in matters of theology and law. |
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Thus, there is no need for secured transactions law to recreate those rules. Accordingly, this Guide generally defers to those bodies of law for effectuation of this principle. |
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After analysing its own objectives, there is the possibility, at least theoretically, that the Alliance defers the invitation to Romania or other candidate countries. |
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Canadian Blood Services defers donors who have had a tattoo or body piercing for six months because of the infectious risks associated with crossing the skin barrier. |
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Similar protections exist under the law governing bank accounts and the law and practice governing independent undertakings, and this Guide defers to them as well. |
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Mr. Speaker, that particular provision basically defers the payment of duty by small vintners selling wine on consignment in retail stores operated by an association of vintners until the wine is sold. |
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The agreement is extremely broad-based and the repayment period is spread over some twenty-five years, according to a smoothed profile that defers the largest repayments until the end of the period. |
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The Charter, incidentally, defers in the extreme to states, specifically the government of any national organization, on the question of recognizing nonstate bodies, particularly NGOs operating within the state. |
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If the Prosecutor, having regard to the matters referred to in article 17, defers an investigation, the Prosecutor may request that the relevant State make available to the Prosecutor information on the proceedings. |
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It is for this reason, the Court normally defers to the Commission's discretion in choosing the most appropriate period of time for its investigation. |
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On the one hand, Sirach defers to ancient Israel's sacred traditions by identifying Wisdom with Torah. |
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In exercising these powers the monarch normally defers to the advice of the prime minister or other ministers. |
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The soft-minded manager often defers direct action in the hope that the situation will remedy itself. |
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In addition, a cash basis employee who defers the income before it is earned will not be taxed until actual receipt. |
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Similarly, the phenomenologist acknowledges the difference between the true and the false, even while he defers to the authority of the one who achieves the truth. |
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