Mr Morris emphasised the importance of a consensus between the three parties being reached, rather than a ministerial dictum imposed. |
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Apparently, the new dictum in the National Party is that if women members disagree with their leader, they are gone by lunchtime. |
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Lord Acton's dictum that absolute power corrupts absolutely holds good today. |
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And now we can understand the meaning of the early Buddhist dictum that realization is attained by experiencing nirvana in the body. |
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In conjunction, increasingly in evidence are the effects predicted by the dictum that all wars are politics by other means. |
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The truth of the dictum has been demonstrated in history, both ancient and recent, time and again. |
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It was yet another example of the old dictum that racing can be a very cruel sport. |
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This dictum makes a crucial distinction between the work that time or mischance has made a fragment, and the work composed as fragment. |
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The European project's founder Jean Monnet turned this into a dictum for the organisation of the European Union. |
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As the old McLuhanesque dictum goes the medium is the message. |
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Anheuser-Busch has reacted in Pattonesque style, emulating the general's dictum that a good plan violently executed now is better than a perfect plan executed next week. |
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Resisting the temptation to crowd the space, they have wisely followed the less-is-more dictum. |
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Yet, some misconstrue Emerson's dictum and believe that patenting an invention will cause the world to beat a path to their door. |
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He was the first to refute the Florentine Academy's dictum that water is incompressible. |
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James's dictum caught his eye: Experience is never limited, and it is never complete. |
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Here, for a quiet life, you have to apply the dictum of the three wise monkeys: see no evil, hear no evil, say no evil. |
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A dictum whose intent is to protect the human rights of the members of the crew. |
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The essence of Awareness is summed up by the following dictum ascribed to the Chinese sage Huang Po: 'The perceived cannot perceive. |
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That dictum will certainly have an impact on the language disputes now coming before the courts. |
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Today his dictum is the guiding assumption of many, perhaps most scientists. |
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Here too the following dictum applies: the greater the through flow the more reliable the measurement. |
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It is speculation to buy contemporary art in the expectation that it will appreciate more than average once the artist is dead, and here the above dictum is wise advice. |
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As a result, by the eve of World War II, no one seriously questioned the dictum of Gen George Marshall, Army chief of staff, that no democracy could endure a 10-year war. |
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He transformed the esoteric realm of quantum physics, and along the way discovered anti-matter by applying the dictum that mathematical beauty is a guide to truth. |
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Because Sanford is not the only politician to disprove Scott Fitzgerald's dictum. |
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Somehow I haven't been able to locate that dictum in the Quran, ahadith or sunan, but it must be there somewhere. |
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Hidden in this dictum is the danger of unlimited government, of the exercise of power untrammelled by the need for openness, transparency and accountability. |
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He also points to the grave implications of this dictum by Pius X for small and underpopulated communities where marital choice was limited. |
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She accepted unquestioningly the dictum that a woman's place is in the home. |
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This pithy dictum contains the essence of Yogic teachings and is the essential message of the Upanishads, Bhagavad Gita, Yoga Sutra and other sacred texts. |
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Is this a circumstance for the application of Renan's dictum that in the history of every great nation there is much to be forgotten as well as much to be remembered? |
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However, for most species of Narcissus Lauremberg's dictum Magna cura non indigent Narcissi was much cited. |
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Happily, that dictum has been accepted all over Africa and its effect is evident in the curriculum formulation found in many educational documents in Africa. |
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It was, therefore, obiter dictum, and of no binding effect. |
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For the purposes of a complete analysis, but strictly as obiter dictum, we discuss below the Majority's review of Commerce's market distortion analysis. |
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Thus, Rand J, in obiter dictum, held that the extinction of the contract does not affect taxes already collected, at least where there has not been a total rescission of the contract. |
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The obiter dictum in Barcelona Traction and the separate opinions of Judges Fitzmaurice, Jessup and Tanaka have undoubtedly added to the weight of authority in favour of the exception. |
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It was the Liberals who followed the Conservative dictum of backing out of their government responsibilities to develop an energy strategy for Canada that has led even more directly to today's debate. |
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Paragraph 73 contains an obiter dictum to the effect that the amount of a bond should not be excessive and unrelated to the gravity of the offences with which the accused has been charged. |
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And, more subtly, even if anecdote is correct, it does not answer the question of whether power tends to corrupt, as Lord Acton's dictum has it, or whether it merely attracts the corruptible. |
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Neither the resolution of the Assembly nor the decision by the Assembly referred to above includes a decision according to article 49 of the Rome Statute, or a direct decision or any obiter dictum on this matter. |
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If one accepts a commonly-asserted dictum that fashioning data protection is not rocket science, it would take a relatively short time to develop instructions for legislative draft persons in the Department of Justice. |
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Tristram Shandy emerges bumpily into the world as an Enlightenment child who must learn, as in Kant's famous dictum, to dare to think for himself. |
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His ambition was to live up to Rilke's dictum that 'the poet must know everything' and to write a poetry that contained all knowledge. |
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Such a pronouncement will not amount to a binding precedent, but is instead called an obiter dictum. |
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I cannot imagine there would be an MP in this House who would not abide by the dictum that we rate a nation by how it deals with its most vulnerable and, among the most vulnerable, obviously, are the homeless. |
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He added that trades were deduced as a result of a panoptic baseline assessment study and stakeholders' dictum for social equity and regional prosperity. |
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Knock lives on, both in British knocking-shop and American knock-up, the latter famously validating Wilde's dictum of two countries separated by the same language. |
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