To confess that I did not realize the implications of my actions would be stupid, even beyond the stupidity of my previous letter to you. |
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Comments by informed readers as to the implications of the above are welcomed and will be shared with other readers. |
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But the violent swings in the electoral pendulum have implications that go far beyond the fortunes of the two major parties. |
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It is in that episode that the larger implications of Schreiner's intricate weave of fiction and autobiography become apparent. |
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Much more work is needed to explore the implications of the new findings for human health and disease. |
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What are the implications of historically and culturally informed findings for strategies of educational reform? |
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Joining me now for the analysis on this right-to-die case and its implications to our society, is our senior legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin. |
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What follows foregrounds just some of the implications of biomedicine for the theory and practice of public mental health. |
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The weblike character of the text means that each datum will ramify in implications throughout. |
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Are you interested in the political implications of weblogs and social software? |
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That report would later have far-reaching implications for South African politics. |
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There's something a bit distasteful about the implications of much of the campaign, too. |
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The tautologists explore the implications of tautological statements, which they claim contain pure truth. |
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Their implications would be only an embarrassing distraction, oddly disjoined from the prevailing paths of technical investigation. |
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The implications of political apathy and cowardice are all the more significant for these revealing admissions. |
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Very little coverage has been given to the infighting within Loyalist organisations and the possible implications for Scotland. |
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Scientists and thinkers have struggled with the controversy and its implications for humanity for decades. |
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He has the same level of concern about the health implications of radio waves from phone masts as he does about passive smoking, he says. |
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Those trends have implications for professionals who want to stay ahead of the curve and ensure a successful future. |
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However, it is the wider implications of the Pearson and CLT-Ufa deal which had senior executives working overtime this weekend. |
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Encouraging the consumption of this single food, milk, may have lasting implications for nutrient density, bone health and body weight. |
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A simple thought experiment shows how dangerous are the implications of treating them as combatants. |
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They analysed the implications of the proposals, explaining that it would be used to reduce teaching staff and deskill education. |
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Much is made of the collapse of bimetallism and its deleterious implications for countries on a silver standard. |
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Hence, it is essential that they understand the serious physical implications caused by their addiction. |
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The results would have profound implications for succeeding generations of Canadian Baptists. |
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In reality, the moral implications in such a world are no more problematic or complex than they are in the current one. |
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The grain markets consistently discounted negative yield implications from our state for most of the growing season. |
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But this doctrine that souls are acquired by heredity carried more physical implications than at least some Platonists could feel at ease with. |
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Well, he might get away with it as long as people don't understand the security implications for Australia. |
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Recalling that the reason to use military force is to compel compliance with demands, the implications for a dominant indicator are significant. |
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The ferocious cost-cutting will inevitably have serious implications for airline safety. |
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Yet reverse discrimination suits by whites almost never have similar positive implications for African-Americans. |
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The case has nationwide implications for any motorist found to be over the drink-drive limit in a parked vehicle. |
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But today, the implications of such a conflation of different levels of criticism and prejudice are dangerously censorious. |
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Advanced nursing roles are an important development in primary care, but the implications have yet to be fully appreciated. |
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Their implications for catalytic function and ligand interaction are discussed. |
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Their research could have implications for discovering how the developing brain processes sound and speech. |
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If it has implications for criticism, it is that critics like Danto himself should be pluralist. |
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Had the High Court reasoning been sustained, the implications for the Health Service as a whole might have been considerable. |
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We conclude by discussing the implications of consuetude for political and social behavior. |
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It bore ethical and metaphysical implications that professional psychology could not rationally explain or justify. |
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Yet this proposition has profound implications for the whole process of child rearing. |
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In addition, possible toxicological implications of these constituents and their pyrolytic products are explored. |
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Realizing the implications of what he is doing, he stops abruptly, and a haunted, thousand-yard stare crosses his face. |
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This has very serious implications for us in that animals going to slaughter are not normally affected by the 20-day standstill rule. |
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Many delegates were concerned about the implications for democracy of the new rule book. |
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Our results have important implications for understanding competition and coexistence of species. |
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Further elucidation of the biochemical processes in these animal models of myopia may have implications for treating myopia in humans. |
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We also discuss the implications of the methods in locating genes underlying complex binary traits by use of samples from natural populations. |
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The results have implications for the design of high-stress work environments such as the coordination of fire-fighting operations. |
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Many policy implications arise from demographically induced economic changes. |
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These data have implications for the emergence of nucleated Oneota groups at Red Wing and Apple River. |
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The courts have also looked to the logical implications and extensions of their prior precedents in deciding whether a right is fundamental. |
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Going beyond the literal meaning, the exhibition explored the nuanced implications of the formless substance that is dust. |
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The new proposals will have serious implications for Gaelic football and rugby. |
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Miller is interested in the philosophical, social and metaphorical implications that the Bigfoot creature represents. |
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There is, however, considerable unease about the implications of critical theory, social ecology and some varieties of deep ecology. |
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But none of these should blinker students from examining the other financial implications of the accounts on offer. |
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Rather, for other readers the thinkers featured here, and the implications for rhetoric, have been so absorbed as not to need a lengthy reprise. |
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Rural aging will have implications for food security, patterns of landholding, health services, labor markets, and so on. |
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Hobbes's philosophy was thus the first modern moral philosophy, for it was the first fully to accept the implications of modern natural science. |
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An altar, however, has implications for the roofing of the structure and suggests that at least part of the interior was hypaethral. |
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Today's trading update lacks the detail to fully digest the implications of the company's decline in sales. |
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Quentin goes to stop them from alerting the police about the occult implications of his alleged bovicide. |
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Nevertheless, such a logic fully brings out the absurd implications of the feminist and naturalist accounts. |
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Again, what are the implications of the spiritistic hypothesis in regard to the miniature faces? |
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The insurance implications of the attack continue to reverberate around the world. |
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Ravindra said most of the IT companies were not fully aware of the implications of unscientific disposal of e-waste. |
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By 1899, the implications of this revisionism had become fairly clear, when the French socialist Millerand entered a bourgeois government. |
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This finding could have future implications for a possible cure of some forms of hereditary deafness in humans and mice. |
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In fact, post-punk had implications more wide-reaching than punk, in the sense that it shaped pop music. |
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For those who train the staff of multichannel contact centers, the implications of these changes in customer expectations are significant. |
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Scientists at Hull University have landed a hefty grant to study the economic implications of switching to renewable energy sources. |
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The rest will feature game after game of hotly contested matchups with nightly playoff implications during the final two-dozen games or so. |
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The findings of the present study have important clinical implications for patient care. |
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The findings have important implications for our conceptualization of pure word deafness and its subtypes. |
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Some may not care, but many people I know are signing up without reading or understanding the implications of the above three points. |
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If this model does survive those tests, it has important implications for the tectonic environment in which the Troodos ophiolite formed. |
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This has important ecological implications for trophic responses and estuarine productivity. |
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Dolly has come and gone, but the implications of her design have begun a new chapter in life, ethics and possibilities. |
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Most critical assessments analyze the implications of the poem's cultural roaming and inclusiveness. |
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The price of the television licence is linked to the consumer price index which means that any increase has implications for inflation. |
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The baseline then serves as a benchmark for comparing the financial implications of alternative plans. |
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What are the implications of this for ensuring that luggage inspectors remain vigilant? |
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Standard Big Bang cosmogeny does therefore seem to have those metaphysical implications which some have found so discomfiting. |
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The technique could have implications for studying cell and developmental biology. |
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Leave aside the implications for self-government of effectively ceding such powers to Brussels. |
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In spite of these reservations, the implications of applying the structural method to the seismic data are investigated in the following section. |
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It is far too early to speculate meaningfully on what the implications of this may end up being. |
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The introduction of weighbridges may have serious implications for fishermen around the coast. |
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The implications for ancient engineering works aren't lost on him, and he has used his techniques to raise Stonehenge-style trilithons. |
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The implications for national greatness and commercial superiority were stressed repeatedly. |
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Before examining the implications of these behaviors, the next section briefly overviews the concept of Internet addiction more generally. |
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The implications of this work on thought about evolution of photic behavior in fireflies are considered. |
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Only deliberate effort enables one fully to grasp the implications of such a position. |
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Bear in mind, though, that there are financial implications to importing goods from abroad. |
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Clearly, the consequences of this challenge have wider implications than those within the ambit of the case itself. |
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The legal implications of all these matters have been the concern of administrative law. |
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The report also called for more research on fluoride and the implications for child health. |
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Seventy percent of the stars in the galaxy are binaries, so this has huge implications for the number of solar systems that could exist. |
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The problems encountered in computational linguistics, and the proposed solutions, have interesting implications for linguistic theory. |
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All of the essays repeat this same cluster of ideas, developing their implications with different emphases and nuances. |
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It has social and political implications that are very meaningful and considerate of the masses. |
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Finally, suggestions for future research and clinical implications are discussed. |
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The implications of studying ecological performance for within-species selection studies are profound. |
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The implications of the results for comparative trait mapping in junction regions are discussed. |
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His insightful analysis will help military officers fully understand the moral implications of their actions. |
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Forget for a moment the political or even economic implications of the shifts in population. |
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Finally, we discuss the practical implications of our findings for Cerulean Warbler conservation. |
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Adulation of power and force prevented Brownshirts from recognizing implications for their country of their reckless doctrines. |
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When the implications of tathata are deeply understood, the ego naturally becomes neutralized. |
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For example, the press agents were stumped when asked to explain the rules and legal implications of the Wi-Fi Internet waves. |
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The emergence of post-structuralism in the 1960s had radical implications for humanist thinking and the ideas of personhood. |
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For Reginfo, the top horizontal line with the curvilinear arrow bears the same connotation as one of the implications of the quartered circle. |
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The implications are profound, which is precisely why the right-wing scapegoaters are up in arms. |
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He used the occasion of the completion of reform to underline the broader implications for world trade. |
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Anything that the Minister might say about the cost implications of this in this House are not worth a crumpet. |
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The remainder of this section explores the implications of these conclusions for pedagogical decision-making. |
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If implications of later violence are not enough to sway the diehard smackers, let's look at its effectiveness. |
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This could obviously have huge and lengthy implications for all auctions, both of livestock and deadstock. |
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Stalinist reaction in the USSR had profound implications for the international communist movement. |
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Why not study the literature on terrorism and write a dissertation on its implications for organizations? |
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The dynamic reminds me of the old George Burns and Gracie Allen vaudeville routine about the property implications of marriage. |
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If the patent is eventually upheld, the implications for the Web are enormous. |
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Over the summer, the trust created a study group to explore the implications of adding affordable housing to the UniverCity. |
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The implications of the refusal of the hand are clear and yet beautifully understated. |
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Multiangular reflectance is a basic property of the natural world, and this has many implications for small-format aerial photography. |
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As a very private vice, it did not have the visibility or social implications of other transgressive sexual behaviours. |
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It may be more important to stick to a diet and lose weight than to worry about the moral implications of the food you eat. |
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They say the health implications can be particularly serious if there is a family history of high blood pressure. |
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They only realised the full implications of the story when they were forwarded the e-mail that had been circularised to the national media. |
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This clearly has major implications for the thermal history of the aureole. |
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This is a nice piece, which summarizes the behavioralist theory and its implications pretty well for laymen. |
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What are the implications of the global diffusion of nuclear and long-range delivery vehicle technology? |
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She sat with her hands on the steering wheel as the implications of what she'd heard crowded in on her. |
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We are making fast progress on understanding the implications of the existence of a cosmological constant for quantum gravity. |
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I understand the difficulty and if we don't put it right it has huge implications for staff. |
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They don't understand the scoring systems or the implications of their choices in scoring systems. |
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This aspect of body image is often neglected in the research, but has important implications for therapy with clients with disturbed body image. |
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Beyond the obvious implications for sci-fi buffs and other space enthusiasts, the episode sheds light on the versatility of free enterprise. |
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Standards New Zealand came and explained the legal implications around copyright. |
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This finding has implications for our distinction between transcultural and culturally specific aspects of interventions. |
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Do you not realise the serious catastrophic, apocalyptic implications if he is correct? |
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Such political implications in popular culture suggest a direction of considerable importance for feminism and for folklore studies. |
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The findings of this book have important implications for current linguistic theorizing. |
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What implications do the interactivity and uncontrollability associated with the new media have for media strategy? |
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The implications of this observation and others are discussed with regard to the evolution of myrmecophily in T. virgilius. |
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He realised that the slowness of this process would have very serious immediate implications for his business. |
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The first movement explores the melodic and structural implications of the minor third, much like the first movement of Adams's violin concerto. |
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We elaborate on these extensions by also considering, where appropriate, assessment and treatment implications for depressed individuals. |
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But a skim does not do justice to the double-barreled implications of these two reports. |
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Rethinking the school run and other short trips has big implications for the rest of us as well. |
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Whether such quirks in the irregularity of irrationals have any implications for number theory remains an open question for mathematicians. |
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A full appreciation of the implications of an agreement also requires the parties to be ad idem as regards its consequences. |
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Often the socio-economic implications arising out of desertions by the spouse is overlooked by society. |
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Just thinking about the implications of getting the position have had my mind in a whirl all weekend. |
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This last remark had a somewhat sobering effect on her as its full implications hit home. |
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The plot behind the film is very thought provoking if you start reading the religious implications into it. |
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Under the guise of socialism, it has become a source of cheap labor, with far-reaching implications for economies globally. |
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The aggregation of proteins has important technical implications in disease treatment and biotechnology. |
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The negative image of older people has wide implications that affect the way in which health treatments and services are delivered. |
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Composers need outstanding interpreters who understand the music and can realise all its implications in performance. |
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This seminar will provide information on the changeover to the Euro and the implications it will have for business. |
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Whether the findings have any legal implications is for the judges to decide, not for the newspaper editors. |
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The depth of knowledge required to follow the implications and consequences of such broad and far reaching policies is intimidating. |
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Many games especially those with playoff implications will go right down to the wire and be decided by a handful of points. |
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The ethical implications of his pluralist philosophy would also have appealed to Moore. |
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What are the implications of a rising money supply on overall growth rates in China? |
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While the progressive implications of some of the films seem tangential, the analysis is generally incisive and occasionally provocative. |
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Their current account is nearly balanced, so a revaluation will have significant implications for imports and exports. |
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I'd imagine there would be implications from such a move for other distributors in the country. |
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If magma were to accumulate at mid-crustal levels beneath the north Taupo region, this has significant implications for hazard monitoring. |
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The very surrealness of current events begs one to stop and think about the deeper implications of it all. |
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We discuss the ecological and biogeochemical implications of these results. |
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The implications for long-term funding of welfare and pensions is profound. |
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It only began to get interested because of the implications for welfare to work and to facilitate women's employment. |
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The organisation would be well advised to use the time to think through the implications of the stance it has taken. |
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Four possible outcomes of any communicatory interaction are required in adopting the full implications of signal detection. |
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There are important implications revealed from archaeological excavations of these sites. |
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It is admirable that she has made her opinion known regardless of what the implications may be. |
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This month Anthony de Jasay reflects upon the implications of admitting Turkey to the European Union. |
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Apparently the implications for broadcasting and narrowcasting, for social glue and public ethos, are enormous. |
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At an applied level, the results may have implications for child-rearing practices. |
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There are implications here too for areas with falling numbers and proposals for school amalgamations or closures. |
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The Church exploited to the full the political implications of anticlerical legislation. |
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They cannot determine which facts have important policy implications and which are less consequential. |
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For while the political implications are indeed large, the tactics employed by both sides have been depressingly small-minded. |
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Do you think that this is going to have serious implications for security on the subcontinent? |
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Everyone was awed by the moral implications of mass murder on such a grand scale. |
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This is in addition to handling the media's economic news reports and requests for an analysis of the economic implications of recent events. |
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The proposal also has major implications for ratepayers, since maintaining the wickets will require a full-time groundskeeper. |
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In 1995 the UK Department of Health considered the health implications of alcohol consumption. |
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Your own continuity planning process should have considered the implications of problems arising with the supplier. |
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As I have been suggesting, the distinction between law and morality has certain implications for its subject. |
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These patterns may have implications for population survival and recruitment in forests. |
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Furthermore, from time to time, they take these economic implications into account, along with other factors, in arriving at their decisions. |
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So many new additions to the human biology in a short time have implications for efficient body function. |
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There are also some implications pertinent to both researchers and professionals. |
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Unions broadly welcome the scheme, while stressing that the implications for teacher workloads need to be thought through. |
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The fall in European growth rates has implications for the world economy as a whole. |
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And as with most of the international trade treaties, it sounds mind-numbingly boring, but its potential implications are huge. |
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This rough assumption brings other troubling implications in its wake, like cultural bovver boys. |
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A good art critic is able to bring up for discussion the issues and implications that are inherent in a film, book, or album. |
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But the significance and implications of the police violence go far beyond the state election. |
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We were careful not to overgeneralize from this single sample of women, but our results do have some implications for care. |
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Although these assertions have long been recognized as problematic, their broad implications have not been fully examined. |
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Finally, results and their implications to pharmacy education and practice are discussed. |
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This convergence has important implications for research and teaching in business schools. |
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The experiments were trivial, downright silly you may say, but the theoretical implications may be profound. |
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Despite the implications of its name, the lingcod does not belong to the cod family. |
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His writing must contain unlimited implications which appear outside the text. |
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The implications of this idea extend beyond vascular disease to other matrix remodeling and detachment processes such as cancer. |
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Yet I wonder about the implications of looking away, of glossing over uncomfortable situations. |
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To leave that as an observation without examining its far-reaching implications seems remiss amidst any sociological exploration. |
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He said there would be real implications for his company when he employed casual or part-time labour, and brought staff in and out. |
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Privatization, in both developed and developing countries, is producing mixed results whose long-term implications are not yet clear. |
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Traffic chaos will reign throughout Kerry because of a failure to consider longterm implications of housing developments, it has been claimed. |
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If this decline is not now arrested, it will have enormous negative implications for our economy and society. |
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The importance of embodiment might have significant implications for rights as well. |
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Moreover, as Jeffrey Goldberg points out, this has disturbing implications for late-term abortions. |
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The focus now is more properly on environmental sustainability and, as argued earlier, on the demographic implications of structural unemployment. |
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This has ethical implications as little is known about diagnosis in and treatment of these children, and they are often undiagnosed and untreated. |
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The far-reaching implications of this are surely of extreme importance. |
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The inability to maximize peak bone mass has significant implications for osteopenia and osteoporosis in adulthood, when bone resorption exceeds bone formation. |
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The result of these forces gathering momentum in the coming fight over policy, he says, will be an historic clash with massive implications for the coming decades. |
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There have been some signs of dissent from Barnaby Joyce and Queensland Liberal Senator David Johnston about the states' rights implications of the plans. |
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Nevertheless, the end of the great age of empires undoubtedly has profound implications for the way in which the subject will be treated in future. |
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The main media outlets have imposed their own, more far-reaching blackout on the case, despite its implications for civil liberties and free speech. |
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My mother offered no resistance to my stance and I typed in her amex number while I reflected on the implications of my denial. |
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Any such attempt will have implications to the tune of thousands of dollars considering the evolving trends in the global cultured pearl industry. |
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Bifocal contact lenses to correct distance and reading vision, so that the obvious bifocal glasses with their ageing implications could be avoided, have not proved successful. |
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The FCA has negative implications for firearm owners, the tourism industry, the film industry, firearm dealers, gunsmiths, and the private security industry. |
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There was no leader whose speech could be dissected, no party whose splits could be anatomised, no single manifesto whose implications could be discussed. |
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The implications of map theory, game theory, topology, the fractals of chaos theory, have all lurked in ornament, awaiting their elevation to science. |
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The anatomy of different oaks has implications for barrel making. |
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A psychic claimant, even a fully honest one, might want to demand such a statement because scientists sometimes overgeneralize or overstate the implications of their results. |
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We discuss the implications of these findings in the context of major evolutionary events in the history of these sand dollars from the Eocene to the present. |
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The world is not black and white, and there are subtle implications in the big decisions that are made beyond the control of the special forces soldier. |
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Well, the implications would be many and weighty, both for the diminished USA and for the new entity. |
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Moreover, it provides a better picture of the emerging environmental implications of the private consumption and public production of suburban landscapes. |
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The research team reckons the discovery will have implications for work on stems cells, tissue regeneration, elderly care and spinal cord injuries. |
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Unraveling the implications of these diametrically opposed responses to Blue is not an easy task. |
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In light of the findings of this analysis, as well as the previously mentioned translation research, a number of implications need to be addressed. |
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The public health implications of diversion have probably only begun to be elucidated. |
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The implications of Iranian hyperinflation for American policy are less clear. |
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Further investigations of the effects of these changes in nutrient concentrations and growth habit is required to assess the implications on plant performance. |
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As Abberline ferrets out evidence, he discovers a method to the murderer's madness, and far-reaching implications that could topple Queen Victoria's throne. |
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The lower slaughter means the carry-over into 2005 will be higher than last year and could have implications for the trade during the early months of the New Year. |
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I don't want to overestimate the significance of my own memory, but I suspect that this word association has larger implications for the way Americans generally view loyalty. |
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As the authors explore the uncharted spaces of diaspora subjectivity, they confront the unarticulated implications of vertigo as a cultural phenomenon. |
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But the soothing big-tent implications offered by those who say the GOP should de-emphasize social issues only seem to go one way. |
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The council's executive board considered the implications of terminating the existing contract, which has one year left to run, but deferred any decision until next month. |
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However, disconformity of practice with constitutional requirements is no inhibition against truly expounding the text and implications of the Constitution. |
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Most of these effects are likely to be sublethal, but the implications for the long-term survival of populations inhabiting impacted areas can be profound. |
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On the other hand, transcendental empiricism has epistemological implications insofar as knowledge too must be formed in a process of individuation. |
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The blocking issue, which has far deeper implications than people imagine is clearly a major issue that, if unaddressed, can be an even more significant danger. |
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That report has not been put in the public domain and councillors discussed its implications behind closed doors before reconvening to reject the plan once again. |
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This article describes the estimates of the elevations of the Mars Face and its surroundings I derived using stereography and the implications of these results. |
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While such a history had horrific implications for the resident population, the long-term impact was a cosmopolitan court culture reacting to influences from all directions. |
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Like a gilded self-fulfilling prophecy, wealth and prestige beget greater wealth and prestige, with dramatic implications for the future of postsecondary education. |
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Studies suggest that an inadequate supply of methyl donors in the diet leads to problems with DNA repair and stability, which has obvious implications for cancer and aging. |
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Harris declined to comment to The Daily Beast on the implications of Initiative 71 for members of Congress. |
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The development has implications for advances in lithographic techniques. |
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The problem also has serious implications for all who use the Scottish hills, including walkers and climbers, since some ticks carry the dangerous Lyme disease. |
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Examining the implications of submediant superimpositions as two keys helps illuminate structures in these pieces that are hidden when viewed through a single tonality. |
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Ashley's coded statements about escorting are laced with implications of regret, yet she can also be sharp-tongued and defiant. |
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What would the implications of that commitment have been in 2008, during the Russo-Georgian war in Ossetia? |
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The implications are enormous as all this comes amid widespread and growing excitement about robotics in daily life. |
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Although this analysis is concerned with and applied to an extreme case of potential biological importance, it might have broad implications on nanotechnological problems. |
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So, on the question of a separate issue, I do say there was a separate issue here, the implications of the challenge to the planning system as a whole. |
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Nobody is forecasting gloom and doom here, but we are facing challenging times that if not dealt with have serious implications for the entire world. |
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The financial implications for general practice, drug budgets, pathology laboratories, and secondary sector preventive and classical cardiological services are huge. |
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All it takes is to claim all the allowances to which you are entitled and keep a weather eye on the tax implications when deciding where to invest your hard-won savings. |
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He said the creation of a full-time post for a person to consult and review any transactions with potential VAT implications was being proposed for the municipal organogram. |
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It took some time from the delivery of the Mabo judgment before many in government and business awoke properly to the implications of native title. |
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It demands a turning back to oneself in order to understand, and thus has implications and effects which are moral in that they influence how we act. |
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The discussion of perfins, advertising stationery, selvedge, and sponsorship identified further implications of the connection between Canadian business and postage stamps. |
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Advocates on both sides are celebrating and condemning roe and its implications at events in Washington and across the country. |
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Given the existing imbalances in the US economy, one would have thought that the foreign exchange markets would have cavilled at the implications of this document. |
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But Beinart is troubled by the implications of the statement for the golan heights and the Law of Return. |
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In an effort to cope with the implications of this question, Americans have subtly but sweepingly shifted their ideals. |
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The architectural differences between shared-memory multiprocessors and distributed-memory multiprocessors have implications on how each is programmed. |
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In an interview with The Daily Beast, Ehrlich seemed cognizant of the political implications of his trip to New Hampshire. |
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This need for recourse to the implied powers doctrine has significant implications for the possibility of Member States' capacity to act in these instances. |
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The authors have tried to analyse the factors responsible for the occurrence of trade imbalance and the implications of the policy reforms on Indian balance of payment scene. |
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These factors increase parents' vulnerability to opportunistic exploitation and raise their overall transaction costs with unfavourable implications for value creation. |
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In the end, the ethical implications of using a drug to pull statements from otherwise unwilling people began to gnaw. |
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What are the implications of achieving sexuality before intimacy? |
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The chapter discusses both the ethical implications of social psychological research findings and the ethical decisions implicit in how social influence research is conducted. |
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Women tittered nervously at the implications of age and sexual boundaries. |
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A falsely high reading on a radiation dosimeter may have very different implications during a bioterrorist incident than during a rat lab experiment. |
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Within Duquesnoy's circle, the well-established association between Greek sculpture and the nude seems to have held clear implications for the rendering of drapery. |
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The New Zealand Journal of Psychology is ideally positioned to publish psychological research which has relevance and implications for our society. |
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In Anglo-Saxon law this mode of justification has been less well received due to its implications for the final alienability of intellectual property. |
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When one starts looking at the implications of a diversified portfolio of services, as is the case for most transport operators, we talk of economies of scope. |
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Of course, the implications of the advertisement are duplicitous and insulting both to the readers and to the portions of society that the spokesperson represents. |
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The course content included identification, screening and early intervention and medical implications like epilepsy, hyperactivity and brain dysfunctions. |
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A hand puppet called Harold is used to get across the message to the youngest children while older pupils learn about healthy lifestyles and the implications of drug abuse. |
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Compromise therefore, and the implications this would have for personal reputations, was recognised as a sine qua non even before the plenipotentiaries left Dublin. |
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