I share with Boshoff an interest in etymology, taxonomy and language, but I didn't feel as fascinated by the work in reality as in theory. |
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Working on Saturdays is always confusing because we start earlier and, in theory, end earlier. |
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Such cross activation could, in theory, also occur between widely separated areas. |
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While in theory that is true, it is only practical to place liquid or realisable assets into trust. |
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Angular momentum can twist light cones and even make time travel possible in theory if not in practice. |
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The trades were in theory all supervised and regulated by the livery companies, one for each trade. |
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But if the market ruled supreme in theory during the 1980s and 1990s, reality was different. |
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A four of a kind is closed, and can no longer be extended, and the same would apply in theory to a run of 14 cards with an ace at each end. |
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Unlike their secular brethren, they claim, in theory at least, to treat as sacral the assumptions of their sacred texts. |
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The idea of love at first sight, though attractive to women in theory, terrifies them in practice. |
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The executives of international oil corporations, avowed globalizers in theory, are in practice the friends of regressive political economies. |
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The software makes it possible, in theory, to see and manage files on any storage system or server. |
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The precautionary principle sounds good in theory, but in practice it is a nightmare. |
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However, although this sounds good in theory, in practice it never quite seems to work that way. |
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These are ideas which are beautiful in theory but limp and bedraggled in practice. |
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Radar also uses microwaves, so that in theory it would be possible to cook food by putting it at the focus of a radar dish. |
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In theory it may seem like a great idea but, in theory, so do so many ideas until they are put into practice. |
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The Freedom of Information Act is, in theory, a way of ensuring that happens. |
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This concept, though brilliant in theory, is utterly, utterly painful in practice. |
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While in theory that's an admirable trait, in practice it's pretty uncomfortable. |
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So, in theory, he could meet the December deadline by simply handing in a blank sheet of paper. |
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The President sets himself up as a bold and principled Everyman, so, in theory at least, he cannot back down or lose some of his edge. |
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In a long jump, in theory, the weights could be shifted mid-jump to alter the jumper's centre of mass and make the most of the extra momentum. |
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Physicians, who in theory held control, were poorly located from a situational standpoint to exercise it effectively. |
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This overall morphological simplicity, in theory, makes tadpoles good models for exploring how vertebrates control undulatory movements. |
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Now, in theory at least, children could buy unlimited quantities of Spangles, gobstoppers and sweet cigarettes. |
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Although unschooled in theory, he was a competent tactician and strategist. |
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Sounds great in theory, but the practical upshot of this can be unsettling to the public. |
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David's intelligence should, in theory, complement what Chappell brings to the table. |
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At the same time, Becker notes, the discipline is broad in theory and application, including a wide range of experimental and applied work. |
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A virtual break-in is nearly impossible in theory, but it is never wise to count out that one clever hacker. |
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They will expect the author to work toward a normative standard in theory and practice. |
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Dog noses at best discern 20 or so explosive scents, but electronic detectors, at least in theory, can screen a far larger array. |
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I have an open-tuned bouzouki, borrowed from a friend, and a capo, so in theory I can play in any key. |
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In terms of presidential politics, a centrist candidate may be more electable in theory. |
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Such tests tend to stultify the most creative teachers even as they, at least in theory, help the worst students. |
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While the idea of people telling their stories is attractive in theory, in practice the courts are overburdened as it is. |
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Second, every slogan, every panacea, no matter how sound in theory, needs to survive in the chill wind of reality. |
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After all, a river that can hold huge carp and catfish should, in theory, have enough food to support some big barbel. |
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The early vaccines focused on antibodies, circulating chemicals in the blood stream which in theory stop HIV locking onto white blood cells. |
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The scheme will be mainly targeted at offenders who serve six months or less in jail, but will apply in theory to all prisoners who are paroled. |
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In classrooms students do courses in theory, English, maths, civics and religion. |
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The paterfamilias or head of the family had the right, in theory at least, to execute summarily any member, including in primis his slaves. |
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Such a view, though defensible in theory, would destroy all semblance of coequality from a practical standpoint. |
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Once you've got an in with the right guys, they don't need to see a full script before, in theory, they start giving you development cash. |
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It does make sense but nevertheless, at least in theory, the president should be the commander-in-chief. |
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What you describe is an isotropic antenna, which exists only in theory and cannot exist physically. |
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Now belief was essential and attendance was compulsory, at least in theory. |
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The uneasy separation of motive from outcome, which he blithely assumes in theory, is inoperable in practice. |
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While these travellers might not support globalism in theory, in practice it oozes from their every pore. |
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When the chickens pass through it, in theory, it shocks them into insensibility and immobilizes them. |
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This is another idea that in theory should help increase thermal conduction between the base and the fins, since they are all one piece. |
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Both in practice and in theory, he moved always toward new interconnections between body and soul, life and art, morality and psychology. |
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This is what many of us wish could happen, and I suspect that Epstein may be correct in theory. |
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This report helped to generate a great reform movement, substituting correction for punishment, at least in theory. |
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These days, in theory, just about everyone in the country has freedom to speak. |
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While clever enough in theory, the chairs in reality clutter the stage and restrict the cast's sorely needed freedom to move. |
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Although Fothergill could, in theory, have had electric lights in his offices, he opted for wall-mounted gas lamps. |
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Hence, in theory, Egg should be able to undercut the Goliaths and provide better value for its customers. |
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The example of Greek democracy seemed so much better in theory than in practice. |
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In theory democratic centralism makes the executive accountable to the Party, but only in theory. |
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Quantam has already certified a 10,000 psi tank, which in theory would double that. |
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In such instances, dissenters have a chance to go beyond a statement of what they, in theory, would do on an issue. |
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It was much easier to just get a new plate than it was to try to fix the one with duct tape, though in theory it should have worked. |
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The case is now docketed, and the court can in theory accept the certificate and give an answer very soon. |
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The fan is configured to exhaust air from the top, which in theory, should work pretty well. |
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At least in theory Kagan could compensate somewhat for the slenderness of her academic resume through the quality of her work. |
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These were tented or prefabricated hut facilities and in theory mobile, although most tended to stay at the location in which they were first erected. |
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But today, the ECPA allows that, in theory, law enforcement need not go through a judge in order to go through your inbox. |
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It's one thing to know in theory that governments always spy on each other, quite another to see set out in a memo the detail of how the spying will be done. |
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And I come away from our conversations feeling far more energised and enthused than I do when talking to pretty young things who should, in theory, be more enticing. |
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The selective forces promoting such phenotypic conformity in groups should in theory make it more difficult for group members to identify other individuals. |
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But still and all, it's worth remembering that stakeholder systems have shown promise in the past, not just in theory but in many years of practice. |
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The divisions and headings make the book easy to dip into and in theory to skim, although would-be skimmers will need to keep one thumb lodged firmly in the index. |
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That was the distance from the arena to the interstate, which, in theory, could remain open during the debate. |
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But, in theory, that started to change last week with the first meeting of SIX, the State Innovation Exchange. |
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On one side stands Orthodoxy, in its various manifestations, and Conservative Judaism, which, at least in theory, subscribes to the complete observance of the mitzvot. |
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Punk, let me remind you, had happened nine years earlier and had evolved into art rock sub-genres every bit as beastly as the muck that it had, in theory, swept aside. |
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We could in theory diagnose the 8th beta cell adenoma of the pancreas in the world, but had no idea what to do for tonsillitis, the second most common disease of childhood. |
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By eliminating the shim material that is inherent in most gaskets, the metal to metal joint, in theory, will transfer the vibration over the entire surface of both parts. |
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This was a mutation of a relationship that should, in theory, be unbreakably strong. |
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Years, months, and days can, at least in theory, be based on celestial realities, but minutes and seconds are mostly conventions. |
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National has no problem in theory with devolving the management of community programmes and assets to the community itself as long as government money is accounted for. |
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While novelists rely solely on the revenue from book sales, songwriters, in theory, can still be quids in even without a solitary record being sold. |
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The episode in theory tries to be nonjudgmental towards people who are attracted towards stability. |
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I never quite understood why the West was so vehemently opposed to Communism, since it is only as bad as Fascism in practice, but immensely preferable in theory. |
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It is true in theory that any given small farm might employ toxic agrochemicals, genetically modified seeds, or other techniques typical of industrial agriculture. |
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Although in theory a bondi had a farm of his own, in practice most young men had to live with their parents, or farm the lands of a large landholder. |
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When an information resource is collectively provided and placed in the public domain, hijacking sounds even more censurable and in theory resembles a real theft. |
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Using hydroponics, inorganic fertiliser, electric light and genetic modification we could in theory feed the entire world from a multi-storey farm the size of Wales. |
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This may seem like a good idea in theory, but in practice they amount to glorified extra-credit projects and pointless busywork. |
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Below the football players and dog-walkers of Marine Park is a culvert that, in theory, still carries the freshet which once thinned the salt water of the Stromme Kill. |
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The problem is that in theory, in any given situation when someone refuses to sell we can't tell whether it is because of strategic holdout or subjective value. |
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Of course, in theory, the game animal is standing broadside, giving the hunter plenty of time to size it properly, select the correct aiming point, and press the trigger. |
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Each coin has one side smoothed down flat and in theory this should be the tails side of the coin since it is illegal to deface an image of the monarch in England. |
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This is despite the introduction of late payment legislation three years ago that, in theory, allows a supplier to hit tardy payers with interest penalties. |
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Stepto's range as an Americanist, including his belief in theory as a dynamic force, makes him an excellent reader of my poetry in process. |
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Whilst in theory the Assembly has no tax varying powers, the Assembly in reality has some very limited power over taxes. |
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The kingdom was administered under Welsh custom through thirteen Cantrefi each containing, in theory, one hundred settlements or Trefi. |
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In some German states in theory it is possible for communities to draft citizens for public services, called Hand and Tension Services. |
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This made broadsides, coordinated volleys from all the guns on one side of a ship, possible for the first time in history, at least in theory. |
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The question of whether trial by combat remains a valid alternative to civil action has been argued to remain open, at least in theory. |
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Hospitality, in theory, is given such importance in Senegalese culture that it is widely considered to be part of the national identity. |
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In the case of most acronyms, each letter is an abbreviation of a separate word and, in theory, should get its own termination mark. |
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Not in theory, says Dave Evans, a molecular biologist at the University of Guelph in Ontario, Canada. |
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In 1856, a new Enlistment Act was introduced by the Company, which in theory made every unit in the Bengal Army liable to service overseas. |
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Canada makes limited use of separation of powers in practice, although in theory it distinguishes between branches of government. |
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The Code of Conduct Group, at least in theory, keeps most of its documentation and discussion confidential. |
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The relationship between democracy and capitalism is a contentious area in theory and in popular political movements. |
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Although in theory an operation on the pyloric sphincter could be the cause this is very rare, as is heartburn in children. |
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A reverse-engineer can in theory do a variety of things with the information she obtains. |
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Since the passage of these Acts, the House of Commons has become the dominant branch of Parliament, both in theory and in practice. |
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This name server will then follow the process outlined above in DNS in theory, until it either successfully finds a result, or does not. |
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The chiefs, who in theory allocated land and grazing rights, were under a strong obligation to consult an assembly, or kgotla. |
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He covers a hermeneutic reading of Daniel, narration, Danielic hermeneutics in theory and in praxis, and the reader as hermeneut. |
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Acoustic systems using infrasound or ultrasound could in theory cause a loss of muscle control, nausea, or even unconsciousness. |
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At least in theory, the greater the surface area, the better a schnoz can catch odor molecules. |
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One of the response options was 'paid exactly the Award rate', which in theory is precisely the group that is affected by the FWA decision. |
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An exeat was needed to be away for the night and, in theory at least, an absit for the greater part of the day. |
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Provided you didn't surrender your ticket into the maw of the gateline at B, you could in theory go back to A and do the whole trip again. |
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That changed dramatically in theory as there seemingly were great advances in feminism. |
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As each division of the NHS is required to break even at the end of each financial year, the service should in theory never be in deficit. |
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In the Kingdom of Great Britain, the monarch, in theory, chaired cabinet and chose ministers. |
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The 'tax gap' is the difference between the amount of tax that should, in theory, be collected by HMRC, against what is actually collected. |
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The boss let me off for breaking the office window, when in theory she could have fined me about 30 dollars. |
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To this day, Turing machines are a central object of study in theory of computation. |
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Executive authority was to be vested in the crown, and in theory not answerable to either parliament. |
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This is similar to the notion of insatiability of wants that we employ in theory, but it is not exactly the same. |
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Capitalism seems different because people are in theory free to work for themselves or for others as they choose. |
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In turn, in theory, the code will thenceforth reflect the current cumulative state of the statutory law in that jurisdiction. |
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Whether the document was legally binding in theory is a matter of academic discussion. |
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Civil law today, in theory, is interpreted rather than developed or made by judges. |
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While in theory King Louis XVI was an absolute monarch, in practice he was often indecisive and known to back down when faced with strong opposition. |
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Such a process infantilized colonies, but also empowered the imperial mother who, in theory, provided for the growth and development of her dependent children. |
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This was, in theory, invalidated by Article 9 of the Treaty of Ghent. |
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However a stretch of trackbed from Wootton to the outskirts of Newport at Halberry Lane is still free from development and could in theory be used in the future. |
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The monarch could in theory unilaterally dismiss a Prime Minister, but a Prime Minister's term now comes to an end only by electoral defeat, death, or resignation. |
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Under the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty, the UK Parliament could, in theory, therefore, abolish the Scottish Parliament, Welsh Assembly or Northern Ireland Assembly. |
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Personalization is defined here as the individualization of education with more robust socialization consequences and constructivist meanings in theory. |
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Big Government is never popular in theory, but the disaster aid, school lunches and prescription drugs that make up Big Government have become wildly popular in practice. |
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It was clear in theory that covalent bonds in biological molecules could provide the structural stability needed to hold genetic information in cells. |
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Although in theory this left Bonnet and Teach at risk of being hanged for their actions at Charles Town Bar, most authorities could waive such conditions. |
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However, in theory any Commonwealth unit can provide the guard. |
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However, WNV viremia was sufficient, in theory, to infect mosquitoes, and oral and cloacal shedding of the virus may increase the risk of infection to other waterbirds. |
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Passage of the Fourteenth Amendment meant that, in theory, all persons born in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens regardless of race. |
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A son of Street Cry, Street Sense will break from the No. 7 post and, in theory, lope along in midpack before finding a spot near the rail to unleash a late run. |
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The British Iron Age lasted in theory from the first significant use of iron for tools and weapons in Britain to the Romanisation of the southern half of the island. |
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However, this supremacy conceptually derives from the European Communities Act 1972 and its successors, which could in theory be repealed by a future parliament. |
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Thus the royal prerogative is in theory an unlimited, arbitrary authority. |
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In the United Kingdom, at least in theory, all persons, whether peers or commoners, may be prosecuted and tried by the two Houses of Parliament for any crimes whatsoever. |
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However, in theory, both species are also capable of insect pollination. |
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This NAC was in turn to be made up of regionally appointed delegates who were in theory confined to act according to the instructions given them by branch conferences. |
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One advantage of having profitable companies in Britain is that they pay large sums in corporate tax into the Exchequer, which in theory at least is used for the general good. |
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Paddywhack won by five lengths and in theory will be chucked in if turned out quickly although my advice is beware before taking a short price about him next time out. |
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The other three were gifted metal oiks, but Cliff was a musician, schooled in theory, transmitting from a private universe of inspiration and expertise. |
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