By his lying, stupidity and intemperance Lee has tarnished the club's image and caused embarrassment to supporters. |
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This intemperance was rather curious for a group that wanted to lead intellectually when it came to political awareness. |
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He is 18 and has time on his side, but as we have seen in the intemperance of his play, patience is not one of his virtues. |
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He becomes so absorbed in trying to interpret the allegory of the voyage of life that he fails to recognize the intemperance of his own course. |
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Later reactions against the Canon were a recognition of the intemperance of behaviorism. |
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Nature offers a healing medicine, and arrests the death which his intemperance has provoked. |
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The intemperance of that high dignitary and his priests filled me with an unspeakable horror and disgust. |
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Certainly, all parties agreed on the pernicious effects of intemperance, and its tendency to promote domestic violence and discord. |
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Societies are formed to resist evils that are exclusively of a moral nature, as to diminish the vice of intemperance. |
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In fact, opinions among the membership regarding alcohol and intemperance were far from unanimous. |
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This is surprising, for contemporary opinion held that women as well as men succumbed to intemperance. |
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They are zealous in the work and are casting their whole influence towards the redemption of society from the thralldom of intemperance. |
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But their campaigns also assisted the temperance movement in its quest to curb intemperance. |
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The ladies are determined to persevere and carry on this work steadily and earnestly, until intemperance shall be conquered as slavery has been. |
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Much early nineteenth-century discussion of female intemperance centered on the damage it did to family life. |
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Can he be sure that his appetites will not lead him to gluttony, intemperance or sensuality? |
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It is the sign associated with intemperance and a craving for emotional excitement and sensuality. |
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Before about 1830, temperance sermons, tracts and addresses routinely broached female intemperance. |
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Given these attitudes, they are prone to a number of vices, including lack of generosity, cowardice, and intemperance. |
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When we do not use our time distinctly then intemperance, intolerance and imprudence turn out to be our masters. |
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The Quaker was a fresh-faced old man who had never been ill, because he had never known passions or intemperance. |
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Was it perhaps a warning about female intemperance, an early forerunner of Mother's Ruin? |
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They felt the lash of the conservative reporters, columnists and pundits, whose intemperance was moderated by neither truth nor reason. |
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Rovers are expected to be clean minded, clean willed and able to control intemperance and lead morally upright lives. |
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To defend her intemperance, she publicly impugned my personal and professional integrity. |
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Political intemperance is traditionally the province of the young. |
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They felt different, too, thought differently, and pursued lifestyles characterized by shortsightedness and intemperance. |
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Because of ignorance or intemperance, lack of willpower or brainpower, people choose badly. |
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It was made without consulting any of his colleagues, who criticised it more for the intemperance of its language than for its basic message. |
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To which intemperance Venezuela's foreign minister replied that his country was not known for its lack of dignity. |
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This advertisement denounced the abuse of family income brought about by intemperance. |
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However, liberal beliefs about the role of moral weakness, laziness and intemperance as causes of poverty make many of the rich hesitant to give too much money. |
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He will remember that Tantalus was punished because, having been admitted to rub shoulders with the Greek gods at heaven's high feast, he failed to curb the intemperance of his tongue. |
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The infatuation of vice, the wanton taking of life, the terrible increase of intemperance and iniquity of every order and degree, should arouse all who fear God, to inquire what can be done to stay the tide of evil. |
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This short story by Chekhov is about an old actor, abandoned to his intemperance, in the seedy solitude of a deserted theatre, and who, assailed by the racket of his memories, dissects his personal and artistic past. |
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The findings differ markedly from the list of social ills, drawn up by Rowntree: among them poverty, war, slavery, intemperance, the opium trade, dirtiness and gambling. |
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It was a casual conversation that ended ugly, but John Galliano paid the price for his intemperance and bigotry due to France's hate speech laws. |
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This unfolding crisis has its roots not merely in an increase in international crime and terrorism but, more critically, in the intemperance of those who make laws and are charged with upholding them. |
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The chief's period of office was for three years, but he could be removed for 'dishonesty, intemperance, or immorality' at the discretion of the department. |
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Cares, disappointments, busy days and restless nights, protracted studies, surfeitings, intemperance, and tobacco, all appear to have led to Lethargy. |
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