This is an argument from the field of descriptive linguistics, made for a rhetorical audience of laypeople. |
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The curriculum sets up a false opposition between a literate clergy and the illiterate laypeople. |
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The church, through its nuns, priests, and laypeople, positions itself in direct opposition to tyranny and oppression. |
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The result is that he jumps to easy conclusions, something intelligent laypeople are not likely to trust. |
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The 30-year-old company president says his aim was to make space-age technology not just available but acceptable to laypeople. |
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When you talk to laypeople, what don't they understand about what bandwidth means and what it can became? |
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Savvy laypeople will see through these broad brush strokes, thus undermining the credibility of the experimental method. |
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I've heard it argued that it shouldn't be easier for a priest to leave the active ministry than it is for laypeople to end their marriages. |
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He understands that laypeople can practise the Dhamma, but he, as a bhikkhu, has many tasks to do which make it difficult to practise. |
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They give educated laypeople a chance to get their information from real authorities rather than mere journalists. |
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We need institutional creativity so that laypeople, especially women, acquire a voice and visibility. |
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After the prayer for forgiveness from the priests on account of their faults and failings, the laypeople also asked forgiveness. |
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In the central bay stands the altar at which laypeople attended Mass. |
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Certain responses note a lack of communion at times between clergy, religious and laypeople. |
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While Nest says its products can easily be installed by laypeople, this layperson was easily stymied. |
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The goal being to come up with new ideas, ideas capable of providing clear information, accessible to laypeople everywhere. |
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The pastors and laypeople of these local churches are to be commended for their faithful and fruitful service. |
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Similarly, claims to scientific authority by technical experts associated with industry delegitimate opposition by laypeople who lack their credentials. |
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Lord, we laypeople also need to ask forgiveness for our behaviour towards our priests. |
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Deen may have been known to most laypeople as a television chef and cookbook author. |
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Little did they know that you would have been appalled if you came to know that police bandobast for you was causing so much hardship to laypeople. |
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Most laypeople did not attend Mass aside from the major feasts. |
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Here it is a question of the things that laypeople are called upon to do when sufficient priests or even deacons are not available. |
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To build this framework, we have consulted a range of Aboriginal people and many others-both experts and laypeople. |
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Textual and visual sources alike indicate that the passage of laypeople through the screen to participate in services in the choir was hardly a rarity. |
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He has also named clerics and laypeople from outside Rome to several other new consultative bodies. |
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In all of China's Tibetan-inhabited areas, the authorities have rounded up innumerable monks, nuns and laypeople for taking part in the 2008 unrest. |
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In this first issue of the 2010 Bicentennial Newsletter, there is little mention about our Oblate Sisters, about individual religious, or about laypeople. |
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Knows and accepts the differences that exist between laypeople and Jesuits in order to deal and work with both while giving his or her all in the process. |
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The Special Clerical Court handles crimes allegedly committed by clerics, although it has also taken on cases involving laypeople. |
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The practice is less widely attested in the case of medieval laypeople, but certainly occurred on occasion. |
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The dictionnary, which will be written in plain language as much as possible, will be targeted to jurists, students, teachers, practioners and laypeople who wish to have information on specific notions of common law. |
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Traditionally, authorities have been very cautious in presenting environmental information and data to the public because of the risk of misinterpretation of information by laypeople. |
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Sunday Mass, the celebrant, who was unvested, sat in the congregation and laypeople were involved as concelebrants of the Eucharist. |
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Ever since it was first given its name, in 1988, the condition known as chronic fatigue syndrome has been trivialized by doctors and laypeople alike, dismissed as mere malingering. |
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If we are, in all places, the living dwelling places of God, then the house in which we live for our whole lives, if we are laypeople, becomes also a house of God. |
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To prevent another abuse scandal, the US Conference of Bishops in 2002 set up a review board of laypeople to serve as a watchdog for the church in America. |
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This week, in an intriguing move, Japan's cabinet approved a bill that allows for serious criminal cases to be tried no longer by judges alone but by mixed panels on which laypeople will predominate. |
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But these markets do not appear to have taken off as successfully as election or sports markets, possibly because they struggle to strike the right balance between experts and laypeople. |
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We all have need of the witness of fraternal life of the friars, the contemplative dimension lived by the Poor Clares, and the secular presence of Franciscan laypeople. |
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During these years of my youth, years of consolidation of my identity, God captivated my heart in the way of Marcellin Champagnat with the life of the brothers and laypeople. |
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The following instructions are not intended for laypeople. |
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I mention both the brothers and the laypeople because both helped us to know Jesus through Marcellin, and thanks to both we experienced love and devotion for the children and the mission. |
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A new sense of association will ultimately free Brothers and laypeople to participate in the mission, especially to poor children who deserve this education. |
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Social work, school teaching, and other such work is therefore usually left to laypeople. |
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However, laypeople are not expected to live in extreme asceticism since this is close to impossible while undertaking the normal responsibilities of worldly life. |
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There should be well-informed laypeople included in this group. |
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This thlipsis is something possessed in common by monks who find their monastic life most difficult, and by those laypeople who would perhaps be monks if they were able. |
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Reflection on the church's efficient causes helped Congar incorporate the roles of laypeople and charisms into the picture of what makes the church work. |
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Laypeople have served as readers, prayer leaders, cantors, communion ministers, announcers, and greeters, as well as ushers, acolytes, and musicians. |
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Laypeople tend to regard two successive quarters of negative growth as a recession. |
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