These problems are not considered in press reports that simply repeat the mantra that HIV in Africa is heterosexually transmitted. |
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They also believe you can produce the same effect by spinning the written form of the mantra around in a prayer wheel. |
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Their say-no-to-drugs mantra affirmed that New York at least has an inexhaustible supply of high energy. |
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The principal mantra of the Buddhists, it is also found inscribed on prayer wheels. |
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During the opening stages of the Tour, the favourites repeat like a mantra the need for constant vigilance. |
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This pursuit of risk avoidance has become the mantra of health care and is now a political manifesto pledge. |
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The Vedas are composed in an ancient language of mantra, myth and symbol and utilise a rich poetic and imagistic expression. |
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Shaktas use mantra, tantra, yantra, yoga and puja to invoke cosmic forces and awaken the Kundalini Power. |
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Every conscious minute of my entire life the heterosexual mantra is broadcasted. |
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I was little, tiny, and I as soon as I knew the words by heart I would repeat them in a rhythmic mantra until I fell asleep. |
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What a sad misuse of her central work that it becomes the mantra for a whole lot of sentimental, claustrophobic, fake urbanism. |
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This is a veritable mantra among staffers, many of whom have children of their own to road-test the merchandise. |
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In fact mantra appears within Brahmanas, Arankyas, Puranas, and Upanishads. |
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This is a mantra which must be engraved in the wall at Tannadice, because it's the line which Paul Sturrock repeated endlessly and unavailingly. |
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When she shared her new mantra with me, I had to agree it sounded indulgent, sensual and exciting. |
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A mantra is a kind of prayer that contains the name of God that is inflected grammatically in the dative case. |
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Now the peace process is no more, it makes no sense to regard it as a mantra, a modern spell to make everyone live happily ever after. |
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Most significantly for Democrats, the election results may portend a backlash against the no-new-taxes mantra that's ruled the Capitol since Gov. |
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As the boon-giving guru gives the mantra in contentment and beatitude, try to please him with devotion, wealth, your very life. |
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Whenever one worships with tulasi plant, one should accompany it with the six-syllable mantra. |
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Each mantra or word is a sound pattern that suggests to the mind the meanings inherent in it, and the mind immediately responds. |
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If the mantra were applied rigorously, then Britain would get rid of farming altogether. |
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A mantra is the name of a sacred deity or a sacred phrase that you repeat silently or aloud. |
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After one or two weeks, when the shifting is over, I will be able to provide you with the necessary mantra and yantra for prapti siddhi. |
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But Sir John's mantra is worth revisiting at a time when another of Scotland's institutions is absorbed into a larger entity. |
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The tradition is that, as each new president is installed, he or she establishes a watchword or mantra for the four year term of office. |
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Dare to challenge this mantra and you are likely to vilified as a backward-looking weakling who just can't cut it in the online world. |
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And it doesn't get much more unusual than having mantra rays and starfish witnessing your wedding day. |
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It is not necessarily a bad thing to just do a prostration or a mantra mouthing the words. |
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Most likely, you're filling some need to alleviate a social guilt imposed by an environmental mantra. |
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The song ends with the drummer alone on the stage pounding out the final measures as the crowd chants a wordless South African mantra. |
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The shrines in their homes are spattered with cooking fat and they recite a mantra in the same breath as they yell at a yak. |
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The statement repeated the mantra that rates are appropriate but also added inflation outlook is favourable. |
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The article continues the right-to-life mantra that only the God-fearing religious have rights. |
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If this sounds familiar that is because it is a mantra acknowledged and repeated by Scottish Enterprise. |
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The days are gone of National's tired old mantra of attacking unionists as if they were evil and devilish. |
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The mantra that, in pursuit of serenity, you should change those things you can change and accept those you cannot has become rather dangerous. |
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Blain is reluctant to make forecasts, and in team meetings the mantra of one game at a time has been chanted, borne of bitter experience. |
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Fiscal prudence from politicians might sound like an electioneering mantra to some, but its a badge of honour to me. |
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Thus the mantra of the right, personal responsibility, requires that the State intervene. |
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When it comes to vital resources like water and land, free market is the dominant mantra of the world's financial elite. |
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These words have become a mantra for the international financial institutions, Western governments and aid agencies. |
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In a mantra that has sounded like a broken record since the late nineteenth century this, apparently, is all the fault of big bad union bosses. |
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That's the mantra of many a hack desperate to meet an inelastic deadline or dying to use a bombastic headline. |
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Californian hippies in suits intone the inane and never-challenged mantra that information wants to be free. |
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Loewen even manages to write about race, gender, and class without sounding like he is repeating a mantra. |
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It's common to use prayer beads to mark the number of repetitions of a mantra. |
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The management mantra that responsibility is ineffective without accountability holds true with regard to the role of citizens. |
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I think there is no difference in Zen, propagating Buddhism, reciting mantra, and worldly jobs. |
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So, needing some beauty sleep, and thinking whilst counting sheep, I went to bed, and a magical mantra came to me in a dream. |
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Many Hindu swamis advise followers to be well-established vegetarians prior to initiation into mantra, and to remain vegetarian thereafter. |
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That is the very old mantra in Tibetan Buddhism, om mani padme hum, Hail to the jewel in the heart of the lotus. |
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He never prescribed any asan, regulation of breathing or any rites to His Bhaktas, nor did He blow any mantra into their ears. |
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We cannot know for sure, but they may have advised him to concentrate on his breathing, or to repeat a mantra silently to himself. |
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Pranava, Aum, is the root mantra and primal sound from which all creation issues forth. |
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Many further speculative explanations of the significance of the mantra are found in Tibetan Buddhism. |
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It is at that point that his mantra changes from a selfish need to be heard to actually listening. |
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If you are using a Siva mantra, then the mantra will bring you closer to Siva-consciousness, as the mantra is Siva as sound. |
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If it is successful, perhaps the dummies who determine what we see on television will rethink their mantra. |
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This common mantra of crabbed Republicanism became mine also. |
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The protest we hear is strangely divided, along with repetition of the mantra about keeping food prices high for the benefit of farmers and cultivators. |
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It is relentlessly positive and constantly whispering the mantra of ease and happiness through wealth and the purchase of this or that brand name product. |
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There is another prophecy, a mantra for the prophesiers in dark times. |
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Their mantra was echoed in the glowing reports of the critics and guidebooks, all of which unanimously extolled the place's virtues in worryingly breathless prose. |
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That's the showbiz mantra, the scout's honour for those of us who tread the boards. |
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And could that name have had the power to act as a combination of mantra, anesthetic, and flag of truce? |
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Mr. Speaker, I appreciate the parliamentary secretary's interest in reading his speech and talking about the mantra of playing politics. |
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The mantra that, at some ideal moment in the misty past, Anglo-Saxon companies had nothing to do with the state is codswallop. |
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I work based on a mantra that products should contain function, social intercourse and dreams. |
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Close your eyes and repeat your mantra continually either silently or aloud. |
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The mantra that liberalisation leads to higher quality services at a lower cost is propounded as a scientific truth. |
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The mantra of globalization has helped give rise to the opposite message: local services, in local hands. |
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Such a statement could easily be called the mantra of the Web. |
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It is said that viewing the written form of the mantra has potent effects, acting as a talisman. |
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The new mantra among consumer electronics executives and designers is ease of use, ease of use, ease of use. |
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It must be filled with feelings of confidence in the efficacy of the power of the mantra, and surrender to the Will of the Divine. |
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This is not necessarily anathema to business, whatever the sterile mantra of free trade might argue. |
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Everyone will be able to join parts of the continuous recitation of the Vajra Guru mantra. |
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Human rights as a theme hardly exists in popular political discourse except as an occasional mantra. |
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But while many funds and managers might share this objective and mantra, not many have the results to back it up. |
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It may happen when we are sitting, chanting our mantra, washing the dishes, or even sitting on the toilet! |
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It keeps being restated, like a mantra, whilst insufficient thought has probably been given to how best to attain it. |
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A growing array of critics understand the need to break with the megacity mantra. |
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Fortunately the government no longer repeats this untenable and discredited mantra. |
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The mantra 'speed kills' is as over-used as it is over-simplistic. |
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The finale provides an apt swansong with a hypnotic vocal mantra that builds into a potent cadenza reminiscent of the early Doves, but customised by piercing percussive jabs. |
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If the six-syllable mantra was being popularised through an oral tradition in the ninth and tenth centuries, then we would not necessarily expect to find a widespread textual representation of the mantra. |
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It was clearly a very emotional scene, with great crowds of people escorting him through the valleys, chanting the six-syllable mantra of Avalokitesvara, making prayers, and weeping from faith. |
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The new mantra under the Reserve banner is ultra-high-end, customized experiences, many of them in dreamy locales. |
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In the death chamber, prison wardens strapped him to the gurney and administered the drugs as he repeated a Buddhist mantra. |
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Others stayed home to protest at the over-control of the campaign, the same men in grey suits regurgitating their party mantra like speaking clocks. |
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The second mantra is intended for serious yogis and transcendentalists. |
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The Krishna Movement stresses continual silent chanting of the hare Krishna mantra in order to keep the mind focused on God. |
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The man who wrote that mantra last week clearly has an axe to grind. |
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All this time I am reciting some mantra or doing some meditation. |
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India and China, he says, are the new kids on the block and will outperform the rest of the world because they have whole-heartedly absorbed the new mantra of globalisation. |
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The GOP should embrace the work ethic as its mantra, and this time act like they mean it. |
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These themes are underpinned by unquestioned assumptions about the dangers of modern life, lazily repeated like a mantra through much of the media. |
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Bush's mantra is that big deficits don't really matter, but that's economic hooey. |
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In this level we focus on the use of mantra for healing the mind, the emotions and the direction we are headed in life by accessing the inner guide. |
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That being said, if this simply becomes a mantra repeated in all our agreements, and fails to make a genuine difference, especially when its terms are violated, it will of course be worthless. |
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When reaching this state of consciousness mentally pronounce the mantra PANDER: disarrange this mantra into two syllables and pronounce one immediately after the other, prolong the sound of each syllable. |
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This is the most popular Buddhist mantra, used to invoke the blessings of the Bodhisattva Avalokiteshwara, the great incarnation of compassion, as well as for evoking a feeling of dynamic compassion in the reciter. |
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The industry's future, goes an old mantra that is back in fashion, will belong to the superleague of behemoths, with fingers in banking, broking and insurance, that is emerging from the current wave of financial mergers. |
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This mantra, plus her own fascinating backstory and a healthy dose of teamwork have helped inspire her students to achieve. |
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It is a common mantra for one to learn from their past mistakes, so leaders should take advantage of their failures for their benefit. |
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The mantra 'public bad, private good' must be dispelled. |
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In the Unifying Practice, three key methods of meditation-looking at an object or an image of a Buddha, reciting a mantra and watching the breath-are brought together into one. |
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This mantra is so called because, when chanted sincerely with reflection on its meaning, it can convey realisation of our Essential Nature which is beyond birth and death. |
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Through mantra and through austerity of thought there is a purification of the fine matter of the subtle body, and regulation of the breath and purification of the mind. |
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The Vajra Guru mantra will be recited throughout the day and the night. |
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Yet old habits die hard: the notion that finance should be free to set its own rules has been the mantra of most economists and politicians for several decades. |
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In his first campaign speech, Sabbahi also claimed to carry the flame for Egypt's revolution – a mantra that implicitly positions Sisi as the establishment figure. |
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How many times have I heard the word marketing in the House as if it was some kind of mantra, as if anyone who is not into marketing is some kind of dumdum. |
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Unlike our friends on the Conservative right wing, we do not subscribe to some monotone mantra that there is no problem in the world that a tax cut could not fix. |
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As our life is largely the consequence of our past thoughts, words and actions, that is our karma, as we replace old habitual thoughts with the mantra, the old karma tendencies lose their force and dry up. |
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They employ every kind of skilful means-visualization, mental imagery, sound, mantra, movement and yoga-and embrace every facet of the human mind-imagination, intellect and emotion. |
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The mantra of the G8 patricians is that trade will set us free. |
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The mysterious croak of the toad is the song, it is the mantra. |
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It dawned on me that throughout my career the mantra of Moore's Law has been driving virtually all segments of anything related to technology. |
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The Council texts before us today are pervaded by the optimistic, consoling mantra of the Lisbon goal: making Europe the most competitive and dynamic knowledge-based economy in the world in ten years. |
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That mantra will be repeated from the charlatan in the movie Network. |
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Salvador savoured every moment of his new success, recording and touring at an impressive rate and repeating his musical mantra as a committed jazz aficionado and a fan of sentimental ballads. |
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I believe that the political message of this Parliament should consist of something more original than a mere rehash of the neo-classical economic mantra. |
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In the context of globalization, the mantra that economic reforms are necessary for a successful transition is an excuse to emasculate sovereign nations' authority and their raison d'être. |
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Even if the mind is competing with the mantra recitation, the latter will gradually wear down the mental chatter, leaving one in a peaceful state. |
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The mantra has started to sound like hackneyed PR schtick. |
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He religiously followed this mantra when photographers followed him during his days at boarding school in Switzerland, and today continues a studied expressionlessness. |
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Flop sweat was not an option, and she had a mantra to dissolve it. |
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Their mantra was to create a managerially unique organization, a polar star for the rest of the United Nations system-a system unanimously perceived as politicized and ineffective. |
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Quality is akin to a mantra at the POB School, an institution that remains notoriously insular with very few foreigners admitted to the year-round program. |
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This mantra is to invocate for the welfare of all the sentient beings and during this Dusshera Puja, thousands of animals are slaughtered all over the world. |
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Hunting is a cruel, blood sport,'' is the mantra of the gun-haters. |
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And I blamed media training, which resulted in mantra politics. |
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A proper foundation garment sets you up for life, was her mantra. |
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Regardless, the phrase became a cultural phenomenon, adopted as the mantra for millions of girls and even making it into the Oxford English Dictionary. |
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Being subjected to this mantra once more re-evokes the perseveration we routinely suffer in the moral ambiguity characterising our supposedly post-politics milieu. |
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