Then we are left with an empirical question of understanding how nature and nurture interact. |
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He earned the dough to bring this asinine concept to life, and has even recruited some heavy hitters to nurture it. |
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I prize my mental instability and nurture the lunacy which manifests itself within my cranium. |
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Strategies to nurture the party's attractiveness to blocs of non-white voters will be increasingly important as the population changes. |
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It is therefore consonant with, indeed an expression of, the personal autonomy that morality should protect and nurture. |
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Providing seed money for two new voucher schools in the city, Brennan then helped nurture the program until it reached the high court. |
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Anthropologist Small follows the various strands of nature and nurture that determine the fate of our children. |
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He was quick to point out that nurture plays a big role, not just our genes. |
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We must value that reputation and work together to nurture it and remove any misconceptions that will put it at risk. |
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Such discontents can nurture extremist, perhaps ultranationalist, policies. |
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Also due to the meagre treatment and rehabilitation facilities, the family must act as an umbrella to protect, nurture and sustain its members. |
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Some may even forget that they have an inner self and it is their bounden duty to protect and nurture it for a peaceful life. |
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He was fascinated with the idea of whether genius is the result of nature or nurture. |
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Infant determinists argue for the determining effects of both nature and nurture, leaving little to individuals' free will. |
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Who of us cannot look back on our growing up years and see how our parents influenced us by both nature and nurture? |
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Yes, when passion ebbs, nurture comes before nature and compassion must overflow. |
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I think we need to be careful when we start talking about whether it's nature or nurture. |
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The rapid transformation of warring societies into peaceful ones underscores the power of nurture over nature. |
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He also has an eminently sane attitude to the ferocity of past arguments about the relative influences of nature and nurture. |
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It's neither nature nor nurture that determines who we are, but the choices we make. |
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However, he perpetuates a common misconception that the battle has been nature versus nurture. |
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Within this setting, some firms seek to nurture different brands of products that are geared to different retail channels. |
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Such is the environment that will either nurture or neuter election reform over the coming months. |
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They have only vague, dim ideas about feelings, the development and nurture of human emotions. |
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You can say something that will either nurture the relationship or tear it down. |
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The church is the seedbed of gospel preachers, and we must value and nurture what God plants among us. |
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It is a way to increase knowledge and learn new skills, build confidence, and nurture a sense of place, and community. |
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Even better, your supervisor, a top researcher in the field, wants to nurture your interest in science. |
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In addition to the physical, parents also have trouble finding time to nurture their kids ' emotional well-being. |
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But maybe they nurture this belief that they live in a classless society and these status considerations conflict with that. |
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Since March, hours of thought and planning have been spent on design, preparation and nurture. |
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One cone-shaped hill is topped with a rock pile like a nipple, a metaphor of nurture. |
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And nurture is interrupted again when your colleague's husband is stopped from checking their baby. |
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But how to price and value love, nurture, community trust and neighbourliness? |
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Children who've grown up without nurture apparently lack any sense that they can be something other than what they are. |
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She turned to one for advice and nurture, another for kicks, and another for career advice, and each knew what was expected of them. |
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We must make the proper nurture of children our highest priority, but this can never be done in a risk-free way. |
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The upshot is that the age-old nature versus nurture dichotomy is completely erroneous. |
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So whichever way you stand on the nature nurture debate, Kierkegaard was always likely to turn out a depressive. |
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Religion is a product of nurture and therefore a matter of choice. I reject discrimination on the grounds of religion. |
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I think we are who we are via nature and then are further shaped by nurture. |
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But it seems to the Professor that nurture has made women more receptive to the idea of retributive violence. |
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Many on the left seem to assume that if everybody has the same nurture, then everybody will be equally intelligent. |
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In a John Steinbeck novel, two characters engage in the nature vs. nurture argument. |
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It is the Romantic-humanist heresy which holds that we should nurture our egos rather than abnegate them. |
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But he overestimates the extent to which the supremacy of nurture is generally accepted. |
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From the very beginning, love and nurture your child so he can begin to feel connected to others. |
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Another unusual aspect of Fred's character is his ability to pick and nurture people. |
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Only within a conjugal union could women be chaste and virtuous, and nurture a positive influence on children and men. |
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The parents were instructed to unequivocally nurture his female gender role. |
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Colonial gardeners also used cloches, or bell glasses, to nurture fragile seedlings and extend the growing season. |
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A leader must harness and nurture that drive, feed it, and encourage it to grow. |
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Public places that help foster a sense of community and nurture civic culture. |
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We need to feminise economics and take seriously the new politics of gender, time and care if we are to nurture families in the new economy. |
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In Britain, we know how to nurture an ironic infatuation with signs of difference, status and style. |
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Mission groups travel outside the city to plant and nurture new faith communities. |
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Certainly, running boards and helping nurture companies still fires him, as does his delight in seeing young people progress. |
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This canal will nurture 2,135 acres of irrigable land and create another 300 acres of irrigable land. |
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He helped nurture the Java Desktop System from concept to creation and even managed to close a few sales. |
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The main aim of the system is to nurture micro-enterprises that may grow into fully fledged businesses. |
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Writing, which ought to nurture and give shape to thought, is instead being used to pound it into a powder and then reconstitute it into gruel. |
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Children genuinely form bonds with and nurture a deep affection for these toys, the way past generations did for teddy bears. |
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After all, he had proven that gender identity is a product of nurture, not nature. |
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While following this epicurean lifestyle, the people fail to nurture their inner self and land themselves in trouble. |
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Interest in whether the essentials of being human are given to us by nature or by nurture has a long pedigree. |
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Apart from expediting the corporatisation process in the film industry, it needs to nurture a habit of ploughing back earnings, he said. |
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Konner knows enough ethology to have helpful ways of discussing old questions such as the relationship between nature and nurture. |
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With strong customer support, we plan to nurture the relationship of developer and gamer to levels above and beyond today's standards. |
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We seek to nurture these young people so that they can fulfill their true potential, both academically and socially. |
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In those days they used to say you couldn't nurture young joeys because you couldn't foster them. |
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He quickly cognized the need for an external structure with which to manage and nurture a growing congregation. |
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His early attempts to nurture Hawaiian natives like koa, ohia lehua, and lama trees were disappointing. |
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Perhaps now is the time to bring the association on board and provide it with the authority and resources required to nurture new referees. |
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He does what he can to nurture it, but otherwise leaves it to nature to do what it does. |
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Very often it is our discrimination against them that helps nurture their antagonism towards us. |
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These hormones help provide moms with the energy and instinct to nurture their children, says narvaez. |
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Tiny baitfish feed on these amphipods, and the next point in the cycle provides food for larger fish, which in turn nurture popular gamefish, among others. |
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For me, it bred the question of what nature and nurture can really do to someone. |
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Soldiers' allegiances were stronger towards their generals than the discredited deputies and army leaders began to nurture political ambitions of their own. |
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Oddly you nurture it, it is part of you, and inescapably part of your past, present, and future. |
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The project will nurture the emerging economies of the Hunan and Guangxi provinces by improving shipping channels to the Yangtze and Pearl Rivers and thence to the sea. |
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One of the problems with the spurious dichotomies posed between nature and nurture, or genes and environment, is that they don't help us understand the process of development. |
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The leftovers are composted, helping to nurture a new cycle of growth. |
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She was the woman who would bear his children, raise and nurture them. |
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Pakistan, on the other hand, have serious worries ahead of the match and need to sort their bowling problems if they nurture any hope of a series-levelling comeback. |
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We are a culture that now cherishes our adventurous, aggressive tomboys but balks at boys who cry, nurture, and listen to chick flick soundtracks. |
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Deenside Players are one of the most progressive groups in the area and continue to nurture the abounding array of talent in the town and environs. |
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Acceding to these requests seriously damages our understanding of conception and fatally fractures the link between parental relationships and infant nurture. |
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I don't just mean in the field of higher education, where Americans give, or give back, to their places of nurture on a scale that we find unthinkable. |
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These candidates should then be given support, nurture, and a challenge to test whether God is calling them to cross cultural borders with the gospel. |
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Our grandparents who planted and pruned according to phases of the moon are early examples of farmers using natural influences to nurture plant growth. |
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And you can answer many questions about nature versus nurture in that way. |
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According to this contrary view, the key to uniqueness, whether in robots or human beings, is a matter of nurture or history rather than of nature. |
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In the nurture of children, they are taught in both religious traditions. |
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He attempted to overturn the nurture versus nature theory that has had us all pressing dolls on our sons and junior construction kits on our little girls. |
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At stake is not the status of marriage in our society but the safe and sensitive nurture of all our children from whatever home background they come. |
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Since its founding in 1997 as a workspace and gallery, the Space, as it's called, has helped nurture careers for just about every artist affiliated with it. |
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But John is sure that he can nurture ayatollah to bring out the best in him, if only Tzipi and Saeb will do their best for Salaam. |
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The 27-year-old grew up in bleak times for Scottish sport, when there was neither the political will nor the financial support to nurture precocious talent. |
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We took a break, for her to relax, center, rest and nurture herself. |
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Also, another group of chicks will be brought over from Russia next year to go through the same nurture and acclimatisation routine that the current influx is undergoing. |
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Rehabilitation is, if society is not to nurture a permanent and growing criminal class, and turn those who have committed minor crimes into more serious offenders. |
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Horse and rider need to nurture complete trust, to tackle the field in fair weather or foul with cavalier bravery but with two minds, one of them human, intrinsically focused. |
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But the desire to nurture is born from blinding selfishness and little or no empathic capacity. |
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He himself grew up without his biological parents, being raised by a foster family, and is understandably sceptical about the elevation of biology over nurture. |
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But there is also a sense that many of those who complain bitterly about the direction of government policy still nurture the hope that Tony is really on their side. |
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Whether nature or nurture, a common point was the change in attitudes regarding the purpose of justice, shifting from retributive to reformative intent. |
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Poverty and injustice are recognised as factors that nurture terrorism. |
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Let's all play a part in ensuring that Scotland delivers the right conditions to nurture the truly modern, vibrant and aspirational country we all want. |
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The country has found an outlet for its energies, and given time and talent to nurture, it is certain one day to stand proud among the established nations. |
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This is where I don my pinny and nurture you into cooking heaven. |
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Then, after a few more years. it needs fire to release seed from cone, reduce mature tree to ash to nurture the sandy soil, and then rains to ensure vigorous renewal. |
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A side effect of that move is that it could help Iovine nurture and develop talent that plays to their strengths. |
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But did he nurture ambitions to return to Queen Margaret Drive? |
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However, with professional spaces becoming increasingly dynamic by the day, it's absolutely acceptable to nurture a goatee or a soul patch. |
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Wells contemplates the ideas of nature and nurture and questions humanity in books such as The Island of Doctor Moreau. |
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To facilitate and nurture a junior's growth in tennis, almost all tennis playing nations have developed a junior development system. |
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The role of wives was to raise and nurture healthy children and support their husbands. |
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The relationships between universal norms and specific norms nurture the development of international law. |
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Instead we need to nurture a culture of war-weariness, anti-militarism, peace, and individual liberty. |
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Workaholics risk long-term physical and psychological ailments as well as an inability to nurture other relationships and domains of one's life. |
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Nature and nurture, genetics and family background all come into play. |
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No amount of nurture could alter the nature of the lankiest girl in Rhondda Gymnastic Club. |
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The verdant mountains and coastal breezes of Santa Cruz County nurture redwoods, banana slugs, and. |
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Be our neighbour is our strap line, so we can nurture and teach them how to manufacture more leanly, how to do the RnD more succinctly. |
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They are our kids, and we must educate them and nurture them, guiding them nonjudgmentally towards help and a healthier and brighter future. |
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Will asking for a barrel-aged Negroni help to nurture some European class? |
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That experience is a key resource that the venture capitalist brings to the table in helping to nurture a developing firm. |
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At a time when virtual space rules, Rottenberg reminds us of our actual solidity, of the material stubbornness of the body and so of the systems it depends on for nurture. |
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It was dedicated to her father, creating the bird house as a tiny home for my dad and Emin thought of the works' title from the idea of nature and nurture. |
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He invented the term eugenics and the phrase nature versus nurture. |
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It's just that one is the lover, while the other is the lovee. Together, they make love. One has an obligation to nurture, and the other has a duty of care. |
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The third grade students will plant and nurture upwards of 600 zinnia and cockscomb celosia plants to sell at the upcoming Third Grade Plant Sale in early June. |
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It wants you to nurture the humus that sustains its great variety, not place before it the monochromatic monoculturalism of a political monotheism. |
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To nurture it, we'd need better pay all around, a more leisurely pace of work, and corporate hierarchies that reward performance over brown-nosing. |
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The threat of Ukip will nurture the Tories' euro-scepticism. |
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Rocket scientist explains factors need to nurture creativity. |
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We felt that KES had so much to offer, academically and with opportunities like the orchestra, and it was clear that this would be a place to nurture him. |
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It is necessary to create and nurture an environment of innovation. |
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Leaders in India are expected to nurture, protect, guide, support and care for subordinates and strictly ensure the pursuit and achievement of goals. |
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By extension, then, those women who experienced the stigmata were able to replicate this maternal Jesus role by allowing Christ's blood to flow through them to nurture others. |
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