And what does it mean when people take offense and respond in evil and inhuman ways? |
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The crocodile had mounted an offense and taken the body of a native, crushing him in its jaws. |
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For language, I'd almost always leave it in, unless it was something that would clearly give offense. |
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If the coaches are stubborn enough to force a balance, the offense again will be one of the NFL's best. |
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A motormouth jitterbug with a shiny dome, he was the X factor, goosing the rhythm and galvanizing the offense. |
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If the defense is active and moves from one side of the offense to the other quickly, it can be confusing to the offensive players teammates. |
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Carolina's offense, however, ranks near the middle of the pack in most offensive categories. |
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The offense still is one of the league's best with WRs Ed McCaffrey and Rod Smith having banner seasons. |
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To prevent further adventuring, these emperors made it a capital offense to build a boat with more than two masts. |
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When we adjusted our defense to be waiting for them, they readjusted their offense. |
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Politicians and military planners argued aerial offense was the most effective against foreign aggression or invasion. |
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He is ready to give offense to both the vanguard and the rearguard of the modem Roman Church-and to many in the middle. |
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But the worst offense is a tone of cheerful, sanitized neutrality so overwhelming that it actually renders the prose ahistorical. |
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The old football adage that offense wins games and defense wins championships still scores. |
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The offense will also need to find somebody besides Modin, who led the team with 32 goals, to score from the wing. |
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All through his sermons Topsell tries to portray Naomi and Ruth as symbols of ideal womanhood who are guilty of no moral or religious offense. |
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He still must gain a working knowledge of a sophisticated offense before he becomes a threat. |
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That's a safe choice for a conservative offense, but it doesn't mean Peete will last the season in that role. |
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The team's vast improvement can be traced to a more balanced offense, which complements an improving defense. |
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The offense still battles inconsistency, but the defense and rebounding, as always, are solid. |
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He invariably zigged when he should have zagged and was instrumental in the team's difficulties executing its offense. |
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Not surprisingly, Cleveland spent the offseason trying to add some zing to its offense. |
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His maturity and leadership skills are an asset for the club's young offense. |
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He is looking for more offense and has indicated he wants to sign a major free agent. |
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What also has people concerned is the scope of the offense and the arbitrariness with which it might be perceived. |
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Minnesota's offense showed improvement last week, with their quarterback leading a rout of the Saints. |
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Milt Palacio's ability to find teammates on the run and thread passes has helped the offense become more productive. |
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He has said from the beginning that he would like for the team to take a more run-and-gun, open and fast break style of offense. |
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The two were superb last season and during the preseason, when the Culpepper-to-Moss bomb was the best part of an otherwise rusty offense. |
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The consistent defense provides a safety net for the offense when it's struggling. |
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I mean no offense, madam, but it is obvious from your speech patterns that you were not born in this country. |
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They became the second straight team with a top-ranked offense to tank on Super Bowl Sunday. |
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Injuries have hurt the offense a bit so far, and the pitching has been poor but not awful. |
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Ever since, Martin has been a mainstay on the Jets' offense, and in their locker room. |
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He still is learning how to fit in with his teammates and where he should play on offense. |
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The team is dictating the tempo and enjoying success in every aspect of its offense. |
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After a couple of traffic offense cases and a few bad check writers were dealt with, he married us. |
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Among those who are guilty of an offense against good taste, he is a scofflaw tormented by felons and scoundrels. |
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He's a valuable player for a team whose offense often sputters deep in its territory. |
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A quarterback's first season with a team is almost always marked by struggles fitting in with his new offense. |
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Later in the series, the next offense had a little bit better luck as the freshman running back gained 17 yards on the first play from scrimmage. |
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Using the private message system or e-mail form to harass or threaten other members is bannable on first offense. |
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The skewness of the perceived severity distribution for each felony drug offense was examined. |
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Another 1995 law made the laundering of money from drug trafficking a serious criminal offense. |
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Beginning in 2009, adults arrested for any felony offense are subject to DNA collection. |
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But the case was abandoned Thursday after magistrates found he had not committed a criminal offense. |
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The original version of the bill would have made an immigration violation a felony offense. |
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The scorning of the tribes is an offense to the natural order in the minds of many there. |
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In those buried and bygone days, it was an affront and an offense to join with separatists to defeat a corrupt government. |
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As a middle-aged freedom fighter, I've always taken offense at this notion. |
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And when I say that, please understand I mean no offense to the ghost of the 70s comedian. |
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I saw the person who is alleged to have taken offense on the tram a few days later, and she seemed fine. |
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And these are the offense football teams that quickly do damage to anything and everything in their path. |
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But for every feint that was ignored, for every offense move that was countered, Tiana dealt equally. |
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As the offense team monitored the threat rings we were flying through, the copilot saw a missile at our 4 o'clock. |
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The offense struggled to sustain drives last year and must get better on third down. |
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The team will need contributions from some of its younger players on offense. |
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Most importantly, they kept the high-octane Kansas City offense off the field. |
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On the other hand, the Colts are a much-improved team with a very potent offense. |
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If the Eagles keep both of their second-round picks, they could go for skill players on offense. |
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First, it brings back a productive player on a young offense that needs playmakers. |
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In the second half of the game the New England offense had the ball for over 21 of the 30 minutes in the second half. |
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That doesn't bode well for a team whose offense is predicated on running with George. |
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A first down is achieved when the offense has moved the ball ten yards from its previous spot. |
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The problem with Tampa Bay's offense is it lacks the team speed to be effective. |
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The rest of the players on offense had to adjust to the change in personality under center. |
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The Chargers would like another big run stuffer on defense and a versatile player on offense. |
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Saban will miss quarterback Matt Mauck and the other playmakers on offense who graduated. |
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He is as automatic as it gets in the league and as much of a weapon as any player on offense. |
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And they're very raunchy and loud and that's just my opinion so, please, no offense. |
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On passes, the offense relies on tight ends to block linebackers and sometimes defensive ends. |
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The Chargers don't have the offense to afford removing quarterbacks who have completed six passes in a row. |
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Whether it's a serious enough offense to merit professional sanctions I'll leave to others to decide. |
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The switch to the West Coast offense doesn't mean the team will become a pass-first team in the mold of the old 49ers. |
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They finished 90th in the nation in passing offense, a devastating number for a team that often trailed big early in games. |
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Fortunately, Florida land speculation is no longer considered a treasonable offense. |
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Too often, Marbury is forced to pop a pipe dream of a trey because the offense doesn't flow and post-up options are few. |
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The game had plenty of offense, with the two teams combining for 83 shots on goal. |
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No offense meant, but you don't strike me as the type he would trouble himself about. |
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Inflicting or otherwise causing a blighty wound was considered a capital offense, which was punishable by execution by a firing squad. |
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Yes, this is a serious offense because school officials are complete and utter morons. |
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The second is that tyrannical oppression is a paradigmatic offense against the natural order. |
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This ultraconservative attack protects Carr, but it limits Houston's potential to hang with any team with a decent offense. |
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His speed and fresh legs will bring some much-needed sizzle to the offense. |
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He is sure to maintain his heavy role within the offense under new coach Sidney Lowe. |
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The defensive players were boisterous and energetic and were taking it to the offense. |
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One setback will be the loss of punter Joey Hildbold, who regularly bails out the offense with booming kicks. |
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In the meantime, they were not unkind to him, and their greatest offense was his captivity. |
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A red-haired Cuban refugee used to take offense at nearly everything I uttered, finding me unrefined, unlettered, vulgar, and a bore. |
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Only boxing asks an athlete to be supremely fit while playing offense and defense simultaneously with life at stake. |
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I take no offense at spending money for walnuts, cashews, Brazil nuts and the like, but the pecans tick me off. |
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And yet, if the invited guest chooses to remain, the offense he commits is trespass, not breaking and entering or burglary. |
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The code wasn't binding on the Royal and Imperial courts, and brigandage was a hanging offense. |
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Groping people is one offense but there are plenty of others and, nine times out of ten, the abused person has to just take it. |
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To reveal the offense would mean dragging his family into an obligatory vendetta. |
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The rotation is full of no-names, but they're young, they'll eat innings, and they'll keep the offense in games. |
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My offense seems to have been spreading noncommercial messages in a capitalist environment. |
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This has to be the largest example of throwing defense under the bus for offense in quite some time. |
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A total of 12 Super Bowl winners have placed among the top five in offense or defense. |
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Some groups took offense at his hail-fellow-well-met endorsement of the high life. |
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The Seahawks are standing pat on offense and turning over five positions on defense. |
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That leads to some one-on-one opportunities for Hammer, and that's no good for an offense. |
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There is immense room for giving and taking offense when the subject is oneself. |
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Establishing a flow and chemistry on offense is critical, especially for a team that expects to be competitive behind a stout defense. |
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His offense was blasphemy, a charge catastrophically misrepresented or misunderstood. |
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He was daring and intelligent, produced huge plays and scared defenses with his orchestration of the offense. |
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He's a good fit for the offense, predicated on pounding the ball in the running game and hitting big strikes off play-action. |
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Those 2001 Rams outscored their opponents by 230 points and ranked first in offense and third in defense. |
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Cleveland has a lot of defensive problems and needs the offense to be on the same page to outscore opponents. |
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The goal is to outscore the opponent, and the Cardinals' offense either provides the lead or the threat of a comeback at any moment. |
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The defense did not induce a turnover and the offense has achieved the chance to shoot. |
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Roberts' team will play an up-tempo high-low offense, and he emphasized they would play loose. |
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A drawing of King William at the top of this broadsheet, rocking on a wooden hobby horse, might have caused some offense in loyalist circles. |
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No offense, but you're one of the last people I'd come to for cheerleading. |
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That team speed will overwhelm the Bucs' offense, which has been clicking of late. |
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Gary Sheffield and newcomer Shawn Green have paced the club's strong offense. |
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Miller committed a further offense by paraphrasing the quote and distorting Smithson's analysis. |
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No offense to your cinematographer, but he's a stills photographer and you expect him to get up and use a movie camera. |
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Tensing, his annoyance growing, Ikeda huffed at her statement in disagreement, beginning to feel incensed at the offense to his partner. |
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Instead of taking the ball to the hoop, for a lay-up, the guy passes the ball off and continues the offense. |
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His overaggressiveness on defense often landed him in foul trouble, and his passiveness on offense often caused him to be a nonfactor. |
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The idiotic hypersensitivity of the media continues to search for new and stupid things to take offense at. |
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My advice for next year is to avoid leagues that penalize players for having too large a role in the offense. |
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But it's still notable he was able to step in cold and run the offense so efficiently. |
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When Dallas took away Barber in the second half last Sunday, the offense was stopped cold. |
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She expresses only disappointment in him and offense at his coldness to her during the last phone conversation. |
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But the military can detain lawful combatants, if it chooses, without charging them with any offense. |
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Why can a conspirator be charged with both the inchoate offense of conspiracy and the robbery? |
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He shoots me a nervous sideways look, maybe afraid I'll take offense at the indelicate reference. |
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In this example, the offense sends a big player up to set a pick near the free throw line. |
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The team's no-risk, no-fault offense resulted in only 13.4 turnovers per game. |
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He is miffed at not being more of a focal point in the offense. |
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Last time Clark commented on Tamihere she said that he meant no offense. |
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Then they compounded the offense by suggesting that South Carolina Republican Senator Jim DeMint shares those Hebraic virtues. |
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The principle of proportionality, which derives from legality concepts, requires that the sanction for an offense be in accordance with its reproachfulness. |
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The very religious, like Eagleton, may take offense at the brusque, selective, and unsystematic consideration of their creeds. |
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These pigs usually compound the offense by slurping their drinks. |
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I cringed at my tactlessness and hoped he wouldn't take offense. |
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The temptation to stockpile vulnerabilities for offense is easy to understand. |
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They are so bad their offense has 18 false-start penalties in six games. |
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Sending a young woman a lewd photo is not an impeachable offense, but it is monumentally bad judgment. |
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They say necessity is the mother of invention, and Wright has done a masterful job shaping his four-guard offense in the wake of Sumpter's knee injury. |
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I wonder if she'd take offense if I ask her to put on a snowsuit. |
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If the evidence at the preliminary hearing supports a new or different charge, the court may bind the case over to the appropriate court on the new or different offense. |
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But now that neopaganism has joined the ranks of approved campus religious groups, this is beginning to be a minority view, expressed tentatively for fear of giving offense. |
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The Titans also chose to go heavy on defense, standing pat on offense. |
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Buying prescription drugs without a scrip is a serious legal offense, as Rush Limbaugh could tell you. |
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Michael, being wide receiver of the offense, had scored four touchdowns. |
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The younger artist, it appears, had overreached himself, causing offense to the dominating figure of the Roman artistic scene, or at least to his followers in Rome. |
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If this were accurate, it would mean that the Wilson stopped Brown over a minor offense, not a felony. |
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And as with plagiariam, Ambrose's habit of falsification and the propensity to error was a repeat offense. |
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He was arrested the same day on felony charges of forcible rape, lewd acts on a minor, and kidnapping to commit a sexual offense. |
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We did not intend to cause any offense, but in retrospect we realize that it was insensitive. |
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They'll have to be to keep Florida's dangerous offense off the field. |
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Fortunately, the record-setting bronco offense did its part to set yet another record. |
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The 23-year-old Army private faces a litany of charges, including aiding the enemy, a capital offense. |
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To many of us, that smacks of censorship, the highest offense to our pride in self-publicity. |
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Suffice it to say that awareness of the risks of giving offense produces a chilling effect on the ground in Russia. |
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But everything in Abbudin feels willfully generic, as if even the tiniest hint of specificity might give offense. |
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Does it become impossible to mention the historic crimes of Ustashe thugs lest law-abiding Croats take offense? |
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The Chinese served better than they had in previous matches against the Americans, with five aces, and they set up their offense better, with 61 kills. |
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The old-line NFL people called it a nickel-and-dime offense. |
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To be sure, jaywalkers put themselves and others at risk, and they can tie up traffic, but jaywalking is hardly the kind of offense that merits being maced. |
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He has played a more balanced game this season, but the team needs him to be more aggressive on offense because he opens things up for his teammates. |
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I'm nostalgic for the days when perjury was an impeachable offense. |
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Faught is guilty of this offense, but the sin is a venial one. |
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The decision of his case has the potential to set a precedent for cyberbullying being treated as a serious criminal offense. |
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Most satisfying is that he is playing solidly on both offense and defense. |
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Trying to bar all acknowledgments of religion by government officials in the name of preventing offense to listeners seems to me more illiberal than liberal. |
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I would contend a crucial first step in the fight against bigotry is to ban the vendors outside the grounds who sell the paraphernalia which causes most offense. |
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Of how incredibly petty the offense can be and how insanely disproportionate the retaliation can be. |
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The angry judge told the municipality that it is contributing to the phenomenon of construction offense. |
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I worried he might take offense but, to my surprise, Abu Hassar began to laugh too. |
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If any person arrived at the age of discretion profanely curse or swear or get drunk in public, he shall be fined by a justice one dollar for each offense. |
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Again, don't take this the wrong way, I mean no offense by it. |
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In the old days, criticising the Queen's glossy locks would have been a head-removing offense. |
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Any critique may be treated as a security issue or an offense against the faith. |
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May has clearly made a decision not to take offense at coverage of her clothing choices. |
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Kat, no offense or anything, but how do you think this works? |
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We take offense at anything and everything, and savvy media folks shout along all the way to the bank. |
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And that is forcing both presidential campaigns to play what might be called a hurry-up offense. |
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However, he was basically outworked and couldn't sustain any offense. |
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Ellis could wind up playing a major role in the offense batting leadoff. |
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Both stand accused of plunder, an offense punishable by death. |
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Baker, murmuring a word of support for the vilified Brooks, noted that she had been on vacation when the offense occurred. |
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Governor Romney continued to stay on offense on the economy with a message that is resonating with voters. |
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He will have no problem playing in Seattle's run-and-gun offense. |
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Well, no offense, but if that is the case, then I want my money back. |
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But has Judge Bybee committed an impeachable offense by signing off on these memos? |
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Singapore still considers graffiti an offense punishable by flogging. |
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That broad offense aside, the fact is that for many women these costs are prohibitive. |
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The multitalented Johnson, in particular, was understood to have sacrificed his own scoring in order to involve teammates in a free-flowing, high-scoring offense. |
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Grand-theft football is not the only offense perpetrated in NFL pileups. |
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His only offense was a moral one, though none of his critics could possibly know the terms and nuances of his marriage. |
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After scoring scads of runs in the early going against the likes of Cleveland, Detroit, and Kansas City, Minnesota's offense has come back to earth in a big way. |
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But the fun starts when conservatives stop playing defense and go on offense. |
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If everyone's eyes are up on the ball as it arcs to the basket, you can be sure the offense is cutting around the defense to get better position for rebounds. |
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The offense momentarily has an unguarded player that gets an open shot. |
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The Patriots have the better offense if tight end Rob Gronkowski has sufficiently recovered from a high ankle sprain. |
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Look, if it caused any anger or upset and in some way got the candidate off-message for the past couple of days of the campaign, I meant no offense. |
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If it caused any anger or upset and in some way got the candidate off-message for the past last couple of days of the Wisconsin campaign, I meant no offense. |
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To our contemporary minds, that might seem a relatively trivial offense. |
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No offense, butches, but when you break it down this way, you know where you usually end up. |
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Monterrey and Santos saved all their offense for the second leg of the CONCACAF Champions League's final. |
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Formerly to impair the morals was a minor was a punishable offense. |
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The 21-year-old will battle with re-signed tight end Brandon Pettigrew for playing time in new coordinator Joe Lombardi's offense. |
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The hymn admits that the entry of the Wife into the ritual is something of an offense, but an expiable one. |
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There were signs of last year's explosiveness for the Avengers offense, which scored on 12 of 13 possessions. |
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Youngblood and Khatib combined on offense to score a slew of fast break points. |
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As usual, the Naps depend upon a punishing ground game to provide most of their offense. |
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To run a breaking offense effectively, players need to buy into two principles that make a fast break work. |
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In the massive world of petty offense processing, that fundamental commitment to individuation has eroded. |
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But if double talk were an indictable offense, there would be few left to attend international summits. |
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Most defenses will try to stop our stack offense by double-teaming down, as shown in Diag. |
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When offering an Alford plea, a defendant asserts his innocence but admits that sufficient evidence exists to convict him of the offense. |
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Some had been killed for the offense, one on the basis of a child's schoolyard report of her father's antimob comments at the dinner table. |
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The Phocians behaved with so much gallantry, that they were thought to have made a sufficient atonement for their former offense. |
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It wasn't long before Jokic was dropping dimes, blocking shots, leading the break, and running the offense out of the elbow for Denver. |
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To be sure, there are those who are more sophisticated in their dogmatic eisegeses, but the offense is not thereby lessened. |
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Since when is it a hanging offense to criticize someone who's not doing the job he's paid generously to do? |
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The Nuggets don't have the most dynamic offense nor do they have a real superstar to hang their hat on but their defense is strong. |
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One consequence was that it was considered a capital offense to harm a tribune, to disregard his veto, or to interfere with a tribune. |
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However, in individual cases, Claudius punished false assumption of citizenship harshly, making it a capital offense. |
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No offense or anything, but this soup tastes a little jizzy. You'd better not have put any special ingredients in here. |
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She might take offense if some Johnny-come-lately thinks he can do a better job. |
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The offense could contrive a variety of laydowns to intensify the defense's problems. |
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He had a maestrolike performance, directing an offense that ran for 517 yards. |
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In criminal law, guilt is the state of being responsible for the commission of an offense. |
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Drug trafficking is widely regarded by lawmakers as a serious offense around the world. |
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Smuggling is a cognizable offense in which both the smuggled goods and the goods are punishable. |
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Voluntary manslaughter in some jurisdictions is a lesser included offense of murder. |
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The following table includes the number of incidents reported and the rate per 1,000 persons for each type of offense. |
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There simply were not enough supplies reaching the front to conduct proper defensive operations, let alone a proper offense. |
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As the Vestals were regarded as daughters of the community, this offense essentially constituted incest. |
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Worldwide slavery is a criminal offense but slave owners can get very high returns for their risk. |
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All Cuban citizens over 16 who have not been convicted of a criminal offense can vote. |
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The greatest offense to the Chinese was the supposed kidnapping of children by the Portuguese so they could eat them. |
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Crimes like tax evasion are specific intent crimes and require intent to violate the law as an element of the offense. |
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No penalty may be inflicted for an offense for which no provision was made at the time it was committed. |
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Interpretations of both the harm and offense limitations to freedom of speech are culturally and politically relative. |
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Wrongfulness of intent also may vary the seriousness of an offense and possibly reduce the punishment but this is not always the case. |
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Additionally, driving while intoxicated in some states may be a misdemeanor if a first offense, but a felony on subsequent offenses. |
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On other rare occasions, it is considered an ordinance violation, the lowest level of offense. |
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He took offense at Tull's rejection of not only Virgil, but of any and all who practiced husbandry in his style. |
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The youngly born brother made no explanation of his sense of offense other than to go over and give Artie a stolid and resounding blow. |
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No small mission, especially after the sizzling Dodgers offense fell cold against Mets' rookie pitcher Alay Soler and two relievers Monday. |
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The Hollywood star's son, Jaycee Chan, is accused of a serious drug offense. |
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This changed attitude is also evident in the words used to describe and therefore trivialize the offense. |
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Prisoners released after serving time for a property offense were the most likely to recidivate. |
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To begin implementation, the FBI awarded a contract to develop new offense definitions and data elements for the redesigned system. |
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Lynch accounts for 65 percent of the NIU offense with 1,881 yards rushing, 2,676 passing and 43 touchdowns. |
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You'll learn the rules of offense and defense, and all about fastballs, curveballs, knuckleballs and screwballs. |
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The easiest way to write for the Internet is to take offense. |
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A new coach and a new offensive philosophy for the Panthers, as Ayer switches from the double wing to a spread offense. |
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The Lakers tried to free Bryant from having to play in the backcourt and direct the offense. |
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Article 130, UCMJ, prohibits unlawful entry into another's building or structure with the intent to commit a criminal offense therein. |
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A check of Carr's criminal record revealed he had two prior convictions for retail theft which made this offense a felony. |
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If we come out and lay an egg against this defense, then our offense is not where we think we are. |
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In a sign of how stagnant the Dodgers offense has become, manager Joe Torre turned back the clock Saturday and had Nomar Garciaparra bat leadoff. |
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His offense is that he is just scarily good at making money. |
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McPherson's bat has perked up at Salt Lake, and the Angels have had virtually no offense from their third basemen. |
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Drivers may be facing not just the initial traffic offense but also a bench warrant. |
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Because it leads to the underproduction of national offense, the free-rider problem in national offense makes for a more peaceful world. |
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Caney completed the offense for the Orioles just four minutes shy of halftime, rocketing in at the left post off a give-and-go with Soucia. |
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The start of the second half saw another Dutch attempt but the Costa Ricans were prepared to defend and launch their own offense. |
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Normally, a team will have a number of extra X's and Z-backs that can double as tailbacks in the T-bone spread offense. |
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We're witnessing the demise of talion, the English word that describes punishment meted out to match the offense. |
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Many asked why Sadeq Larijani was being treated as if he had committed an offense of equal horridness to what Ahmadi-nejad did. |
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The BJP took offense to the posters saying it was ridiculous as the people of Delhi knew who is truly an opportunist. |
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Would it not better serve our case to impose life imprisonment without the possibility of parole in capital offense cases? |
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The beheading of a dog shouldn't be a Proposition 66 issue because it should be a capital offense. |
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Currently, judges are required to offer bail to all suspects, except those accused of a capital offense. |
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Raytheon understands that collaboration is critical to success in cryptoanalysis and cyberspace for both offense and defense. |
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One of the keys in stopping this offense lies in having as much carryover as possible from your basic reads and schemes. |
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The best legal defense is here a strong offense, employing vaticination as rhetorical power. |
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In the common law tradition, an acquittal formally certifies that the accused is free from the charge of an offense, as far as the criminal law is concerned. |
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Although the Patriots prefer to play a half-court motion offense and man-to-man defense, they expect to see an up-tempo offense and a pressure defense from the Eagles. |
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What's more, while codes of conduct would not necessarily make holding an Ashley Madison account a fireable offense, using company resources certainly could. |
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This resulted in the German lines on the offense contracting to keep up the offensive time table while correspondingly the French lines were extending. |
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In 1515, conversion from arable to pasture became an offense. |
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Because A cannot be sure that it will realize all, or indeed any, of the benefits of its expenditures on attacking B, A will underproduce offense. |
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Murder with calculated premeditation is a capital offense, and should be. |
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Any penetration, however slight, is sufficient to complete the offense. |
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Mosaic law also makes idolatry or the worship of other gods a capital offense, along with a host of other crimes, including adultery, cursing one's parents, and sodomy. |
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Instead, it's the offense, herky-jerky as it is, bailing out the defense. |
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In light of this retraction, you have articulate grounds to foreswear resentment that do not compromise your judgment of the offense, the offender, or yourself. |
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Because we don't want our point guard to wear himself out by bringing the ball up court on offense and pressuring the opposing point guard on defense. |
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On first down, after a nice run by quarterback Jeremiah Masoli, the offense lined up on the left hash mark with a slot set to the right side of the field. |
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To get open on offense, you should cut to an open area or to the ball. |
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The one new law that this country needs is one that will make it a banishable offense to preach or teach anything contradictory to established fact. |
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Perhaps the world would be more willing to listen if we weren't wasting time, money, and media attention taking offense at irrelevancies like a candy Christ. |
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Similar to statutory exclusion mechanisms, prosecutorial discretion is often limited to a subset of cases based on age and offense characteristics. |
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Deputy District Attorney Laura Foland Pervier said she will ask that the two youths be charged as adults because of the brutal nature of the offense. |
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La Canada used the double-wing offense to churn out a 41-0 halftime lead. |
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At Sevier County we use a defensive system that allows us to dictate the coverage and adjustment we want the offense to use in a particular tactical situation. |
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But Kempt didn't make it through the first quarter before suffering a concussion and finished with minus-three yards of offense on three incompletions, one rush and one sack. |
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Even with his worst game of the season, Florence, who went 12-for-19 with 289 yards against the Horned Frogs, still leads the country's top passing offense. |
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Many states do not allow expungement, regardless of the offense, though felons can seek pardons and clemency, potentially including restoration of rights. |
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If a base hit or out is recorded, the defense has 10 seconds to get the ball in and the offense has 10 seconds to get the next hitter into the batter's box. |
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One-timers and slap shots make for an even faster and challenging offense. |
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