If we abdicate our roles as adults, it will be media and peers that educate our kids. |
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But it had no discernible effect on his career, which is still sustained, say his peers, by an extraordinary ability to spot hits. |
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But it is still useful to find it recorded in a single volume that brings the story up to date and peers cautiously into the future. |
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Potterton is described by his peers as a direct man, with a no-nonsense approach to business. |
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Green's arrogant belief that he has been dragged down by his environment and peers leads him to vitriolically reject the class he was born into. |
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Many young Marines were left with serious bruising after receiving 20-30 blows from their peers. |
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But although I took soundings from friends and peers, in the end I just followed my gut feeling and did what I thought felt right. |
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This evening will be a valediction from his peers, a tribute to the man who changed the game. |
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I like the way the newspaper urges its readers to cajole their peers into voting. |
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The company is still trading at a discount to its peers so Dilger's confidence in the upside potential for the shares probably isn't misplaced. |
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Among drug users, abused youth were significantly younger than their nonabused peers in mean age of onset of marijuana, cocaine, and uppers use. |
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Later, Wolfe became a novelist himself, to show his peers how Dickensian social realism should be done. |
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The school context provides an opportunity for youth to socialize with selected peers, independently from adults. |
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Undoubtedly princes, peers and other great nobles of old stock resented the power thus vested in men whom they regarded as social inferiors. |
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Are not-so-fat people to be so demonised as to be hauled up before a jury of their peers? |
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Standard Life's peers have been reporting soaraway sales and profit growth thanks to the recovering stock markets. |
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Sensing his political smarts, his peers in the Republican Class of '96 selected him as their liaison to the party leadership. |
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I like being the smart, intelligent career woman who is respected by her peers. |
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Young narcissistic adults tend to be ostracized and shunned by peers and colleagues. |
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The academic argues in her book that sexually active school girls are often slut-shamed and bullied by their peers. |
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He peers out from under his scruffy, unkempt hair with a slackjawed, apprehensive expression. |
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The researchers' explanation is that freer expression of conflict occurs more among peers than among unequals. |
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Returning to the women's side, skip Marika Bakewell was voted by her curling peers as the all-star skip for the tournament. |
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She peers over her sunglasses to see Taylor and Alex walk directly passed her, wearing board shorts and carrying surfboards at their sides. |
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And in a sideswipe at some of his peers, many of whom he feels are languishing in the comfort zone, he refused to pull his punches. |
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His face is mobile and pensive, reflecting a deeper register of emotion than his acting peers in Miami and Las Vegas. |
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Also, popular kids with troublesome peers showed the highest likelihood of being led into such dangers as vandalism and shoplifting. |
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Some find solidarity and comfort in the company of their peers, others are judged as outsiders and misfits and suffer accordingly. |
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Stage one saw the removal of most of the hereditary peers, leaving 92, who were to remain during a transitional period. |
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From that experience, I learned that I could do anything I put my mind to and that I'd always have the support of my peers at camp. |
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At the wedding ceremony on 10 February 1840 Queen Victoria was attended by twelve train-bearers, all daughters of peers of the realm. |
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I fell in with a group of politically correct activists who I soon discovered treated me differently than their Canadian or American peers. |
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They really were expressions of contempt and rebellion toward what his peers regarded as holy. |
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What is benison for Chelsea inevitably turns out to be a curse on their peers. |
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Radebe said this was a serious concern for government and suggested that the rail company's performance be benchmarked against its global peers. |
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The result from one institution compared to a similar site allows managers to benchmark their performance with peers. |
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After a few minutes of listening to the mindless chatter of my peers, the bell rang, signaling the movement of the student body to first period. |
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They set about finding out what their peers were eating and the results don't make for good news. |
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He saw himself as a titan, a giant among his peers, towering above the rest of the pack. |
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Seniority amongst peers was often broken down into a matter of months, weeks, or even days. |
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After the team goes through the initial training, they are continually being trained and mentored by peers and lead staff. |
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My colleagues were my best friends, family, peers, confidantes and mentors. |
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The Australian-born athlete picked off her peers moving through the field with ease before bearing down on victory in the closing stages. |
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A structured programme for asthma education led by peers can lead to an improvement in self reported quality of life in adolescents with asthma. |
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He is so modest and self-effacing which also makes him popular with his peers. |
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Figures from Cambridge showed far fewer scored firsts and many more got third-class degrees than their peers. |
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It may be all-you-can eat, but this isn't your father's barbecue, fellow peers. |
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Few things massage a worker 's ego like being praised in front of his peers. |
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In just a few years, he evolved into a respected veteran player whose peers marvelled at his skill. |
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We will be awkwardly zagging while most of our peers happily zig in lockstep. |
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In a period of two weeks we measured the bandwidth of 54,845 peers downloading over a hundred newly injected files. |
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Like many tetras, the glowlight tetra is a schooling fish and prefers to swim in the company of at least seven of its peers. |
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I was worried that the audience would be my peers, bearded and balding, but in fact most of them were half my age. |
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They find that they are continuously judged and scorned by peers and adults when they wear their uniform. |
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In the macho world of grown-up schoolboy car freaks, no fate is worse than that of spinning a car in front of your peers. |
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Along with their technical skills, these researchers possess unusual business and media savvy, say their peers. |
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This is what I get for being related to someone that is overly obsessed with what her peers think and is the baby of the family. |
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His historical analogy was compelling, but that didn't save him from being denounced by right-thinking peers for his tastelessness. |
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This heinous act of the murder of a little girl and the wounding of her peers go beyond the boundaries of reason and sanity. |
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But when it comes to real luxury and real comfort the newer air mattresses of today have no peers. |
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A man took an LSD tab from someone at a party although he did not want it, so as not to let himself down before his peers. |
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Rainbows is a peers support programme to assist children or adults who are grieving a death or separation. |
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Those bishops who sit in the Lords do so, not as peers, but as lords of Parliament. |
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Saving a bet is neither dramatic, nor ego satisfying, nor likely to rouse the envy of your peers and adversaries, but it's spendable cash. |
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Whether any of his American peers will be roused to diss him back at this point seems rather unlikely though. |
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Bending at the waist, she peers beneath the pot, adjusting the burner's blue flame. |
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You'll also find committee member rosters that you can use to find peers who are subject-area experts on whom you may call for advice. |
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She was right, but I so dearly wanted to be a normal child that could romp with my peers and have fun. |
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This is a loss for literary study and writers, as challenges by peers create and motivate new poems. |
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A little older and a great deal larger than his peers, the 17-year-old Cypriot is built like a tank. |
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His ability to write scripts at once funny and sad has lifted him to heights occupied by very few of his peers. |
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Most adolescents attribute more negative than positive characteristics to risk-taking peers. |
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In other words they're being forced to beg for an education that their more privileged peers received by right. |
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That hasn't prevented him becoming the object of ridicule among his peers or the victim of inane questioning about his lifestyle. |
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Others are bullied, either because they are isolated from their peers or because a sick or disabled parent is an easy object of ridicule. |
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He is a kind of leper in the Japanese medical world, shunned by his peers and out of favor with his bosses. |
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I find myself staring at my father's back as he bends over and peers lengthily into the dangerously overstuffed interior of the fridge. |
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When I was young my father used to annoy me by saying that I would have to work much harder than my peers to succeed. |
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Judging by their sworn statements, Smith will always get the benefit of the doubt before a jury of his peers. |
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The annihilator of the hereditary peers has succumbed to the trade union barons. |
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Before he lectures the poor on their shortcomings, he might want to lecture his peers and the middle class on theirs. |
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Effortlessly refined, he peers at his audience as if we were animals in a zoo. |
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McCarthy's perceived influence among his peers is matched by his personal popularity. |
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Parochial schools insulate Amish youth from the contaminating influence of worldly peers. |
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However, when you play with campers, you must remember that you are not playing at the same level you would be with peers. |
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Both were very well liked by their peers and by students in other years and will be enormously missed. |
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It will also change its financial year from a November 15 year end to a calendar year in line with its peers. |
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At parties, it was the last thing I wanted to mention, since it was certain to bring yawns and glares of boredom from beer-holding peers. |
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Winning the quiz, aside from the kudos and respect from your peers, nets you eight pints of beer or lager. |
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Nate peers at the ground beyond his magnifying glass, the portal to this Alice-in-Wonderland world. |
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Every child should be brought up to know right from wrong and to respect their peers and elders. |
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Unlike many of his young Indian peers, Rogers' Kiowa grandparents believed in serving more traditional foods, including berries, deer, and fish. |
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It could also lead to isolation from peers or withdrawal from activities, which could increase the risk for depression. |
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Polly is recognized by her peers for her extensive knowledge and competency in the areas of hematology and oncology. |
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They can also question peers and learn how asking for and giving assistance to one another are keystones to academic success. |
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Do those parents try to rear their child to be as like them as possible, as indistinguishable as possible from its hearing peers? |
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Nations that start wars are considered aggressors, and are judged harshly by both history and their peers. |
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Kelly is a popular pupil who has been elected on to the school council by her peers. |
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Second, you are to keep a civil tongue in your head especially when addressing your peers. |
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The most common forms of observation based assessment are ratings by supervisors, peers, and patients. |
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She is more likely to be concerned with the affairs of her constituents rather than the egos of her peers. |
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Akin to an artist to his canvas, he plays with an adroit cunning that is matchless to his peers. |
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He has earned the admiration of his peers and players with the upstanding way he goes about his business. |
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At Court, and in Paris, wealth opened every door, and dukes and peers happily married the well-endowed daughters of great financiers. |
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It has been found that the smoking behaviours of best friends and peers have a weighty influence on adolescent smoking habits. |
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Get two of your best customers to help conduct peer 2 peer webinars to discuss best practices and issues with peers you invite. |
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Each year, no more than one-half of 1 percent of the society's members are elected fellows by their peers. |
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An only child, with parents who wanted what was best for her, she couldn't quell the feeling she was different from her peers. |
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A duly constituted body of faculty peers should determine tenure qualifications and requirements for each type of appointment. |
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He abhors the fast food culture and, as a student, can't understand why many of his peers are content to be couch potatoes. |
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But when they are compared with their U.S. peers, they seem both pretty conservative and pretty liberal as opposed to anomic, alienated, violent, and excluded. |
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To his peers, he's an all-star eccentric who is pitied or clucked over protectively as often as he is envied. |
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From Turin, as Ligety continued his rise to success in the alpine ski world, he and Miller would interact more as peers. |
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She says her friends and peers are angrier and more jumpy than the people she has met in Egypt. |
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Another high schooler tearfully confesses to being teased by her peers because they thought she was anorexic. |
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Dardagan and his peers are the first to admit that local media reports often are speculative in the extreme. |
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His peers remember him as a bright man who spoke softly and occasionally came across as a bit shy. |
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Not to mention Pistorius is a double amputee who is certainly more physically vulnerable than his able bodied peers. |
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From his purview, our visit and interest had brought excitement to him and his peers. |
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To this day, the combination of acceleration, dynamic performance and braking power offered by the current 911 Turbo continues to set the model apart from its peers. |
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Students learn from their peer teachers, enjoy the contact with peers from the class ahead of them and find the peer teachers accessible and easy to ask questions. |
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Sandback has never received the recognition accorded his minimalist peers. |
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Indeed, his large-scale study of the issue shows that high-achieving black kids are cited by fewer of their peers as friends. |
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I know several of my peers who have spent years working on film adaptations of their work, only for them either to come out badly, or else not come out at all. |
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The adolescent recipient of this kind of torture is forced into the position of trying to prove that she didn't do whatever it is her peers claim she did. |
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His peers allude to his quick thinking and kaleidoscopic mind. |
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But Alun Michael, the rural affairs minister, and the whips gradually persuaded backbench MPs to vote to offer the compromise to peers one more time. |
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During the group lesson, each student was graded by both their peers and me on their success in reaching their musical goal for that group lesson. |
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Martin peers through an ajar door which opens into the lobby. |
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There are officers out there who deserve our support, some of whom have witnessed these crimes by their peers and have turned them in to face prosecution. |
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The student who enters grad school intent on becoming a traditional humanist is the student who will be labelled as hopelessly unsophisticated by her peers and her professors. |
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Children who are able to delay gratification 15 times as long as their more impatient peers score 210 points higher on their sats. |
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Over the phone, she tells me how NYC Prep was sold to her and her similarly privileged peers as a docudrama. |
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So, yes, like a lot of angry young men, especially those who had been betrayed by both their government and their peers, said things which didn't sound great. |
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If you are accused of a crime you have the right to be judged by a jury of your peers. |
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In addition, fast loading pages are, in my opinion, considerably more likely to earn links, retweets and other forms of sharing than their slow-loading peers. |
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With a style that was influenced by jazz, soul, reggae, and dub, she rapped lyrics and rhymes that addressed the misogynist attitude of her male peers. |
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While these friendships tend to be less stable than those between non-drug-using and nonantisocial peers, real friendships between antisocial adolescents exist. |
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The group is musically the more adventurous, but their lyrics seem a little lightweight compared to the in-yer-face political consciousness of their peers. |
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At school, like my peers, I was indoctrinated in the mysteries of original and venal sin, virgin birth, the respective criteria for entry to limbo, purgatory, and heaven. |
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Many young men will risk death rather than be seen by their peers to flinch from a fight. |
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Recently I found myself wondering how much money I forfeited by working for less than male peers during my years at the Times. |
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I will think of you, briefly, as we meander along the creek and take photos of the ducks attempting to rugby tackle their peers in the pursuit of breadcrumbs. |
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All of them obviously had a different attitude to life than their peers. |
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Children of authoritarian parents lacked social skills with their peers. |
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One of the saving graces of the Lords, for me, is the fact that over one third of peers are cross benchers, freeing them to vote on conscience over party lines. |
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As he peers over his spectacles, Leveson is a big predatory cat that beguiles as he smiles. |
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He knows battle only through schoolbooks and soldiers' stories, and fears the possible ridicule of his peers, should he be deemed a coward by running from battle. |
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Children were supposed to spend their days in a schoolroom with their peers, and in specially designated play spaces such as private backyards and playrooms. |
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Sometimes the aftermath, which can lead to stigmatization and harassment from peers and leaders, is equally painful for victims. |
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He leads a group of guys who look more like scumbags than officials and are continually at odds with their peers, supervisors and, of course, the public. |
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His peers sat bruised and beaten by this masterless samurai. |
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Yet Page can justifiably point an accusing finger at his peers and predecessors. |
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I do a lot of self-study through journals and discussions with my peers. |
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Ahalt and his peers in the supercomputer community are hoping it stays that way. |
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Why does the U.S. lag behind our peers when it comes to educating our students? |
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Shockingly, it was not the mass gay-and-straight wedding that sent some of his peers into a tailspin that bothered Beck. |
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If our athletes feel disillusioned from the outset how on earth are they going to beat their peers when they step up to the blocks at the Olympics? |
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Yes, the team with the most-bloated payroll in hockey and, by comparison to its peers, in nearly any sport, woke up in midwinter and realized its approach wasn't working. |
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The denizens, be they peers or peasants, are weighed down by tradition and inertia, living out their lives according to exactly the same patterns as their ancestors. |
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You do have to give Fatboy credit for staying alive and even a tiny bit relevant while all of his big beat peers were falling off the face of the earth, though. |
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Not for her the kind of soporific bilge spouted by too many of her peers. |
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Palin is the rare female politician who is as much a megalomaniac as her male peers. |
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Arrested in 1477, and condemned for treason in a show trial before his peers, he was executed secretly in the Tower, by means never officially revealed. |
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His unassuming modesty would never allow him to think like this, of course, but I think a time and an icon among his peers, is owed a lot by the profession. |
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Unlike their minority peers, most mainstream U.S. students grow up in a homogeneous monolingual family and in a community where their mother tongue and culture are the norms. |
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A chisel-faced Van Gogh stares bleakly from a green ground, Francis Bacon is a massacre of distorted whorls and Sarah Lucas peers over a wilting cigarette. |
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The blithe spirit of the students perhaps best symbolises the fair that has evolved over the years, pitting the youngsters against their best peers. |
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Seated around me are my soldier peers, all division staff officers and noncommissioned officers. |
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Muck-up day has long been associated with flour bombs on the teachers' cars or chucking water bombs and shaving cream at unsuspecting junior peers. |
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A gunman in black leather and a ski mask peers out the window. |
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The multistage social learning model asserts that an important factor in escalation of adolescent substance use is having peers who encourage and engage in substance use. |
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Also The Hunting Bill was given an unopposed second reading and now goes to its committee stage later this month, where peers can seek to amend it. |
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This may be a sign that it has fared better than its peers, or equally it could just mean that the company is set in its ways and unresponsive to market conditions. |
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My peers, colleagues, and friends in the financial-political-punditocracy rushed to hit the panic button and assign blame. |
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It peers nearsightedly around the barn, searching for an opponent. |
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Unlike my peers who were mostly going to Britain or Spain, I chose Zimbabwe. |
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Among his peers, few probably know Madoff as well as Pasternak, the former CEO of Knight Securities. |
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Story meetings with my peers are usually a matter of tossing out many ideas until the right one hits. |
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My father used to take me along to the shop whenever he needed to buy a good or another sola topi, something that he and his peers liked to sport. |
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My father used to take me along to the shop whenever he needed to buy a good tie or another sola topi, something that he and his peers liked to sport. |
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Brownstein, calling from her home in Portland, talked about the peter pan syndrome many of her peers experience. |
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Publishing technical results in journal articles or presenting them in papers at professional meetings is critically important for validation by professional peers. |
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My parents have told me that the real force that turned them and their peers against the war was the unedited, raw footage they were seeing nightly on the television. |
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Whilst others try to veneer or pepper their works with Californian melodies, The Forest are purists and for that, much more original than their peers. |
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The moon peers through the bare window with a spartan offering of light. |
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Unlike some of her peers, she is not motivated by an ideological zeal to precipitate Israel's destruction. |
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Although he sees himself as analytical, his peers describe him as a nitpicker. |
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He asked these people to reveal the turning points, influences, epiphanies, peers, and mentors in their lives and careers. |
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Elizabeth became queen at the age of 25, and declared her intentions to her Council and other peers who had come to Hatfield to swear allegiance. |
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But they are the peers of the Queensland Parliament, and, having no lordly robes, must approach the Old Country model as closely as possible. |
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An orphan among its peers, consecutive interpreting appears to have a short life and little if any luster. |
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By critics and male peers commending these artists for simply being female, they discredit the opportunity for women to be recognised justly. |
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But does each subunit know how well its performance compares with its peers? |
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The Whig majority of the house of Lords was swamped by the creation of twelve Tory peers. |
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Often, when a Lord High Steward was necessary for trials of peers, the Lord Chancellor was appointed to the post. |
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Originally, the House of Lords held that it could try peers only upon impeachment. |
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The Criminal Justice Act 1948 abolished the use of special courts for trials of peers. |
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Widows of peers who later married commoners lost the privilege, but those who later married peers did not. |
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Burgundy, the most powerful of the princes and peers, naturally took power in his hands. |
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In fact, only one study has shown that non-starter softball players may not share the same psychological profiles as their peers who start. |
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Therefore, Henry VIII instructed Wolsey to watch Buckingham, his brother Henry Stafford, 1st Earl of Wiltshire, and three other peers. |
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Communication is also a key skill, being able to converse technically with peers and nontechnically to clients. |
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Teen peers, parents and coaches all have a role in educating young people about the risks associated with HGH use. |
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Formerly, the House of Lords constituted a court in certain trials, including trials of peers of the realm and impeachment cases. |
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The Lord High Steward selected, at his discretion, any twelve or more peers to be Lords Triers. |
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Moore's work in the comic book medium has been widely recognised by his peers and by critics. |
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Longitude was beyond Pytheas and his peers, but it was not of as great a consequence, because ships seldom strayed out of sight of land. |
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Shall they draw off to their privileged quarters, and consort only with their peers? |
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The House of Lords includes a large number of peers independent from political parties. |
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Frequently described as the best graphic novel writer in history, he has been widely recognised by his peers and by critics. |
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Yet, despite his triumphs, he never attracted the highest respect from the critics or his peers. |
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If in reality Trajan was an autocrat, his deferential behavior towards his peers qualified him to be viewed as a virtuous monarch. |
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However, until 1999, all hereditary peers were entitled to sit and vote in the House of Lords. |
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Since then, only 92 of them have this entitlement, of whom 90 are elected by the hereditary peers as a whole to represent the peerage. |
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One innovation within this analysis is including the labor force decisions of mothers of the girls' peers as a variable. |
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This large body contained lawyers, peers, and members of the Church, many of whom lived far from London. |
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The launch of POSIT in Singapore generates new opportunities for buyside traders to source block liquidity among their peers. |
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Despite the criminal charges against him, he seems to have remained in good standing with his peers. |
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Children born to poverty stricken families may have a harder time moving upward socially than their peers born to privilege. |
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He was, however, considered a poor trial judge, being reversed on appeal more frequently than any of his peers. |
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Traditional rank amongst European royalty, peers, and nobility is rooted in Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages. |
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Instead, the new Act gave all Irish peers the right to stand for election to the House of Commons, and to vote at parliamentary elections. |
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Blue ribbon juries cannot be used in real trials, which require constitutional safeguards to produce a jury of one's peers. |
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The lay judges do not hold any legal qualification, and represent the peers of the person on trial, as members of the general public. |
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Formerly, it was customary to appoint commoners to the office of Lord Keeper, and peers to the office of Lord Chancellor. |
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Trials of peers in the House of Lords were abolished in 1948, and impeachment is obsolete, so this is unlikely to occur again. |
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Byers-Heinlein and Poulin-Dubois initially thought that bilingual children would prove more open-minded than their unilingual peers. |
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The best known example is the British House of Lords, which includes a number of hereditary peers. |
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Membership of the Lords is now limited to life peers and a number of elected hereditary peers. |
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If the bishops were only Lords of Parliament, and not peers, their right to petition would be vitiated while Parliament was dissolved. |
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In the United Kingdom, life peers are appointed members of the peerage whose titles cannot be inherited, in contrast to hereditary peers. |
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This gradually began to diminish the numerical dominance of hereditary peers. |
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Life peers created under the Life Peerages Act do not, unless they also hold ministerial positions, receive salaries. |
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Despite their failure to be tried as temporal peers in the House of Lords, it remained unclear whether the Lords Spiritual were indeed peers. |
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An amendment that would have allowed Irish peers to sit in the House as well was defeated by ninety votes to eight. |
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The Prime Minister may determine the number of peers the Commission may propose, and also may amend the recommendations. |
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High judicial officers have sometimes been created life peers upon taking office. |
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For one, even as her peers want to turn the unsemantic event of death into a meaningful story, she draws them into death. |
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None of the peers of the first creation who were members of the Royal Family was granted a life peerage, as they had all declined. |
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A window in the floor peers down on a semi-nude performer lying on a bed. |
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For instance, baronets and baronetesses may pass on their titles, but they are not peers. |
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It is established precedent that the Sovereign may not deny writs of summons to qualified peers. |
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The bill did receive Royal Assent, and from 1999, hereditary peers have not had the automatic right to sit in Parliament. |
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Asquith, asked King Edward VII to create sufficient new Liberal peers to pass the Bill if the Lords rejected it. |
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The most recent policies outlining the creation of new peerages, the Royal Warrant of 2004, explicitly apply to both hereditary and life peers. |
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Hereditary peers may no longer pass on a seat in the House of Lords to their heir automatically. |
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In 1999, the House of Lords Act abolished the automatic right of hereditary peers to sit in the House of Lords. |
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Newly created peers in the Peerage of Great Britain were given the automatic right to sit in the Lords. |
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Elections were held in October and November 1999 to choose those initial 90 peers, with all hereditary peers eligible to vote. |
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Yet at all wage scales and management levels, women earn less than their male peers. |
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The Government reserves a number of political and ceremonial positions for hereditary peers. |
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As a result, there are many hereditary peers who have taken up careers which do not fit traditional conceptions of aristocracy. |
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Your gothness is then measured by your peers with a 'gothier-than-thou' approach, facing ridicule if you are falling short. |
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From July it became increasingly clear that the Tory peers would reject the budget, partly in the hope of forcing an election. |
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Women were immediately eligible and four were among the first life peers appointed. |
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Traditionally, peers would wear their parliamentary robes during the hearings. |
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His successor, George V, was asked if he would be prepared to create sufficient peers, which he would only do if the matter arose. |
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This led Asquith to declare the King's intention to overcome the majority in the House of Lords by creating sufficient new peers. |
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The Life Peerages Act 1958 established the modern standards for the creation of life peers by the monarch of the United Kingdom. |
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The Act made it possible for life peers of both sexes to be members of the Lords. |
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The Act allowed for the creation of female peers entitled to sit in the House of Lords. |
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Counterintuitively, American Airlines actually has more routes overlapping with Spirit than with either of its big legacy carrier peers. |
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Lord Randall put forward the idea of phasing out the hereditary peers by disqualifying their heirs. |
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The largest group of Lords Temporal, and indeed of the whole House, are life peers. |
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In 1963, the Peerage Act was passed, allowing all Scottish peers to sit in the House, not just 16 of them. |
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The Government, however, responded that the Articles did envisage a change in the election of representative peers. |
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Previously, hereditary peers had been constitutionally disqualified from being electors to, or members of, the House of Commons. |
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The Act prevents even hereditary peers who are the first to hold their titles from sitting automatically in the House of Lords. |
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Before the granting of Royal Assent, the Lords had adopted a Standing Order making provision for the election of peers. |
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Voting is by preferential voting, with peers ranking the candidates in order of preference. |
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The remainder were to continue to be appointed, and all hereditary peers were to be removed. |
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Evans had influential backers and political allies, but lacked social graces and was disliked by many of his peers. |
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Some of these might be job stress, physicality, risks, degree of supervision and ability to work with peers or family members. |
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In 1999, the Labour government brought forward the House of Lords Act removing the right of several hundred hereditary peers to sit in the House. |
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Those chosen by Scotland sat for a single term, and following each dissolution new Scottish peers were elected. |
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Elections for Scottish peers ended in 1963, when all Scottish peers obtained the right to sit in the House of Lords. |
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Under the 1999 House of Lords Act, a new form of representative peer was introduced to allow some hereditary peers to stay in the House of Lords. |
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The House of Lords was previously a largely hereditary aristocratic chamber, although including life peers, and Lords Spiritual. |
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Upon the summons of a new Parliament, the Sovereign would issue a proclamation summoning Scottish peers to the Palace of Holyroodhouse. |
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The position and rights of Scottish peers in relation to the House of Lords remained unclear during most of the eighteenth century. |
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They reasoned that the Act of Union 1707 had established the number of Scots peers in the House of Lords at no more and no less than sixteen. |
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If Parliament was not in session, then peers could be tried in a separate court, known as the Lord High Steward's Court. |
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He displayed a sense of fun and quick wittedness strikingly at odds with his gangsta peers. |
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The final trial of a peer in the House of Lords was in 1935, and in 1948, the use of special courts for trials of peers was abolished. |
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Sometimes a neighborhood cat, a calico, wanders by and peers in. |
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Similarly, the House of Lords was once the court that tried peers charged with high treason or felony. |
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She made her remarks days before a new batch of peers were due to be appointed. |
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He had created 117 new peers since becoming prime minister in May 2010, a faster rate of elevation than any PM in British history. |
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Tracy Maitland peers into six computer screens, each flashing real-time stock market updates from around the world. |
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Black gays, in turn, are accusing their white gay peers of viscous racism. |
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Eventually the bill passed the House of Lords after the King threatened to fill that House with newly created Whig peers if it were not. |
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The precocious student had really overpassed her peers, and was reading books written for children several years older. |
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As an interim measure, appointment of new peers will reflect shares of the vote secured by the political parties in the last general election. |
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As a part of a compromise, however, it agreed to permit 92 hereditary peers to remain until the reforms were complete. |
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Apparently, it was felt that too many people were being honoured and that it should go to unsung heroes, rather than peers of the realm. |
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The Labour Government introduced legislation to expel all hereditary peers from the Upper House as a first step in Lords reform. |
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In 2007, twenty peers in the House of Lords owed their peerages to a direct connection with Northern Ireland, usually through a political party. |
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However, they had established themselves as favourites in the music press, a cut above the majority of their Britpop peers. |
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Disraeli took no public part in the electioneering, it being deemed improper for peers to make speeches to influence Commons elections. |
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