The 22-year-old company's basic principle is to develop new, simple products at reasonable prices by making the best use of the materials. |
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Actually, the same principle used to solve domestic quarrels can be applied to achieve world peace. |
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This kind of racialist principle was found to be philosophically invalid and extremely socially damaging 60 years ago. |
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Apply this principle across the board to other areas of life and you lose more than you gain. |
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A standard central vacuum canister works on the same principle as a conventional cleaner. |
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West Wiltshire District Council has agreed in principle to free up some land for the proposed redevelopment of the waterside area of Trowbridge. |
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It sounds a very dubious principle and inconsistent with the accusatorial trial. |
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His tolerance to other religions perhaps came from his many queens including his principle wife who was a Hindu. |
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The correctness of the principle on which we have proceeded is obvious; we have not taken the whole subtrahend from the minuend at once. |
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On the principle of waste not, want not, I've pasted some material below that was originally intended for New York Press. |
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In principle this meant developing countries should have the right to have access to cheap generic drugs. |
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Innovation, an unofficial principle of logistics, was applied successfully by Bataan quartermasters. |
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The principle of the cyclotron fails as particles accelerate close to the speed of light. |
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On the other hand, waking a dying person to inform them of their imminent demise goes against the principle of beneficence. |
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He described synchronicity as an acausal principle that links events having a similar meaning by their coincidence in time. |
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The other principle the artist followed was the artistic value of the works. |
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However, the principle of the main theme recurring in the same key is usually adhered to. |
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It is a fundamental principle of recovery in tort that the injured party be compensated for the full amount of his or her loss, but no more. |
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On the principle that a cat may look at a king, the picture may be painted from the view-point of the humblest observer. |
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You need to have strong principle to be able to withstand the pressures and temptations. |
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It reconfirms the principle that indefinite detention is contrary to the U.S. Constitution and international law. |
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The principle of divine kingship was maintained even when the king was replaced by rulers drawn from outside the family of the enthroned king. |
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These pages cover general themes, such as the strength of the king in the endgame, not hurrying, and the principle of two weaknesses. |
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But the principle is absurd and irrational as far as the international community is concerned. |
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On the other hand, the North ought to follow suit, respecting the principle of reciprocity. |
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Thus the first fundamental principle of the gift economy is a return or reciprocity. |
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Ivanov said that the principle of reciprocity, a key principle in diplomacy, should be applied to the issue. |
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This will also guarantee the principle of reciprocity when relaxed travel terms are negotiated with other countries. |
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To put the matter abruptly, the advertising industry is a crude attempt to extend the principle of automation to every aspect of society. |
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The founding principle of human culture in general is exchange, transforming hostility into reciprocity. |
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The military base is the principle strategic airhead for the militia, supporting its small fleet of helicopters and warplanes. |
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It is a general principle of abdominal distension that one must treat the spleen. |
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He is the alpha and the omega, the principle and the end, the foundation stone and the keystone, the plenitude and the plenifier. |
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That principle is simply not reconcilable with the principles of our republic. |
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Geology, geography, and agronomics all study the earth, but their construction, their principle of scientific knowledge differs. |
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We can hardly take pride in a successful war against Germany motivated less by principle than realpolitik. |
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The principle of simulation wins out over the reality principle just as over the principle of pleasure. |
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But to educated people, embracing the reality principle means, above all, following the spirit of science. |
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On many levels there is a reality principle at work that each of us must face. |
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Political realism in essence reduces to the political-ethical principle that might is right. |
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Ethics, one might say, enshrines the principle that subjectivity is not reducible to objective analysis. |
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Chartres new luminosity and stained-glass windows illustrate a second principle of medieval aesthetics. |
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I was just in Japan, where I talked about kaizen, the Japanese principle of continuous improvement. |
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This is an absolute abrogation of the principle of rangatiratanga inherent in the deed of settlement. |
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It was then proved to him that even his own principle did not justly apply here. |
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After all, the whole principle was to look after members and not just shareholders. |
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Those people who are against the death penalty as a matter of principle are not eligible for jury service. |
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I was pleased that the bill enunciates the principle that all relevant evidence is admissible unless there is a policy reason to exclude it. |
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The principle of an oral hearing being adjudicated by a EPA staff member has been adjudicated by the Supreme Court. |
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It's a very different voice and they are putting it over in a very different way but the principle remains the same. |
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Clearly, the principle of freedom doesn't weigh heavily in his decision making. |
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The principle aim is to promote outdoor activities and social camaraderie for retired people. |
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So a textualist could, in principle and within limits, allow both a politically liberal and a politically conservative reading of the Constitution's text. |
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If the noble experiment of American democracy is to mean anything, it is fidelity to the principle of freedom. |
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In reference to women, however, and particularly in this scene, the moon also symbolises womanly beauty and is associated with the female principle yin. |
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The principle stress-bearing elements of the lung, which account for its tendency to recoil, are elastin and collagen fiber networks and surface tension. |
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Dutifully obeying the modern principle of agglomeration, it would be called an iPlod. |
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Representation is, as it were, the reality principle of the image. |
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His notion of synchronicity is that there is an acausal principle that links events having a similar meaning by their coincidence in time rather than sequentially. |
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In making these decisions we should be governed by the principle of equity. |
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However therapeutic, poetry does not suffer the reality principle gladly. |
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But in principle you could deprive humans of all kind of things to see what happened. |
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Following the principle that what was not assumed cannot be redeemed, Lewis insists that God himself was involved in the kenosis, including the death and burial of Jesus. |
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The decision to replace someone is often taken on the basis of acquaintanceship, on the principle of personal devotion or, more abhorrently, for money. |
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Mirrors, spherical or otherwise, operate on the principle that the angle of reflection of a ray of light equals the angle at which it strikes the mirror's surface. |
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The more acrimonious and bitter an argument or election contest appears to be, the less likely it is that anything of principle will really be at stake. |
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It stands for the proposition that the biological basis of procreation should also be the sole organizing principle of society. |
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A key principle of Wikipedia was that articles should have a neutral point of view. |
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If you had a car and it made a terrible rattle you'd have it checked out immediately instead of waiting to for it to go kaput, the same principle applies to marriage. |
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The conviction that the strong are bound to prey on the weak, as dictated by the law of the jungle, is incompatible with the principle of competition. |
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The principle of jet propulsion involves one of Newton's Laws of Motion. |
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The principle that outsiders should be welcomed and provided for was a cross-cultural theme in ancient cultures. |
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From the strong principle of inheritance, any selected variety will tend to propagate its new and modified form. |
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The play uses the principle of discordia concors in several of its key scenes. |
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The principle still sounds good, but our astronomical knowledge is limited, and we haven't yet discovered any such brethren solar systems. |
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The daily press is the evil principle of the modern world, and time will only serve to disclose this fact with greater and greater clearness. |
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The Government has come a gutser there, and it will come a gutser in the health area when it tries to put the user-pays principle in operation. |
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Or he can walk cross-handed following the principle of the cross-legged walk. In this variation, he can move forward, backward, or sideways. |
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In the deramp process, the principle of continuous radar with a linearly frequency-modulated wave is applied to a pulsed radar. |
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We note Bateson's dormitive principle at work in which behaviors are described as traits such as LD, which then are used to explain the behavior. |
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The principle was recognized by some of the early Greek philosophers who embodied it in their systems. |
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The field equations can be obtained from a thermodynamic variational principle which extremises the total heat density of all null surfaces. |
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In hunting or agrarian societies dependent upon nature, femaleness was honored as an immanent principle of fertility. |
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The doctrine of precedent which requires similar cases to be adjudicated in a like manner, falls under the principle of stare decisis. |
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Further, such use would be highly likely to result in a violation of the principle of neutrality. |
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The same principle applied to supplying towns on the route of the aqueduct. |
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In common law systems, a single decided case is binding common law, under the principle of stare decisis. |
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This brought in a distinctly common law principle into an essentially civil law jurisdiction. |
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The only vestige of the principle is the process of resignation from the House of Commons. |
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Given how strongly Frankish culture held to its principle of inheritance, few would support him if he attempted to overthrow the king. |
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But there was a core principle missing in the law passed by the Assembly before Christmas. |
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Still others may lack any formal leaders, either in principle or by local necessity. |
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Edward had nevertheless won a significant victory, in clearly establishing the principle that all liberties essentially emanated from the crown. |
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In 1316, a principle was established denying women succession to the French throne. |
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It's the principle of the pneumatic instantaneous shutter for a camera lens. |
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Richard's claim to the throne was based on the principle that the son of an elder brother had priority in the succession over his uncles. |
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Repeatedly, throughout Anglican history, this principle has reasserted itself in movements of social justice. |
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There are a large number of different types of jet engines, all of which achieve forward thrust from the principle of jet propulsion. |
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This principle should be enshrined by a resolution of the House of Commons. |
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This is what I see in Penrose's quest for a new basic principle of physics that will account for consciousness. |
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This dirt separation principle was well known and often used in central vacuum systems. |
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The flaw in Dalton's theory was corrected in principle in 1811 by Amedeo Avogadro. |
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It is also the fundamental principle behind the spring scale, the manometer, and the balance wheel of the mechanical clock. |
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The principle of a clip lockingly engaging under the metal to which it is affixed had been in general use in the automobile industry. |
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The principle of a lookback option is to give the investor the maximum payoff based on perfect hindsight. |
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The theory of supply and demand is an organizing principle for explaining how prices coordinate the amounts produced and consumed. |
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This inequality has also been criticized as conflicting with the principle of equal opportunities. |
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Sikh teaching emphasizes the principle of equality of all humans and rejects discrimination on the basis of caste, creed, and gender. |
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He preached the principle of equality for women by prohibiting purdah and sati. |
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The core principle of Druidry is respect and veneration of nature, and as such it often involves participation in the environmental movement. |
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As they are considered a type of explosive, offenders can in principle be tried before military courts, though this is unusual in practice. |
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Physicalism restricts meaningful statements to physical bodies or processes that are verifiable or in principle verifiable. |
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He not only proposed many legal and social reforms, but also expounded an underlying moral principle on which they should be based. |
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Bentham writes about this principle as it manifests itself within the legislation of a society. |
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Chesterton's fence is the principle that reforms should not be made until the reasoning behind the existing state of affairs is understood. |
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He also accepted the principle of legislative intervention for the purpose of animal welfare. |
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Premier League clubs agreed in principle in December 2012, to radical new cost controls. |
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On 30 October 2015, Cellino agreed a deal in principle with Leeds Fans Utd to sell a majority stake in the club. |
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What we need as a metaphysic and what the logical realists are at least glimpsing, is the principle of contradiction. |
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It is a basic principle underlying the dominant Westphalian model of state foundation. |
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This is the origin of the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty and is usually seen as the fundamental principle of the British constitution. |
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The Assembly has established the principle that the UN should not be unduly dependent on any one member to finance its operations. |
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A key principle of the British Constitution is that the government is responsible to Parliament. |
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The nationalist does not go on the principle of simply ganging up with the strongest side. |
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Exceptions to the MFN principle also allow for preferential treatment of developing countries, regional free trade areas and customs unions. |
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These pillars are the principle of Parliamentary sovereignty and the rule of law. |
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The rule of law was AV Dicey's second core principle of the UK constitution. |
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It enshrines in statute the impartiality and integrity of the UK Civil Service and the principle of open and fair recruitment. |
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In early 1932 it was agreed to suspend the principle of collective responsibility to allow the Liberals to oppose the introduction of tariffs. |
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There seem no reason why the principle of trusteeship in private affairs should be not be extended to the international field. |
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This gave the explosion time to build up momentum, similar in principle to a hammer hitting a nail, enabling less plutonium to be used. |
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James Joule worked on thermodynamics and is often credited with the discovery of the principle of conservation of energy. |
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Naturalist Charles Darwin, authored On the Origin of Species and discovered the principle of evolution by natural selection. |
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Article 7 incorporates the legal principle nullum crimen, nulla poena sine lege into the convention. |
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It usually sets out restrictions on behavior, and will be far more compliance or rules focused than value or principle focused. |
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Under the principle of collective responsibility, all ministers are obliged to support in the Assembly any measures approved by Cabinet. |
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The principle was applied to other countries as they became Commonwealth realms, having sovereign status granted directly. |
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In the Westminster political system, the principle of separation of powers is not as entrenched. |
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This accords with the principle of continuity of the legal system enshrined in Article 8 of the Basic Law. |
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This principle translates into the culture, involving all citizens in the country's defence. |
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We protest against the principle that the world of pure comedy is one into which no moral enters. |
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This principle of preservation, I have called, for the sake of brevity, Natural Selection. |
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In November 2011 IAG announced an agreement in principle to purchase British Midland International from Lufthansa. |
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In Chapter Four of Utilitarianism, Mill considers what proof can be given for the principle of utility. |
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For Scotus, the axiom stating that only the individual exists is a dominating principle of the understanding of reality. |
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Popper's principle of falsifiability runs into prima facie difficulties when the epistemological status of mathematics is considered. |
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Taxes on the same principle include hearth tax, brick tax, and wallpaper tax. |
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The David Keswick Athletic Centre is the principle facility in Dumfries for athletics. |
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Mary noted, however, that he had written against the principle of female rule itself. |
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In leaving the established Church, however, they did not reject the principle of establishment. |
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Another principle that seems to have been pretty widespread in early Celtic laws is that of the importance of social rank. |
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This principle is incorporated into the Constitution of the Republic of Serbia and further elaborated in its Criminal Procedure Act. |
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Labour wanted the principle established that no one was exempt, but it did not demand that conscription actually take place in Ireland. |
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The principle of original horizontality states that the deposition of sediments occurs as essentially horizontal beds. |
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The principle of faunal succession is based on the appearance of fossils in sedimentary rocks. |
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Because deeper rock is often older, as noted by the principle of superposition, this can result in older rocks moving on top of younger ones. |
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The system consists of a pyramid of leagues, bound together by the principle of promotion and relegation. |
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His principle duties appear to have been the custody of a heap of coal and a boiler house. |
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This constant ratio is often referred to as Forchhammer's principle or the principle of constant proportions. |
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The principle of supply and demand holds that as hydrocarbon supplies diminish, prices will rise. |
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The call for application of the subsidiarity principle to the CFP lies within the argument for its decentralisation. |
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In its origin, therefore, the agnatic principle was limited to the succession to the crown of France. |
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The eventual recognition of Henry IV, the first of the Bourbons kings, further solidified the agnatic principle in France. |
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The new forts abandoned the principle of the bastion, which had also been made obsolete by advances in arms. |
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In the law of treaties, the most important manifestation of the principle of good faith is undoubtedly the rule of pacta sunt servanda. |
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That new rock layers are above older rock layers is stated in the principle of superposition. |
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By analogy with the perceived decline of Latin, they applied the principle of ad fontes, or back to the sources, across broad areas of learning. |
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In linguistics, idioms are usually presumed to be figures of speech contradicting the principle of compositionality. |
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This principle states that the meaning of a whole should be constructed from the meanings of the parts that make up the whole. |
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The operating principle involves inducing a vibration of the tube through which the fluid passes. |
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Application of the molecular clock principle revolutionized the study of molecular evolution. |
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This principle became one of Darwin's chief pieces of evidence that biological evolution was real. |
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Jaensch, Havelock Ellis and Weir Mitchell began their experiments with mescalin, the active principle of peyotl. |
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Sociocultural anthropology draws together the principle axes of cultural anthropology and social anthropology. |
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Any operation of ropes should obey the principle of safe working load, which is usually much less than its ultimate strength. |
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The general principle is that releasing fish allows them to survive, thus avoiding unintended depletion of the population. |
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Two consuls were elected each year, serving together, each with veto power over the other's actions, a normal principle for magistracies. |
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A certain period elapses, and some unseen mysterious principle again sets in motion the magic pinions and the wizard wheels. |
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Finally, the principle survived in some form or other for centuries after the demise of the last Germanic monarchies. |
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The Germanic law system is in principle based on compensation rather than revenge. |
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In 1565, the application of this principle in the Pacific Ocean led the Spanish discovering the Manila Galleon trade route. |
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This judgement also laid down the principle that slavery contracted in other jurisdictions could not be enforced in England. |
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The general principle was clear, Catalan influence north of the Pyrenees, beyond the Roussillon, Vallespir, Conflent and Capcir, was to cease. |
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Venice was satisfied with reaffirming the principle that no citizen was superior to the normal processes of law. |
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In principle junk sails have much in common with the most aerodynamically efficient sails used today in windsurfers or catamarans. |
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There is no other physical principle determining longitude directly but with time. |
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It is obvious that with it the principle of induction would lose its predictional value. |
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Tlatocayotl, or the principle of rulership, established that this divine right was inherited by descent. |
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Donkeys and guard llamas have been used since the 1980s in sheep operations, using the same basic principle as livestock guardian dogs. |
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Alongside the principle of distinguishability seems to operate a principle of economy. |
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This trait of phrasal verbs is also what makes them interesting for linguists, since they appear to defy the principle of compositionality. |
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Most Germanic languages do not normally use the V2 principle in embedded clauses, except in a certain semantic type of clause with certain verbs. |
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The V2 principle allows any major constituent to occupy the first position as long as the second position is occupied by the finite verb. |
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In this regard, it is important to understand that the V2 principle focuses on the finite verb only. |
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On this account, the V2 principle is violated if the finite verb has more than one predependent or no predependent at all. |
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The V2 principle requires that this root have a single predependent, which it does in each of the four sentences. |
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In past decades it has been shown that sound change does not necessarily affect all the words that in principle it could. |
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Chapter 21 describes the acceptable parameters of Reformed worship as governed by the regulative principle of worship. |
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In the encyclical Mediator Dei, Pope Pius XII elucidates this principle and address errors that can arise from a misunderstanding of it. |
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Rather he is adopting the understandable but morally dubious principle that the end justifies the means. |
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State almost any general principle and you find one or more leading cases which contradict it. |
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The principle by which judges are bound to precedents is known as stare decisis. |
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Recovery of damages is subject to the legal principle that damages must be proximately caused by the wrongful conduct of the defendant. |
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This principle governs the recovery of all compensatory damages, whether the underlying claim is based on contract, tort, or both. |
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The principle that sustains compulsory vaccination is broad enough to cover cutting the Fallopian tubes. |
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Locke advanced the principle of consent of the governed in his Two Treatises of Government. |
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As a general principle freedom of expression may not limit the right to privacy, as well as the honor and reputation of others. |
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The original harm principle was never equipped determine the relative importance of harms. |
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It is a principle of corporate law that the directors of a company have the right to manage. |
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So strictly is this principle adhered to that no question is allowed to be raised as to the fairness or unfairness of the contract entered into. |
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It is also largely accepted in most jurisdictions that this principle should be capable of being abrogated in the company's constitution. |
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Accordingly, a number of exceptions have developed in law in relation to the general principle of majority rule. |
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The principle prevailed later that an offence already punished by a secular judge was no longer punishable by the ecclesiastical judge. |
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The principle said to underlie these actions was eventually recognized as unjust enrichment. |
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In five of the Canadian provinces, English law was received automatically, under the principle of a settled colony inheriting English law. |
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The principle of hot pursuit of a presumed felon and arrest by the law officers of one state in another state are often permitted by a state. |
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The adversarial principle that a person could not be tried until formally accused continued to apply for most criminal cases. |
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This principle was relied on in MacPherson, in which a car wheel collapsed, injuring MacPherson. |
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The Dutch, for their part, considered it their right to trade with anyone anywhere, defending the principle of the mare liberum. |
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Its genesis is related to the principle of division of powers of the State. |
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The principle may play a role in any debate over the need for environmental regulation. |
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When a principle becomes customary law is not clear cut and many arguments are put forward by states not wishing to be bound. |
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The US Consul General at Jerusalem told the State Department that the Mufti had refused the principle of partition and declined to consider it. |
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The principle of direct effect would have had little impact if Union law did not supersede national law. |
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This principle has been used in countries such as Egypt, Pakistan and others to bring blasphemy charges against apostates. |
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Boundary commissions were set up by subsequent Acts of Parliament to maintain this principle as population movements continued. |
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The governing principle of the Colonial Empire should be the principle of partnership between the various elements composing it. |
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The Eastern Orthodox Church views all bishops as sacramentally equal, and in principle holding equal authority, each over his own see. |
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Most constitutional monarchies employ a system that includes the principle of responsible government. |
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The rebus principle supplemented the logographic principle and allowed full writing systems to develop. |
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The rebus principle appears in both the Egyptian hieroglyphic and in the Chinese writing systems. |
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The key principle was the removal of excess carbon and other impurities from pig iron by oxidation with air blown through the molten iron. |
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The principle of his rolling spinning process was perfected by John Kay and Thomas Highs and promoted by Richard Arkwright. |
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A series of inventors incrementally improved all aspects of the three principle processes and the ancillary processes. |
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Numerous inventors began to try to implement the principle Blanc had described. |
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The principle of interchangeable parts flourished and developed throughout the 19th century, and led to mass production in many industries. |
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The important principle is that no direct current of air can impinge on the gauze. |
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In principle such ideas could be reconciled with the demands of the reflators, the regulators and the rest. |
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Syndicalism has been a common union organizing principle in a number of European countries, including France, Spain, and Italy. |
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A fundamental principle of thermodynamics is that the higher the temperature of the steam entering an engine, the higher the efficiency. |
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Confucius advocated loyalty to principle rather than to individual acumen, in which reform was to be achieved by persuasion rather than violence. |
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All relationships should be beneficial, but each has its own principle or inner logic. |
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Geared sugar rolling mills first appeared in Mughal India, using the principle of rollers as well as worm gearing, by the 17th century. |
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The principle of any such device should be to pull on the vessel by a rope of water passing in at the bow and out at the stern. |
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The TANSTAAFL principle applies to all techniques of statecraft, not just the economic ones. |
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To awaken the conscious self to the principle of the whole or Tao one needs to forget oneself, so that in knowing one unknows. |
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But what does it mean to question the question of the principle of reason? Here, it seems to me, we may risk introducing the concept of unpower. |
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And equally unsolid is the argument that from a principle of gradation in races would reduce a principle of progress in races. |
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That sin or guilt pertains exclusively to voluntary action is the true principle of orthodoxy. |
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In the following paragraphs, the general principle of votator margarine processing is described. |
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The ritual and tradition are of course rather absurd, but the principle is good and the ethics are identical with Xtian ethics. |
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The principle of backdating taxation over an extended period is in itself unfair. |
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She acted out of principle and if there were more politicians like her we would see more public trust in politicians. |
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Nowhere is the dissonance between principle and practice more pronounced than among those in the breach, particularly African-Americans. |
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In the interview, the senator was quoted as saying he did not believe in having an age of consent but a principle of consent. |
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The principle of succession laid down by Ibn Saud was one of agnatic seniority, with added condition of fitness to rule. |
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Anaglyphs are based on the principle that if you view an image through a certain colour filter, that filter's colour will disappear in the image. |
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Rydberg atom, having a high principle quantum number, engages in strong interactions because of its large dipole matrix element. |
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However, the much feared and loathed anthropic principle can provide an escape from the discomfort. |
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Finally, he classifies both sociobiology and work relating to the anthropic principle in cosmology as borderline examples of pseudoscience. |
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The anthropic principle presents a great opportunity for discussion of areas of agreement. |
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A fundamental principle is that the jobholder must be enrolled and will then be able to opt out. |
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The underlying principle of the Raman effect can be explained through quantum mechanics. |
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The expediency of principle AFTER all the hype, all the publicity, all the fanfares, all the razzamatazz, it is finally here. |
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So far, marching cubes enjoys a wide application due to its relatively simple principle and strong realizability. |
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Anyone who does not acknowledge this basic principle might make a good church leader but not a practitioner of realpolitik. |
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Nature is never something simply seen or experienced but is a principle of recognizability that frames and materializes what can count as nature. |
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What better time for the Democrats to reembrace the principle of progressive taxation than when the government so desperately needs the money? |
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The first principle of restorationism is that nature and humanity are fundamentally united rather than separate. |
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Existing binding precedent from past cases are applied in principle to new situations by analogy. |
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In principle the High Court is bound by its own previous decisions, but there are conflicting authorities as to what extent. |
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The site is dominated by its water features, principle among which is the Goodwin Fountain. |
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To speak of air having weight was a contradiction of the principle that air was naturally levitative and upward-tending. |
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As an advocate that simplicity and theory be part of the scientific method, Lord Rayleigh argued for the principle of similitude. |
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The Babbage principle is an inherent assumption in Frederick Winslow Taylor's scientific management. |
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It is argued that the precautionary principle provides an important mechanism for bridging the gap between public and private sectors in their approach to financial harm. |
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The Supreme Court of California's explanation of this principle is that. |
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Binding precedent relies on the legal principle of stare decisis. |
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This nature itself is not to be deduced from the principle of utility. |
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Once the rebus principle is accepted by a language in its written form, it is a natural step for such symbols to come to represent the sounds of syllables. |
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Finally, relying on the principle of a partial flow, the PM METALIT avoids plugging or dramatic increases in backpressure which many solutions exhibit. |
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Some countries apply the principle of reciprocity in their visa policy. |
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The principle of disease notification was unanimously adopted. |
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In voting on the Bolkestein directive in 2006, the Parliament voted by a large majority for over 400 amendments that changed the fundamental principle of the law. |
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While Rough was preaching in the parish church on the Protestant principle of the popular election of a pastor, he proposed Knox to the congregation for that office. |
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Last, but not least, we have the principle of the balanced budget. |
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A facility on this principle was built on the Montreal River at Ragged Shutes near Cobalt, Ontario in 1910 and supplied 5,000 horsepower to nearby mines. |
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The principle distinction between earldom and mormaer is that earldoms were granted as fiefs of the King, while mormaers were virtually independent. |
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The face milling process can in principle produce very flat surfaces. |
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I have termed that third principle the reformation of form, a reduplicative narrative posture which assumes and revises Du Bois's double consciousness. |
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His more immediate political legacy was that he replaced Diocletian's tetrarchy with the principle of dynastic succession by leaving the empire to his sons. |
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The principle is described as difficult to abide by consistently, due to violence not being available as a tool to aid a person who is being harmed or killed. |
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The principle of intrusive relationships concerns crosscutting intrusions. |
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The principle of superposition states that a sedimentary rock layer in a tectonically undisturbed sequence is younger than the one beneath it and older than the one above it. |
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The party recommended that Welsh clubs accept the principle of coaching. |
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Hornblower's compound engine principle contributed significantly to the increases in steam engine efficiency, and it was the foundation of the expansion engine. |
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A similar principle is used to create electric energy in power plants. |
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This treaty lays down the principle that the two countries must gear their language policy to each other, among other things, for a common system of spelling. |
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However, some critics argue that applying the subsidiarity principle to the CFP may not improve the policy's effectiveness, as it may lead to what de Vivero et al. |
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His jargon of slang was a continuous joy and surprise to them. His gestures, his strange poses, his frank ribaldry of tongue and principle fascinated them. |
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