She is one of the most intelligent, sensitive, and principled individuals I know, and she will enjoy great success as a dramaturge. |
|
The authors, however, are hostile to anything that smacks of principled working class politics. |
|
It is of paramount importance to take a principled stand against the advocates of communal hatred on all sides. |
|
That has been the strongest, principled position against passing the bill at this stage. |
|
Or do we do a little of both, going back and forth, and back again, from moral intuition to principled ideal? |
|
In the first place, the film depicts some imaginary breed of gracious and principled gangsters. |
|
He presents a noble, principled defence of the cooperative movement which coheres into a highly readable text. |
|
Kevin was principled, courageous, incorruptible, unselfish and a man of great integrity. |
|
And the Germans are hard working, conscientious, trying hard to be principled pragmatics, wearing history heavily on their shoulder. |
|
His position on euthanasia grew from a principled view of patients' rights. |
|
The decision to come out fighting to restore standards in higher education was principled and courageous. |
|
I know I am recommending a pragmatic rather than a principled stand, but that is what national interest and foreign policy is all about. |
|
Although faced with accusations of priggishness and prudery, the council remains unrepentant, arguing that it is taking a principled stand. |
|
We must have principled leaders who define all of life by principles and not expediency. |
|
As a result, his former image as a political operator was replaced by that of a principled leader. |
|
When you must make decisions about marriages, you are obliged to be consistent and principled. |
|
They showed that far from being apathetic, they are principled, dynamic and determined to make a difference. |
|
Whistleblowers are highly principled people who are in the job because they thought they could do it in an ethical manner. |
|
Particular mention should be made of Mike Kelly, who remains the most principled man it's ever been my good fortune to meet. |
|
He was one of the very few people of principled honesty that I had met, thus becoming an inspiration to me, and will be deeply missed. |
|
|
He saw him as a principled man who openly spoke out his thoughts on any issue of the nation, but never wishing to malign or discredit others. |
|
He is an independent minded and principled man, who is very different from most private eye characters. |
|
The welcome sign of a principled politician is the desire to risk everything for change. |
|
Little Women is a cheerful, wholesome account of the daily life of a highly principled family. |
|
If he was principled at all and believed that these things should be done, he would have spoken out. |
|
More specifically, toward whom should he have looked as an example, this deeply moral and principled man? |
|
How can you ever again position yourself as a principled candidate in this election? |
|
Passionate and principled democrats were slow to recognise the dangers posed by totalitarianism 60 years ago. |
|
If courts are to intervene by the imposition of public law standards upon a private body they must adopt a careful and principled approach. |
|
But there are several reductions of arithmetic to set theory, and seemingly no principled way to decide between them. |
|
It has won a considerable global readership as the result of its principled approach. |
|
Worse, what is the principled basis by which we weight the importance of the properties in the bundle? |
|
If he maintains such a principled approach in the subsequent campaign, I thought, he might even be able to turn public opinion around. |
|
As such cases show, if we give weight to both equality and utility, we have no principled way to assess their relative importance. |
|
However, she said, she was taking a principled rather than a technical decision. |
|
The point of a radical move to restore the rule of law is that it offers both parties a principled basis for agreement. |
|
These five justices have all the right in the world to have their own principled way of interpreting the constitution. |
|
It says that there is no principled way to decide that some limitations on land use are takings and others are not. |
|
One therefore has to decide which should be given priority in any given situation and one should do this in a principled way. |
|
It would help if the government actually knew what it wanted, and held a principled position one way or the other. |
|
|
The following statements are admitted under the principled approach to hearsay. |
|
A principled stand in defence of the human rights of children is not an empty gesture. |
|
In tributes and memorial speeches Paul has been eulogized by political friends and foes as honest, principled, and unpretentious. |
|
There are all kinds of principled arguments against this dunderheaded and dangerous idea. |
|
Mr Bradley's quietly principled and wholly ethical stance is to be commended. |
|
If there had been principled resistance, the extreme and aberrational set of arrests might never have taken place. |
|
Voting against a bill for good reasons in a principled manner, based on one's party's kaupapa and policies, is not venal or corrupt. |
|
A principled and unflinching response from the Wikipedian community followed. |
|
Why should someone resign for taking a principled stand based on a reasoned position? |
|
Until your party can offer leadership and be seen to do something principled, you will never reduce your minority. |
|
Citizen Kane is the study of one man, both a hero and a rogue, a principled egotist who wanted others to love him, but only on his terms. |
|
You have the picture of a party that is rudderless and adrift, with no clear-cut strategies of providing principled opposition on issues. |
|
But conflict resolution in recent decades is at odds with the principled approach. |
|
Fortunately, there are scads of principled, hopelessly marginal parties and candidates for whom you can cast a purely symbolic ballot. |
|
With his wife, he had co-authored four scrupulously principled books on New England wilderness. |
|
Our words and actions will support secularists in their principled stand against fundamentalists. |
|
The President sets himself up as a bold and principled Everyman, so, in theory at least, he cannot back down or lose some of his edge. |
|
How do you prepare for the role of being one of the undead, albeit a principled vampire who prefers to drink the blood of cows than humans? |
|
But almost from the outset, Maskhadov was challenged and deliberately undercut by his ruthless and less principled rivals. |
|
The unprincipled behaviour of the Bush administration has been met with principled conduct and objections. |
|
|
Not only may they do better if the person carrying them is unselfish, altruistic, and principled, but it is easy to see why this should be so. |
|
In Bombay he reminded his audience that a vote for Congress was also a vote for it, and his, foreign policy of peace and principled neutralism. |
|
The driving anger is far deeper and both more visceral and more principled. |
|
There is the example she set, her very principled approach to life which she demonstrated, rather than preached. |
|
Tim's principled stands on these issues propelled him to victory against his two better-known rivals. |
|
He spoke of the principled stand Mick took on the issue of the transfer of elective orthopaedics from Kilkenny to Waterford. |
|
We're dedicated to a principled stand, it's in the national interest and we'll be standing by that. |
|
As a gentleman and scholar, he must rush to the defense of the brilliant, principled, and callipygian Jill. |
|
He explained that he was the only socialist candidate and had been a principled fighter for Trotskyism, that is socialist internationalism, for nearly four decades. |
|
There is no principled way to decide that one man's gratifications are more deserving of respect than another's or that one form of gratification is more worthy than another. |
|
No President in history has ever taken a principled stand on every issue. |
|
One of the most principled aspects of their decision was that political pressure on publishers to exercise a form of self-censorship should be resisted. |
|
The media have conferred on him the image of the victimised rebel, who was transported to a penal colony as the price of his principled insubordination. |
|
Yes, Katniss is brave, strong, and principled, but she is not purely good, or unrealistically selfless. |
|
I think you have to deal with it in a bit more principled way than that. |
|
The Greens support taking a principled approach to this legislation. |
|
Pence is well-spoken, thanks to a radio show background and to his solid, principled beliefs which make it easy for him to speak. |
|
He is generous with his time and money, and a principled and loyal friend. |
|
When principled limitations to the scope of government are absent, the necessities of government become mere side projects of vote hunting glad-handers and crony-bureaucrats. |
|
He has paid a significant price for his principled approach to politics. |
|
|
I think the notion of a retrial is a broad hint to him to leave Egypt and go abroad, but so far he has been too stubborn and principled to take such hints. |
|
He developed a reputation for principled independence that others sometimes saw as arrogance. |
|
Let me pretend to be their most dedicated and principled spokesman, the one who won't buckle no matter what concessions the Chancellor delivers from his sack. |
|
Thus spoke countless, earlier generations of failed, though no doubt principled and conscientious, revolutionaries. |
|
Underneath the cowboy lingo, the man is light in substance, weak on strategy and quite willing to cut and run from principled position if he feels a chill wind from politics. |
|
That should apply to all the parties seeking a principled accommodation. |
|
For the first century of the Republic's life, this picture of great figures, intellectual and pragmatic, principled and far-seeing, dominated explanations of the Constitution. |
|
I respected his principled stand, but when it came down to arguing with management, stopping redundancies etc. his principles stood for precisely nowt! |
|
Alcohol abuse has in many instances also reduced once dignified, principled and balanced people into inferior inebriates lacking drive, initiative and resoluteness. |
|
On one hand, it seems oddly principled of Romney, a candidate who has always been guided by expediency when it comes to abortion. |
|
The extended mechanism turned out to be capable of giving a principled account of lexical blocking, the pragmatics of adjectives, and systematic polysemy. |
|
This article concludes by suggesting ways in which the currently stalemated debate might be revitalized by principled interventions from scholars and concerned citizens. |
|
The brand, if shared, if articulated, if co-created, is a powerful flame that can illuminate the process and help everyone make principled choices. |
|
What a doughty, principled fighter for pensioners that McLennan is. |
|
The opposition has been assiduous in considering the issues and developing solutions consistent with the principled position it has taken on the bill. |
|
Some time ago, he took a courageous and principled stand in support of a local failed asylum seeker and her family who were threatened with deportation. |
|
The trouble is that no one is taking a principled stand on either side. |
|
Paul, to be fair, is a principled isolationist, which is a harebrained position but not a dishonest one. |
|
His fear, which we share, is that principles will be interpreted inflexibly, without regard to the nuances of cases, generating a gridlock of conflicting principled stands. |
|
In response, Smith quit the party in a huff that July, trashing it as insufficiently principled on his way out the door. |
|
|
Granted, Hudson considers it a mistake on a principled level to rate Cusanus as either a Platonist or a Neoplatonist. |
|
The best politics here is to be principled, nimble, and shrewd. |
|
The compressed lips suggest his principled reticence, his practice of keeping his own counsel. |
|
It is a call to be principled and practical at the same time. |
|
His principled opposition to royal prerogatives over the church, meanwhile, twice led to his exile from England. |
|
Her speech was praised by SNP Parliamentary Group Leader, Angus Robertson, who described it as outstanding, principled and passionate. |
|
He would not compromise on his principled stand, he said, whether he stay in office of speakership or otherwise. |
|
In Mohawk Industries, the Supreme Court reaffirmed its principled refusal to expand the list of immediately appealable non-final orders. |
|
We rely primarily on the Foundational Model of Anatomy for anatomical terms because of its deep coverage, principled organization, and mereotopological detail. |
|
The whole question is made more complex because there is no consensus as to whether any principled distinction can be made between languages and dialects. |
|
A conception of praxis as principled pragmatism is articulated, and the commitment to pragmatic antiracisms is contrasted with liberalism's policy of nonracialism. |
|
Let an enthusiast be principled that he or his teacher is inspired. |
|