There are those in the British ruling classes who wish to maintain their power and privilege by using the age-old tactic of divide and rule. |
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Status and privilege of the religious elite and their ability to maintain power, were based to some extent on deception. |
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Along with privilege and education, leisure brings choices, including those deemed by moralists to be evil or corrupt. |
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The British relied strongly on the Sunni elite, which grabbed power and privilege for itself, alienating the Shiite heartland. |
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The companies chartering some aircraft that specifically carry divers as passengers have negotiated a special privilege for them. |
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Users with a grantable privilege can only revoke privileges they have granted and chains they have caused. |
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I suggest my little grand-niece better keep her mouth shut, or she'll lose her privilege to a nice, cozy and cheap apartment. |
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Attacking the bastions of privilege is still the easiest way for a politician to win a cheap round of applause. |
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How the U.S. earned the privilege of siting one of its Antarctic bases at the geographic pole in the first place is a charming piece of history. |
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I try to be aware of the space I take up, of the prejudice that I carry, and the privilege that is the albatross around my neck. |
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We reproduce what may be the most vicious tirade by a pollie against a journo, delivered by Danby under parliamentary privilege on Tuesday. |
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It's she who, having abused that privilege to abet terrorist acts, should be under attack by the naifs who have come to her defense. |
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A grandfather clause in that Act stated that the Act was not to affect an existing privilege as defined in the Crown Minerals Act. |
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But on the few occasions when I've had the privilege of being out in the field with him, I try to bash his head in because we're competitive. |
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But that necessarily follows from the theory that the defamation created a presumption of malice and the privilege then destroyed that malice. |
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Last, but not least, I deem it an honour and a rare privilege to write about her. |
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This opportunity is an honor and a privilege and I think it is something that I will cherish for the rest of my life. |
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It is doubtful that the US can successfully arrogate this privilege only to itself. |
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They need to get high-quality healthcare, which has all along been the privilege of the middle and upper classes. |
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Gandhi was born to the upper class of Indian society and had the privilege to study law in London. |
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The formation of union gladdened the hearts of the students who had been demanding this privilege for quite some time now. |
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Those who had the privilege to know him and break bread with him never felt bored or lonely. |
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The privilege could nevertheless be defeated if actual malice was proved by the plaintiff. |
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I thought it was quite a coup and a privilege to have the big Chief of the Society visit our relatively small branch. |
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Unjustified, or even accidental infringements of the privilege erode the public's confidence in the fairness of the criminal justice system. |
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I also had the privilege of sharing numerous early morning shiurim with your father. |
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Finally, this week it is my privilege to pay tribute to the editor of our sister newspaper in Mayo. |
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In 1901, the councillors gave up the privilege of having peons who used to accompany them during assessments and inspections. |
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However when our dissent becomes a meaningful challenge to their illegitimate privilege and authority, then they will begin to criminalize us. |
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I'm very happy to say his dream was not a passing fancy, as I've now had the privilege of attending the first two gatherings. |
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I think he is a man of limited intelligence, considerable low cunning, self-esteem born of blinkered privilege and a mean spirit. |
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Economic privilege and injustice is increasing and class prejudice is accepted to an alarming degree. |
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It does not create a privilege for newspeople, rather it provides an immunity from being adjudged in contempt. |
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It would, in short, retain a system of cartelized banking, special privilege, and virtually inevitable generation of inflation and contraction. |
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To the extent that civil unions will duplicate marriage, then extending that privilege is clearly unnecessary. |
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Courts almost never overturn presidential claims to privilege in civil suits, he says. |
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Don't abuse the privilege of having my cell number by wasting my valuable time on this kind of footling nonsense. |
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At the moment the course is a blaze of colour and it is a privilege to tread the lush fairways and lightning fast greens. |
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But she saw nothing wrong with indulging a few kisses with the hottie with the most piercing blue peepers she has had the privilege of seeing. |
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Wealth as an instrument of social control is a privilege of rank or of birth. |
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We have a husband-wife privilege, a doctor-patient privilege, an attorney-client privilege and even a privilege between priest and penitent. |
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A common meal served in rural areas called privilege blends rice, okra, hot pepper, pig tail or salt beef, garlic, salt fish, and onions. |
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She picked him out from his many siblings, including a twin brother, adopted him in secrecy and raised him in a life of privilege and safety. |
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In almost every shot, they wear their power and privilege as comfortably as their smartly tailored clothes. |
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During the authoritarian era, people dared not speak out about the abuse of power or privilege, no matter how angry they were. |
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Despite the outcome, captaining this team was the greatest privilege ever for me. |
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Ministerial appointments in Indonesia, as elsewhere, are the exclusive privilege of the president-elect. |
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Sure, we may not have the privilege of a vinous climate, but this country can make beer, the way Belgium can. |
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It held that the Fifth Amendment's privilege against self-incrimination was not applicable in such proceedings. |
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We pay handsomely for the privilege of being members and we get hot under the collar about its burdensome regulations. |
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Such production shall not be deemed to constitute a waiver of any privilege in any other proceeding or context. |
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Class privilege has reached the point where the entire society is ruled by a plutocracy. |
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There is no privilege here, no escape from the insolent booth attendants, the ceaseless demands of the homeless, and the pungent overcrowding. |
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The real privilege for us is that people actually came to the creamery and saw what the creamery is all about. |
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The privilege will also cost you a quid, but that's a small price to pay to avoid a cricked neck and beer-stained chinos. |
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For me white privilege has turned out to be an elusive and fugitive subject. |
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Thus people in positions of privilege or power must earn our trust, show they deserve it. |
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Customers not only had the privilege to see, feel, and experience the jewellery but also learn more about the precious stone. |
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So in one sense there would be very few defamation cases where a defence of qualified privilege could be raised. |
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With his retirement due next month, Mr. Devaraj deems it a privilege to have been chosen for the special assignment. |
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All Delawareans should have the privilege of participating in this institution. |
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The stories are heartbreaking, but the privilege of the briefest of glimpses of the lost lives is also revealing and inspiring. |
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Your Honours, at common law there is absolute privilege for what is said in court by an advocate. |
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It was during the late 1700s that the ancient female privilege of lying-in began to be usurped by a masculine, medical authority in the West. |
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When a small breeder wishes to have his mare covered by a top stallion, he will pay top dollar for the privilege. |
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Ten men won the privilege of batting against baseball's all-time strikeouts king as part of a promotion for a candy bar. |
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Instead of being a right, walking has become a privilege to be carefully rationed. |
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Moreover we declare that she had forfeited her pretended title to the aforesaid kingdom, to every right, dignity, and privilege. |
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The decline and fall of a mere meritocrat in a world of privilege is the theme of this novel. |
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I am conscious that the color of my skin carries privilege that may wound, a lightness that can betray. |
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There were three of us in the car and I was given the privilege of being first cab off the rank. |
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Look, voting is a privilege as well as a right and if you don't vote, you should be ashamed of yourself. |
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The King's English he adores is a dreadful language of pride, privilege and confusion. |
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I have had the privilege of meeting Brendan, and he is a really nice chap, a splendid fellow. |
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It was stressful and physically demanding but a great privilege to be involved. |
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Not only are students deprived of the privilege of enjoying a social nightlife on campus, but many students are also out of a job. |
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You have a rad apartment in Manhattan where space is a privilege, not a right. |
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Originally, the spousal privilege reflected the view that a married woman was not an entirely separate person from her husband. |
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Proof by the claimant that the defendant was actuated by express malice removes the privilege. |
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If you want to join forces with such organizations, that is your privilege. |
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They're very tough on executive privilege in general, and on the flow of information more broadly than that. |
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Some paid for the privilege of nailing by contributing to a war charity or benevolent organization. |
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Taking his privilege as a dying man and the king's uncle, Gaunt remonstrates with him, calling him England's landlord rather than her king. |
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It was my privilege to serve with him, and I can't think of anything better than to have the opportunity to renew that relationship. |
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This is the most amazing, awesome and deadly frightening image of fire that it's been my privilege to see. |
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By granting them such privilege, aren't Bulgarians betraying national interests? |
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Future generations will not have the pleasure and privilege of observing what I witnessed the other morning. |
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If there are exclusionary provisions in agreements, the existence of privilege will not prevent the agreements being provided. |
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Part of the privilege we have as Canadians is that we can express our beliefs openly. |
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Civilians enjoyed the rights to counsel and trial by jury and the privilege of a habeas corpus writ to test the legality of government detention. |
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They feel that it's wrong to privilege scientific over other types of knowledge. |
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This was a fine privilege for its editors and a confusing disservice to your readership. |
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In this symbolic reversal of southern style, injustice, privilege and power are no buffer against an unavenged, incomprehensible death. |
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The potential momentum of diminishing privilege is so horrifying, they must handle it by reinventing the language of their enemy as their own. |
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This allows them to accord individuals a degree of epistemic privilege with respect to their own inner goings-on. |
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We do not succeed in meeting on equal terms those who lack the privilege of a history. |
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Rather an abuse of parliamentary privilege to achieve a cheap and shoddy pay back for his mates. |
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Company drama could be credited with democratising classical music, which had been a privilege of the upper classes. |
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In the event of a misdeal, the dealer loses the privilege of dealing and the deal is passed to the left. |
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A dreary trait of actors is their tendency to gush about the great privilege it was to work with each other. |
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Cultural capital, based in most cases on financial capital and class privilege, spreads its tentacles both on the Left and the Right. |
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Have you sought any instructions from Dosca Ltd as to the waiver of that privilege? |
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It is also argued that the Agreement has the effect of constituting a waiver of litigation privilege. |
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Old forms of government have every reason to operate in secret, while denying just that privilege to subjects. |
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This silent divide will almost certainly lead to widening divisions in the sector based on individual and institutional privilege. |
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The law of defamation provides for the defences of fair comment and of qualified privilege in appropriate cases. |
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I had the privilege then to join the Cork city fire service on an emergency call-out. |
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The question was whether the privilege was confined to cases where legal proceedings were already in contemplation. |
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The privilege covers direct communications and communications through agents. |
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Having players of this quality is a real privilege and will help people get an experience of kabaddi and help the game develop here. |
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It is a world of antique privilege about to be replaced by a thrusting business ethic. |
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What matters is the sacrifice of godly privilege for the lowliness of humanity, irrespective of gender. |
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Theirs is an object lesson in making good in the face of adversity and it has been a privilege to represent them. |
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But as they are themselves the owners of the aforesaid company, they would simply be making lawyers rich for the privilege of suing themselves. |
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I wasn't sure whether the issue was one of social privilege or gender exclusion, or both. |
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She won two more Grand Slams in each of the following two seasons, being afforded the rare privilege of a ticker-tape parade in New York. |
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I personally, had never before been one of these said gophers, and had never been granted the privilege of entering the teacher's lounge. |
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These schools would compose the bottom tier of an educational hierarchy based on privilege. |
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Were the written words used by the defendant on an occasion of qualified privilege? |
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Not everything said or written on an occasion of qualified privilege is protected. |
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In order to reduce traffic congestion I have decided to forego the privilege of witnessing the golf at first hand. |
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They treat you as an honoured guest, as if the privilege and pleasure is theirs, not yours. |
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What we're looking at doing instead is issuing a driving privilege card, which also states thereon that it is not good for identification. |
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He charged us what we later found out was a ridiculous amount for the privilege of the tiki tour. |
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Access to city spaces should be guaranteed by virtue of citizenship, but it is increasingly becoming a privilege conferred by status. |
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There's certainly no reason to card anyone for the dubious privilege of seeing it. |
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By the time it reaches an examiner, they explained, several layers of privilege have coated a middle class child's coursework. |
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Quite the lady's man, Zach plays hard, and lives his life of privilege to the max. |
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In my book these are the finest still waters I have had the privilege to fish in the British Isles. |
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In 500 years he only beds one woman and even then has to pay for the privilege. |
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Many commuters are paying handsomely for the privilege of standing all the way to and from work. |
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They provide a payout based on a contingency, charging a premium for the privilege. |
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He emphasized the paratroopers' privilege of wearing their trouser legs tucked into their jump boots. |
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Here, I have a privilege of working with people who have expertise in their own domain areas for more than a decade. |
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During this time, mobility was read as the ability to depart, or as the privilege of exit. |
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He rejected privilege and chose to bear the hardships of his men, and was in turn esteemed by them. |
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It will mean an immediate end to all inherited privilege and a drastic reduction in income inequality. |
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It transfers power and privilege from working people into the hands of corporate elites. |
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The film that follows is a dark, dryly humorous critique of class privilege and artful etiquette. |
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Their franking privilege could not be better employed than in sending the whole matter to their constituents. |
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You may go back and look at the estimates of the Postmaster-General and the appropriations since the franking privilege was ostensibly abolished. |
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With this distinction comes a notoriety and privilege that normally takes the ordinary filmmaker half a lifetime to establish. |
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Deviations from the standard stratification of privilege were never permanent or absolute. |
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It was a privilege for the parish and parishioners to share this Mass with the rest of the country. |
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In other words, there is no distinction between the privilege arising in the context of civil law, criminal law, or any other area of law. |
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It has been my good privilege to hunt wild pigs in five states as well as wart hogs in Africa and the pig-like javelina in Texas. |
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The son of a rich clothier, he gave up wealth and privilege to dress in rags. |
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His life seems well in order, as if nicely wrapped in a cocoon of privilege and pleasure. |
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It is accepted that an authorised publication by an agent attracts the same qualified privilege as would the same publication by the principal. |
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As far as I'm concerned, you have to look at the circumstances to make a determination whether or not there's been an abuse of that privilege. |
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The Law Commission proposed that the privilege should be restricted to incrimination for crimes punishable by imprisonment. |
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It was heavily funded by Otto I, who gave the abbess of the monastery much power and privilege. |
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The second factor has to do with the debilitating effects of unearned privilege. |
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I began to count the ways in which I enjoy unearned skin privilege and have been conditioned into oblivion about it existence. |
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But the only privilege either had was the opportunity to outwork his competitors in order to reach his goals. |
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Opinion on this issue is as divided and polarized as the position papers that comprise the prescription privilege debate. |
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But these are the perils of my profession, and I am happy to thole them for the privilege of attending some of the best sport around. |
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One could either become fostered to anyone willing to pay for the privilege or be sent away on a slave ship. |
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The craftsman and his family enjoy the privilege of being the first to be allowed to worship the deity after the poojas are performed. |
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It is a great privilege to minister to people whose next step is to stand before the Lord himself. |
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Mr Trembath claimed it was unreasonable to charge for the privilege of mooring there, when it was only for a short period of time. |
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It is only the rarest few who have come to earn this privilege in past lives. |
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He said under parliamentary law, it was a breach of privilege and contempt of either House to obstruct, insult or molest a member while in the execution of his duties. |
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Students had the privilege of investing him into the role of Chancellor. |
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He was old and in failing health, but still taking visitors who daily waited in an anteroom for hours for the privilege of speaking with him for a few minutes. |
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When the stakes are as high as these, checking privilege can foreclose important advances in human psychology. |
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The devil makes work for idle hands, particularly in pre-revolutionary France where pampered privilege combined with decadence to create a bloated elite, ripe for plucking. |
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Hence, used as a symbol of intellectual life, or a standard of what real intellectualism entails, his thesis obfuscates issues of access, privilege and accountability. |
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How much do those without a checking account pay for the privilege of having their paychecks cashed? |
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How come this stuff wasn't protected by attorney-client privilege? |
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It's been a privilege to watch the wildlife reclaim the moss. |
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European governments continue to allow employers the privilege of using cheap foreign labor while making asylum seekers take the fall for clandestine migration. |
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The pope's privilege of choosing a name for his tenure in office ought to be exercised more strategically than has been done during the past few centuries. |
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One undoubted privilege of the office is that of being listened to. |
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I have seen that privilege subordinated to partisan interests. |
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Darwin the gentleman was secure in his world of privilege and power while Wallace the impoverished enthusiast scraped a living selling butterflies and birdskins. |
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They think that their wealth, privilege, and gated communities will save them. |
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Is it acceptable that MPs should have the privilege of voting in secret? |
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Lowry's interpretation of his liberal education in support of personal motives illustrates the privilege embedded in the synoptical perspective that Iola adopts. |
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What role do state institutions play in shaping identities and constructing beliefs about deviance that privilege some groups and pathologize others? |
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Be aware of racism, classism, sexism, heterosexism, cissexism, ableism, and other issues of privilege and oppression. |
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Let us not accept the existing line as poetic licence for this is a privilege reserved for distinguished writers of English language and literature. |
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That's her privilege, but I shan't forget the calumny in a hurry. |
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As a white, educated, Western, middle-class male, I possess most of the unearned privilege the world has to offer. |
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Every one of you must first prove and justify each talent and privilege. |
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Polite, deferential service in an old-school Continental-restaurant mode increases the sense of being suspended in a bubble of privilege for a few comfortable hours. |
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Being such a linkman endowed Zhou with the privilege of freely passing through the pits and team buildings and exploring the inner organization of the team. |
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There's a controversial proposal under debate in New York City now that would give non-citizens a protected privilege of American citizenship, the right to vote. |
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I must admit I have partaken in many of the adventures that go along with the privilege of driving a hippie camper van. |
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Needham grew up a child of privilege on the West Side of New York City, a liberal bastion. |
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Dixon was legally bound to not report the assaults at the victims' requests, in abidance with physician-patient privilege. |
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Their interaction with it was by predetermined procedures or, at the very most, a dumb terminal with as little power and privilege we could give them. |
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To protest means to question not just friends but even yourself as a white person of privilege in this society. |
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While he continued to enjoy the privilege of the whip he continued to represent and be seen as part of a minority opinion within the Conservative Party, Mr Morris said. |
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There were a million and one stories and I've had the privilege of seeing quite a lot of the rushes and there are so many different ways of being able to look at the thing. |
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It is the great privilege of poverty to be happy and yet unenvied. |
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The documents which you have deposed to in the witness box and referred to are strictly in answer to the subpoena but in respect of which you claim privilege. |
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We don't want it be used by a small number of people who may use the opportunity of public hearings under privilege to make patently untruthful allegations. |
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Exeter allowed only bishops and knights to have effigies, whereas Hereford and Wells gave the privilege also to cathedral dignitaries like deans and archdeacons. |
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Does privilege mean that we Maori dominate certain illnesses such as diabetes, heart disease, asthma, glue ear, and others, and that we die 10 years earlier than Pakeha? |
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Though natural history does not privilege the individual moment of perception in quite the way that romanticism does, it does rely on a process of imaginative synthesis. |
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He's perfectly happy, Mr Speaker, to stand by and allow his senior colleagues to traduce his reputation under Parliamentary privilege, Mr Speaker. |
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We have the rare privilege of watching up close as a formerly socialist, autarkic economy peacefully attempts to make the transition to a market-based, rule-of-law economy. |
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This implementation of the principle of least privilege helps contain security breaches arising from buggy code, malicious code, user error and malicious users. |
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Because Hitler regarded the Slavs as inferior to the Aryans, he considered that they should not be afforded the privilege of serving in the German armed forces. |
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It was not disputed that the words were spoken on a privileged occasion, but the plaintiff alleged that the privilege was defeated by malice on the defendant's part. |
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Men and women perform as equals, taking turns to bear the weight in lifts and jumps, and sometimes appearing to fight each other for the privilege. |
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In Lost in the Meritocracy, kirn charts how the economics of privilege taunt him at every turn in Princeton. |
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Do I, a law professor, get to invoke the privilege when I write a piece for The Daily Beast? |
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Yet this Saturday night I had the privilege of being present when Suzie McNeil, backed only by drums, bass violin and a lonely electro-acoustic guitar, gave in to the crowd. |
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I could go on a rant about how sugar subsidies cause American consumers to pay triple the market price for sugar, just to get the privilege of ruining the Everglades. |
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We pay a little extra for the privilege, but then we do save on fuel and the need for a special journey, not to mention the usual parking aggro and all that. |
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It has been a distinct privilege to have the honor of working with them. |
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Poussin, who seems to privilege the world image per se, dissembles such spatiotemporal leaps within the contiguous illusion-promoting signs of the depicted scene. |
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The two have paired up again for Please Give, a send-up of white guilt and privilege in these recession-plagued times. |
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The court must keep in mind that solicitor-client privilege is both a principle of fundamental justice and a civil right of supreme importance in Canadian law. |
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But it really takes paying for a building or endowing a chair to have that kind of privilege. |
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It would depend on the detailed operation of the law and it is most unlikely that a blanket abrogation of legal professional privilege would survive. |
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In 1953 he was invited with a retinue of six people to Paris, and his son and successor, Moro Naaba Kougri, was later accorded the same privilege. |
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But if I could live in an economy where everyone had the privilege to be rude rather than the obligation to fake it, I would. |
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Our tax dollars get wasted on dole payments to businesses who then charge us more for the privilege of consuming the products we've already subsidised. |
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So it was a privilege for me to be get up close to see the ingenious workings of Harrison's magnificent clock, still keeping good time, nearly 300 years after it was made. |
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According to Berman, brain images and models may skew and privilege model-friendly properties over existential characteristics of life and thought. |
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The Notice of Appeal also asks this court in effect to hold that the defence of qualified privilege in each of its forms has no real prospect of success. |
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Under cover of anti-elitism, people like Sarah Palin love to conflate unearned privilege with hard-won educational achievement. |
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The defences of qualified privilege and comment will only be defeated when a plaintiff demonstrates that the defendant was motivated by express malice. |
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In fact they were defending the old Spain of privilege and poverty, threatened by the masses entering politics after the 1931 expulsion of the monarchy. |
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After centuries of changing political rule, however, education became the privilege of a chosen few, and was confined within the walls of the palaces. |
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Nor could Branch claim any reportorial privilege since he was never asked about them. |
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Indeed, a privilege to contribute to the work here between the Makuas. |
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Until some mechanism is found for giving advice to the great mass of the population, sensible financial planning will remain the exclusive privilege of the chosen few. |
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Although often a controversial power, executive privilege is the right of the president to refuse to divulge information to those who have compulsory power. |
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It is part and privilege of everyone to determine whether or not he is addressing others not only in a courteous manner but at the proper time and place. |
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Last week some of them discovered a remote and unexplored passage in Assynt, a find that affords them the privilege of assigning a name to the new cave. |
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I had the privilege of interviewing Mohammed Assaf before he took the stage at The ritz. |
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All this has got to be revised if you abandon the present practice, and provide for the free use of the franking privilege in every department of the Government. |
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I've had the privilege of visiting the chinampas of Xochimilco on several occasions, and exploring deep inside to see the last few agricultural chinampas that still produce food for the market. |
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Do you think people are poor because of lousy educational opportunities, wildly unequal social conditions and layer upon layer of middle-class privilege? |
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That is why he sometimes gets dismayed when the privilege is abused and lies or half-truths are dressed up as news in certain elements of the media. |
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I've had the privilege of celebrating Mass with the Holy Father. |
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By the end of the evening the combination of the violins, the wine and the heady atmosphere of privilege and poshness have us walking on air as we leave. |
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I've had the privilege of visiting Harlan Crow's collection of historical artifacts. |
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So I think it advisable that the media scale back the intensity and magnitude of its coverage of extravagant lifestyles that some rich urbanites have the privilege to enjoy. |
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Smoking is a privilege while clean, breathable air is a right. |
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I have considered it a privilege to watch fox cubs play, otters fish, salmon leap, and blackcock lek without causing disturbance to wildlife or landowner. |
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After the sin the primogenitures lost their privilege of serving in the Holy Temple and it was given to the Levites, who had abstained from the sin. |
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As such, the heretofore obscure executive now occupies a place of privilege in the financial elite. |
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Where an easement, right or privilege for a legal estate is created, it shall enure for the benefit of the land to which it is intended to be annexed. |
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Steve, like many of us, is not a blue-blooded aristocrat but an honest British citizen who loves hunting and enjoys the privilege of riding around the countryside. |
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It was into these palaces of privilege that Jen and Gwyn seemed to disappear barely moments after their red-carpet strolls. |
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Shortly after that I had the privilege of meeting you at a series of colloquia organised to debate the role of complementary and alternative medicine. |
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Floating in the fog of privilege, all sorts of voguish developments in language control bypassed me. |
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They'll never get that ballast of unearned privilege into space. |
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The United States has opted to rely more heavily on schooling as a means for promoting individual fulfillment, enhancing social justice, and countering unearned privilege. |
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In 937 Athelstan, then King of England, granted the privilege of sanctuary to Ripon, for a mile around the church. |
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And yet it is the privilege of the prince and the sultan to misbehave. |
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She forfeited that privilege the second she colluded in Shannon's abduction. |
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Nonlegal business advice offered by attorneys is not covered by either the attorney-client privilege or the tax practitioner-client privilege. |
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The privilege prohibits ex parte meetings between nonparty treating physicians and others outside the confidential relationship. |
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The pain of the perception of a new psychological disprivilege within an old privilege gnaws at contemporary white people. |
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He was a plantsman of vision who helped create some of the best herbaceous plants we have the privilege to grow. |
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Yet for all of the inauspiciousness of these beginnings, privilege seemed to be Lukin's birthright. |
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Like most privileges, however, the attorney-client privilege can also be destroyed accidentally. |
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The trial by jury, your Lordship knows, is so antient a privilege belonging to mankind, that its origin cannot properly be traced. |
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I wondered which next superstar I might have the privilege of seeing live at the coalface of stardom in Hollywood. |
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It is considered a rare privilege for a foreign leader to be allowed to address both houses in Westminster Hall. |
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Until 2016, the bank provided personal banking services as a popular privilege for employees. |
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This was a breach of Canterbury's privilege of coronation, and in November 1170 Becket excommunicated all three. |
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This means that, should the professor leave the university, he or she also loses the privilege to use the title of professor. |
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After Basire complained to the Dean, the schoolboys' privilege was withdrawn. |
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The tension between privilege and disempowerment pervades the polarized discourse evoked by public violence. |
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One privilege of student life at Cambridge is the opportunity to attend formal dinners at college. |
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Wollstonecraft attacked not only monarchy and hereditary privilege but also the language that Burke used to defend and elevate it. |
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Marcher lords could build castles, a jealously guarded and easily revoked Royal privilege in England. |
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The National Library of Wales was granted the privilege of legal deposit under the 1911 Copyright Act. |
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During much of the 19th century, most educated young men of privilege undertook the Grand Tour. |
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The name Dunkirka was first mentioned in a tithe privilege of 27 May 1067, issued by Count Baldwin V of Flanders. |
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The Chair ruled on one point of privilege or contempt during this sessional period. |
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Subpoenaing records that are protected by the psychotherapist-patient privilege also poses some challenges at the Article 32 stage. |
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Tribes also privilege primordial social ties, are clearly bounded, homogeneous, parochial, and stable. |
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In some parts of Europe the right of private war long remained the privilege of every noble. |
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In 1517 King Manuel I of Portugal handed Lopo Homem a charter gaving him the privilege to certify and amend all compass needles in vessels. |
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In 1517 King Manuel I of Portugal handed Lopo Homem a charter giving him the privilege to certify and amend all compass needles in vessels. |
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Zheng He, a court eunuch, would not have had the privilege in rank to command the largest of these ships, seaworthy or not. |
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Opium smoking began as a privilege of the elite and remained a great luxury into the early 19th century. |
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Every privilege and position, economic political, or religious came from him. |
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In 1825, this privilege was reduced to the south aisle and in 1895 to the former chantry chapel of the Black Prince. |
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In rare cases a linguist may represent phonemes with abstract symbols, such as dingbats, so as not to privilege any one allophone. |
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They have, with others, the same passions for party, for power, and the privilege of their corps. |
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Privilege rules give the holder of the privilege a right to prevent a witness from giving testimony. |
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Supreme Court that enjoys the privilege of having its opinions routinely published in three hardcover reporters. |
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Thus, in spite of parliamentary privilege to amend the constitution, the constitution itself remains supreme. |
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Hansard, the court found that the House held no privilege to order publication of defamatory material. |
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In consequence, Parliament passed the Parliamentary Papers Act 1840 to establish privilege for publications under the House's authority. |
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His privilege of studying in the Wordsworth library was continued after the Wordsworth family moved to Rydal Mount. |
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London has the privilege of disturbing a whole street for an hour together, with the twanking of a brass kettle or frying-pan. |
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I stand on the privilege of a free Scotchman, and will brook no insult unreturned, and no injury unrequited. |
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Trinh writes that untelling the stories of privilege and marginality is a form of displacement that takes a long time. |
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It would be an absolute privilege to join that group and hopefully I can push on and get plenty more caps for Worcester. |
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It has been an absolute privilege and pleasure to have worked for Coleg Gwent over the last five years. |
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