This proposition has only to be stated clearly for its unfoundedness to be clear. |
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The data is then used to improve the value proposition the companies make in their sales pitches. |
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An antinomy is the peculiar fallacy which enables us to derive both a proposition and its negation from the same premiss. |
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It is a risky proposition under any circumstances, and sometimes it doesn't last. |
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A much more difficult proposition was to overlook the hard evidence of official government documents. |
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And the thought that I couldn't possibly manage without some bloke to wash socks for really didn't seem a very attractive proposition. |
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If I could illustrate what I say, respectfully, is the error in that proposition, I would direct you to page 107 of the application book. |
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Since it does not succeed in expressing a proposition, the liar sentence is neither true nor false and the paradox is avoided. |
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We think it is a realistic proposition to bring a crossing between Kent and Southend, and eventually up the Thames to London. |
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This last theorem implies, in particular, the proposition that free groups are residually finite. |
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Our proposition to the ship and the ship's company is that the vessel ought to return to international waters. |
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Hence the logical proof schema which enables you to deduce any proposition whatever from a contradiction cannot be applied. |
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Owning a press, or a television station or a magazine is a capital intensive proposition. |
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Developing a new manned spacecraft in addition to larger launch vehicles becomes an expensive proposition. |
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If this commercial proposition proves wrong, it could be bad news for more than Scardino. |
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It did not look an attractive proposition to the London bookmakers and short odds were offered thai Mons would fall. |
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You might take it for granted each of your employees understands your value proposition. |
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He also discusses the disjunctive propositions which follow from a conditional proposition. |
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The proposition that tolerance of SO2 by these terricolous mosses depends on metabolic detoxification of dissolved bisulfite was investigated. |
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It is devoted to the proposition that if a cat may look at a king, a thief may win and woo a princess, with plenty of wizardry to help him. |
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When the wind blows, it can be a fearsome proposition, yet, like all links, it is vulnerable when the weather is calm and placid. |
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She is one of over 30 delegates, most of them vociferously against the proposition. |
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I do not conclude that that delay undermines their credibility or supports the proposition that they are concocting a story. |
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It is by no means adventitious that this statement combines an ethical proposition with an economic prescription. |
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Affiliate marketing can be a win-win proposition for online retailers and for Web sites hoping to capitalize on their traffic. |
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In constructivist mathematics, the truth value of a proposition is dependent on whether we are able to prove it. |
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Transportation of bigger pieces is a difficult proposition as any negligence in handling would result in breakage. |
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It is a commandment we obey or a proposition we seek to uphold, not an indisputable natural fact like gravity. |
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The proposition assumes that the witness is going to perjure himself or herself. |
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More plausible is the proposition that the popular rationale for regulation is statist nonsense. |
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It seems to embrace the proposition that owners or occupiers are insurers for the safety of others. |
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Voters responded overwhelmingly, carrying the proposition into law by a margin of nearly 20 percent. |
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He has a proposition for James, which he puts to him in deprecative terms typical of their mutual origins. |
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Catering to the denizens ' demand for water is a tough proposition for local governing bodies. |
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Illuminating reality without recourse to truth is proving a difficult proposition. |
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What began as a hobby for the actress is now a viable business proposition. |
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I can truthfully say that this whole proposition appears to my mind as one of the most grotesque and unpractical that I have yet encountered. |
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A number of normally sensible people in Europe have supported this proposition. |
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So the convolutedly titled Mitsubishi Evolution VIII MR FQ400 is an astounding proposition. |
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One possible approach is to say that a proposition is what is expressed in a complete indicative sentence. |
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Criticism of the footnote is not a quibble about a minor incidental proposition. |
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The Wall stood for the proposition that unbridgeable cultural differences exist among peoples. |
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It will kill the golden goose, the very ecosystem that makes it such an attractive tourism proposition in the first place. |
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In our submission, the proposition can be put this way, that the Tribunal, as you point out, does not have a contradictor. |
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Central to this proposition is the recovery of existing top predators such as grizzlies, cougars, and wolves. |
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This will make us an even more competitive solutions company with a unique value proposition for our customers. |
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That, at least, is one proposition on which there will be unanimous agreement. |
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It seemed like an unattractive proposition for audiences and ultimately box office sales. |
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Indeed, for the cause of action to arise only when the lender realises his security would be a highly unattractive proposition. |
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And I wonder why religion has always been such an unattractive proposition to me. |
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This proposition was most overtly put in the arrangement of the opening of The Dawn of Photography. |
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The key value proposition to buyers, he says, is a significant reduction in procurement costs. |
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I don't know that it's a slam dunk that this proposition is particularly sound. |
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Reinforce your brand's value proposition with meaningful intangibles, like superior customer service. |
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With your value proposition in hand, go department by department, function by function, through your business. |
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You can test that proposition by hypothesizing the same transaction that is now before the Court as occurring yesterday. |
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Lunar and planetary exploration is a proposition far different from orbiting Earth. |
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This makes them an extremely unattractive economic proposition for even the most destitute ragpicker. |
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In a civil case, there is a lot to be said for that proposition, and generally speaking, that is the law in the civil courts. |
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I am not asking you to debate the accuracy or inaccuracy of that proposition of law. |
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Today that is a very distant proposition as its realization depends on the conjunction of many improbabilities. |
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But he was ignored because of his wild ideas, like the proposition that life came to Earth from space. |
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Take any of these players out of the side and they are a different proposition. |
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To say that the proposition is imbecilic is not to derogate the intelligence of the folks whose political maneuvers have brought us to this pass. |
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The streets are still littered with bicycle traffic, making the coexistence with cars a dicey proposition at best. |
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The company developed its marketing strategy in three phases, extending its value proposition beyond online trading. |
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Besides, transporting animals on ocean voyages is a chancy proposition full of danger for the animals and those assigned to care for them. |
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The only exception to that proposition is where the court order itself only orders the person concerned to do his best. |
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She pulled it off in the quagmire at Loch Lomond, but it will certainly be a tougher proposition under the hostile glare of Minneapolis. |
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Unfortunately, they come up short in providing a tangible value proposition that quantifies what the product actually means to a business. |
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To be a business partner in every sense of the word, we have to understand the nature of our client value proposition. |
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He accepts the proposition that he instinctively warms to people he perceives as battlers against the system. |
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Yet if we accept the proposition that we live in a global economy, we need to consider how we're going to make our voices heard. |
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Was there any challenge to the proposition that her fingerprints were on that spray? |
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It is not my role to agree with any proposition about the ideal family relationship that forms the best environment for raising children. |
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Improving recovery time should be a key piece of a vendor's value proposition. |
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This proposition would ban discrimination or preferential treatment of ethnic and gender groups by California public agencies. |
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The basic proposition is that in the ordinary case a breach of statutory duty does not, by itself, give rise to any private law cause of action. |
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He disputed Gettier's claim that any deduction from a justified, but false, proposition preserves justification. |
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The proposition that randomness is equal to the Platonic Aeon is not explained. |
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And looking at the set and the staging and trying to decipher which came first is indeed something of a chicken-and-egg proposition. |
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The French government itself, however, could already have made the white knight idea a difficult proposition for Aventis. |
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That proposition won by a wide margin overall and garnered more than half the female vote. |
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This is the proposition that I hoped the government would deny, or at least remain agnostic about. |
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We may yet see the company acquire a digital music vendor to reboot, rather than trash, its downloads proposition. |
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Smith still holds to the view that to return to another Scottish club would be too difficult a proposition. |
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Don's unique selling proposition was that he managed to get hold of the question papers well before the exams were held. |
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The MacBook Air could see a minor refresh to increase its value proposition. |
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Zachery is generally punished for his bad behavior with time-outs, a parenting tool that is often a hit-or-miss proposition. |
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I see no difficulty with the proposition that Shakespeare was acquainted with Roger Manners, fifth Earl of Rutland. |
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There is not a proposition or an insight I can bother to disagree with in these acres of amiable flannel. |
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Simply put, comparing our operations to commercial operations is not an apples to apples proposition. |
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Keeping ahead of the Joneses is a far more seductive proposition than keeping up with a pedestrian virtual bus driver in a fluorescent bib. |
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To develop the value proposition, the company had to understand what was important to customers in each segment. |
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Championing lower cable prices via legislation is a no-lose proposition for Frank, who may well be content to let the bill flounder. |
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For a proposition to be justified it must, at the very least, cohere with other propositions that one has adopted. |
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Contrary to our learned friend's submissions, we resist the proposition that this is remedial or beneficial legislation. |
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Because the falsity of such a proposition is inconceivable, you cannot have a clear grasp of its meaning and be in doubt as to its truth. |
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We initially attracted investors who were most interested in companies that offered a good value proposition. |
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This may seem like a simple proposition, but to a man it's like you have asked him to scale Mount Everest without oxygen. |
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A spokesman for Metro said work had to be done to make public transport a more attractive proposition. |
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Growing merchantable trees in that section of Idaho is no easy proposition. |
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To expose the woolliness of this proposition takes a little bit of reasoning, but it is well worth the effort. |
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Even though he may have played you like a baby grand, getting out of a relationship with a ladies' man is no easy proposition. |
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Well, we know that it's a crew of five that subscribes to the proposition that all that glitters is not sold. |
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And if the club still owned its own ground it would also be a much more attractive proposition to would-be owners. |
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Having to saddle up a mud-encrusted bike and ride hell-bent in inky blindness is a dicey proposition. |
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Even in the allegedly unrelated areas like finance the business needs to live out the value proposition. |
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Network partners must align in such a way that the resulting partnership offers a unique value proposition to the consumer. |
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The sentence is grammatical but it's not a proposition and so is not something from which a contradiction can be derived. |
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This new price is part of Nintendo's commitment to offer the consumer an unbeatable value proposition. |
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Murphy was trying to project confidence, knowing well that regardless of what he said, Iowa is an all-or-nothing proposition for Gephardt. |
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This is not a college course, it's a living proposition, here for you to use, to dive into and soak yourself in. |
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The first proposition is easier to defend than the second, as it rests on inexorable logic rather than vexed value judgments. |
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You're saying that the leaders of other nations are buyable, and that is not an acceptable proposition. |
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On my view, to believe something is to hold a proposition in your mind assertively. |
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There is authority for the proposition that a wrong opinion is both unreasonable and capable of constituting a flagrant impropriety. |
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Yet, surprisingly, there is little empirical evidence for this proposition. |
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A man would be lewd with, or proposition, or tell an untoward joke toward a female. |
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My client realizes that altering your name may seem a burdensome proposition at this time. |
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We have to use the theory of probability when we do not know whether a proposition is true or false. |
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As part of our revised proposition, we are offering to create a new and safer parking area, in line with the surgery's needs. |
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If you are coming to it fresh, take in your proposition and the business plan, and take it from there. |
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If the Finance Sector proposition set out at the bottom of page 359 is correct, that is sufficient for our purposes. |
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The right proposition offered to well-targeted customers will bring more success. |
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Could the reason perhaps have been that general opinion was very much against the proposition? |
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But this is between ourselves as such a proposition unexplained would be caviare to the general. |
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As a result it became a real practical proposition to use the apparatus for making drawings from life. |
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We have eliminated traditional boundaries and made the proposition much clearer for shoppers. |
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Investing in a club should not be viewed as a business proposition, merely an emotional investment. |
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If that is your proposition, that seems to me to present an insuperable hurdle in your way. |
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However, he rues that the increased denomination of stamps has now made philately an expensive proposition. |
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As written, the proposition is overly broad and might have vicious unintended consequences the Legislature didn't foresee. |
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That is totally different from the proposition just made by the leader of the National Party. |
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The proposition being advanced to members of this House is an assumption that the law is unchanging. |
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Yet this proposition has profound implications for the whole process of child rearing. |
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Careful consideration was given to where the offer should be pitched and it was viewed as being a yesable proposition. |
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As a consequence, we believe that the bill has continued to evolve into a workable proposition and a good piece of legislation. |
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To conclude, it is in our interest to have them see themselves as confronted with a yesable proposition. |
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Obviously they didn't watch the press conference where we announced this proposition. |
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The government exhorts us to get off the roads and onto the railway, but it may not have considered the opposite proposition. |
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In the 1930s, the proposition concerning the absolute primacy of politics was overly dogmatized, and this still continues to make itself felt. |
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After winning a local rodeo a college friend of her brother offers her a proposition she can't refuse. |
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It suddenly occurred to her why Kyle had offered the proposition in the first place. |
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James watched her leave and thought over the proposition Veronica had offered to him. |
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The theory is that right-handed competitors are less accustomed to facing left-handers, making them a more difficult proposition. |
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His most recent deal is designed to make the combined company a more attractive proposition for investors in terms of size and product offering. |
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As I've said, this is bound to be a difficult proposition given the success of science. |
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Still, the roads in this country are not very safe at night, and the airport is still a dodgy proposition. |
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Over time, markets have always demonstrated a wonderful resiliency that makes being a bear a long-term losing proposition. |
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This led to the proposition that most of the mass in a galaxy was low luminosity mass of some kind, and this invisible mass was called dark matter. |
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Buying presents for girls is a very difficult proposition indeed. |
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This is a remarkable proposition for a war memorial to enounce. |
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This is partly due to the fact that the proposition is not distracting. |
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Few Americans appear to exemplify that proposition better than Joseph P. Kennedy. |
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For the neo-liberals, by contrast, the proposition that, when it comes, change originates mainly from the inside of particular countries is strongly supported. |
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Though he's been talking about other people's albums with all the restraint of a runaway train, analysing his own work is a different proposition entirely. |
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Money is money, but the proposition is not all that compelling once you are taxed on the income. |
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There is no mystery or magic here to the value proposition of this firm. |
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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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The first are books that bring added value to the popular, the second cheapen the whole proposition of publishing. |
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It is his submission that there is no warrant for the proposition that the claimant can rely upon matters which were unknown and could not have been known to the defendant. |
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And Everman is hoping that e-billing will actually turn into a moneymaking proposition as customers visit their local cable website to pay their bills. |
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That is why he will agree to your proposition with alacrity. |
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They adduce no evidence for this proposition, beyond the intuition that giving three vaccines simultaneously is too much for the infantile immune system. |
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He was not able to produce any authority in support of his proposition. |
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None of these institutes have made any appreciable contribution in ameliorating the harsh conditions and making agriculture an attractive proposition. |
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A consultative process lasting some six years led to the flawed proposition, which was rejected by a slender majority of those who actually voted. |
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This sort of proposition has the causal sequence the wrong way round. |
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Remember that nothing in bodybuilding is an all-or-none proposition. |
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But again, this is I think pretty much an all-or-nothing proposition. |
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He goes on to cite a number of experts to support this proposition, including some of the smartest guys in the field of national security and force structure. |
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But this is an empirical proposition, and there is reason to doubt it. |
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The conjunction of a true and a false proposition is a false proposition. |
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A magazine is a business proposition, and ads pay for the magazine. |
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What I don't understand is, if it is not a viable proposition to expand my business, how come so many new establishments are opening almost daily? |
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Our leading article in the same edition condemned the supermarket proposal and suggested that such a proposition would be better suited to a redeveloped Myrtle Walk. |
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At the end of the day it is a business proposition for the company. |
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According to the hotel authorities, the pool is a business proposition and a health choice, both of which have become non-negotiable for many a discerning customer. |
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I have a list of those who made proposals to the draft proposition. |
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The proposition was deemed unconstitutional and was not implemented. |
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The Law of Proportionate Belief states that one should believe in a certain proposition or policy prescription in proportion to the arguments for that position. |
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Even if one considered this legislation a reasonable proposition, which the Government proclaims and National supports, the reality is that it is only a small step. |
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Californians may choose to take this step on Nov.2, however they also have a proposition on the ballot that would be a step in the other direction. |
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It is a very difficult proposition, as she has no idea who this guy is. |
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Giving up alcohol might prove a trickier long-term proposition, although he has, for the first time in his life, admitted that he has been seeing an alcohol counsellor. |
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Investments that rely on the misfortune of others or the good will of sharks are a losing proposition in the long term, whatever the quarterly earnings report says. |
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But the proposition had eventually broken apart in the churning, acidic stomach of Washington politics. |
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Every simple proposition contains two terms, predicate and subject. |
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In its strongest form it demands a list of observable consequences and a formal demonstration that they are indeed consequences of the proposition claimed. |
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Taking account of this general proposition, the question of seisin in this context must be decided in accordance with the national procedural laws of Contracting States. |
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Let us say that I could have rendered a proposition false in the weak sense iff I was able to do something such that, if I did it, the proposition would have been falsified. |
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It is generous in its scope, but the generosity is based on long-term realism and the proposition that reform and change is not only necessary, but unavoidable. |
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Such a cost-benefit ratio lends weight to the proposition that, in many cases, infrastructure can be self-supporting, generating its own land value revenue source. |
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This unit is subject to attack and has a certain round trip time, so rearming units in the middle of combat at a distant front line can be a dicey proposition. |
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The latter will now go head to head with Fox's Fringe, a risky proposition given the overlap in demos. |
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Is that not the key proposition which the parties seek to controvert? |
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I think if a doctor is seriously putting forward that proposition, it would be quite inappropriate to just do neuropsychological testing and leave it at that. |
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An offer constitutes a definite proposition by the offeror signifying his willingness to be bound by the terms stated therein as soon as it has been accepted by the offeree. |
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In neither of these cases, however, was the contrary proposition argued. |
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Like yacht and horse racing, wine making is a wildly expensive proposition, says Michael Mondavi, founder of folio Wines. |
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The third and final issue to be examined starts with the proposition that the military element of national power is a rather blunt instrument, not a precision tool. |
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This development was important because the rule was meant to be invariable, such that it constituted absolutely reliable support for the proving of the thesis proposition. |
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In particular he has inveighed against the proposition that women should be encouraged by law and circumstance to rise through the ranks of business or politics. |
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The converse proposition is that if priority is given in that tension to ensuring that people are not out-of-pocket, all sorts of meritorious cases might not get to court. |
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Evidence exists that weight gain increases cancer risk, but the converse proposition that weight loss would reduce risk of the disease has not been confirmed. |
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This case is not however authority for the proposition that the exercise of a lien against the would-be seller would amount to conversion against the true owner. |
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But neither proposition is looking particularly strong at the moment. |
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Attacking comedian Zach Galifianakis is a no-win proposition for the GOP sugar daddies, says Paul Begala. |
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Whether the idea of fairness can attract a voting majority is, alas, an iffy proposition. |
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Travel stories can be a dodgy proposition, quite often varying between the detached, amused air of Western superiority and the slavish worship of all things foreign. |
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The Crown's claim to bona vacantia was represented by the Treasury Solicitor on whose instructions Mr Leech of Counsel addressed me in relation to proposition. |
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She marched me through a maze of corridors as I began wondering if dropping breadcrumbs behind me would not necessarily be an unintelligent proposition. |
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In support of this proposition, three corollary arguments are presented. |
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Hence, our results provide data substantiating the earlier proposition that protein binding and protein folding have similar underlying principles. |
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But measuring up to managed care companies' requirements can be a chicken-and-egg proposition, in that a site has to be established and well known. |
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The nine-mile route with 4000 ft of climb is a challenging proposition. |
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In this regard it would go some way towards making it a more attractive proposition for inward investment and would help to reduce the peripherality of the region. |
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We offer tangible value to the individuals behind the idea and then, by hothousing the concept, we offer investors a very sound proposition indeed. |
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The guy pauses a moment, then grants that this proposition seems doubtful. |
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However, welcoming refugees is an expensive and potentially risky proposition for European countries. |
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It is not wrong to ask for government help, but the automakers should come up with a win-win proposition. |
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For it is an elementary proposition that if a vote is not cast for one of the two highest candidates it is completely shorn of its elective power. |
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At the top of the list is the simple proposition that by adding a reference to the first mortgage as a prior encumbrance the lease was encumbered. |
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Dow says he didn't have to think too hard about the value proposition. |
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On further dips, its value proposition gets really interesting. |
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In each case, the proposition expressed is argued to be that which would be expressed if the indefinite determiner were replaced by the existential quantifier. |
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Petitioner raises two arguments in opposition to the proposition that Congress has acquiesced in this longstanding practice of claims settlement by executive agreement. |
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Those cases, stand for the proposition that a trial court does not lose jurisdiction of the matter until a valid sentence has been put into execution. |
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The first was that responses that are aligned to the preference of the question, and that affirm its primary proposition, are more frequent than disaligned responses. |
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The disaligned viewpoint can be construed as a potential viewpoint of the reader, or from the context as that of a third party or as one generated as an inference of a proposition in the text. |
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Unlike animism or polytheism, monotheism is a reasonable proposition. |
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American politics has also too frequently become an all-or-nothing proposition, making the USA the United States of agita. |
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The unpalatability of a proposition, however, has no bearing on its truth. |
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Sometimes they completely miss out on the power of a value proposition. |
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I think the proposition is still debatable, or at least still in formation. |
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For a time, it seemed that the Olympics might no longer be a viable financial proposition. |
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Boaty took the proposition one step further by volunteering to produce this first venture on the strawhat circuit. |
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It is an absolutist proposition that aims to demolish Left Utopianism and cement Right Utopianism. |
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Challenging the revanchists on their message is not an attractive proposition, given the apparent popularity of the message with the voters. |
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Value proposition was also used in the later stages to evaluate proposed solutions in terms of feasibility and interestingness. |
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Pescara developed the brand and customer strategy to communicate and deliver the Company's core value proposition through all areas of marketing. |
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If we ever misstate the facts it is, alas, because sometimes we mismean the proposition that we utter. |
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The people considered the proposition, for it would be innovatory to replace the corpse. |
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Sentences containing catenatives have one proposition, coded by the main verb following these. |
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Any two dihedral angles are to one another as the angles contained by perpendiculars drawn as in the last proposition. |
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The subject and predicate of a proposition are, after Aristotle, together called its terms or extremes. |
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Traditionally eiders are hunted from rocks, a tough proposition involving chasing the tideline up and down and moving the spread constantly. |
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So, using a muscle becomes more of an all-or-nothing proposition for chimps. |
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It is a proposition which I venture to say no one in Scotland or England who was not a lawyer would for one moment doubt. |
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This allows for nonviolent resistance to the government because opposition is not a life or death proposition. |
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The comprehension of unformable laws may seem rather an incomprehensible proposition. |
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Our English nouns remain unchanged, whether they form the subject or the object of a proposition. |
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The final chapter gives the conditions required for a per se notum proposition. |
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Icelanders began to trade for grain from continental Europe, which was an expensive proposition. |
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Presenting an attractive, well-groomed appearance without wearing pantihose can be an intimidating proposition. |
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Professor Dodd and Professor Malcolm Shaw of Leeds University supported this proposition. |
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And being of warm blood he had not the phlegm tacitly to negative any proposition by unresponsive inaction. |
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At the time pay television was an almost untested proposition in the UK market, as was charging fans to watch live televised football. |
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Proofreader made a most encouraging debut for Neil Mulholland and looks a tempting proposition in the 32RedSport. |
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At some point in the conversation my name came up, and I readily agreed to their proposition. |
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Quite approachable but sporty targets, the 35-60-pound javelina is a high-odds proposition for diligent bowhunters. |
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We both believe that parenting is an all-in or nothing proposition. |
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We knew this would be a big swing, an all-or-nothing proposition. |
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This introduces the intriguing, but untestable proposition that the principals' communications with agents may be influenced by 'herd' effects. |
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He died one day after the proposition was defeated in the House of Lords, and he is commemorated with a memorial plaque on Kailpot Crag. |
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In Italy, filibustering has ancient traditions and is expressed overall with the proposition of legal texts on which interventions take place. |
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Each part is a categorical proposition, and each categorical proposition contains two categorical terms. |
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In intuitionistic logic, a proposition implies its double negation but not conversely. |
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The negation of a proposition p is notated in different ways in various contexts of discussion and fields of application. |
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Thus, prohibiting human sacrifice during this festival was an untenable proposition for the Aztecs. |
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This supports the proposition that early human populations moved from Africa into Arabia during the Late Pleistocene. |
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This proposition is fatal to this appeal, and renders this court jurisdictionless and powerless to proceed to review the cause. |
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This proposition was later challenged, and it was argued that the 12th century was a period of greater cultural achievement. |
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A conditional proposition is one which asserts the dependence of one categorical proposition on another. |
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Majority rule, loosely put, is the proposition that 51 percent of the people should be able to get whatever they want. |
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Her theory rejects the basic proposition that humans evolved from apes. |
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The gambler set the second stage of the proposition for Tony's restaurant. |
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The problem lay in forming a primitive proposition which encompassed this and would act as the basis for all of logic. |
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The presence of an ethical symbol in a proposition adds nothing to its factual content. |
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It is a universally quantified proposition that contains no exceptive clauses. |
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The only issue he argues against is the proposition that God cannot have determinate knowledge of the future. |
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A referendum was duly held on 5 June 1975, and the proposition to continue membership was passed with a substantial majority. |
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But the Steelmen have to represent a value proposition at 16-5 against a Hemel Hempstead side who are no great shakes themselves. |
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Such a proposition must resort to some degree of overgeneralization on both sides. |
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Hess admits that many entrepreneurial efforts are apt to fail, making support for them a risky proposition. |
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The House isn't likely to go along unless the proposition is delivered on a tea cart pushed by Gov. |
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For a businessman who has the profit motive as the prime interest, it is a losing proposition to offer below or above market wages to workers. |
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This proposition Heller takes considerable pleasure in ridiculing. |
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Under the council's rules, at least two-thirds of members at a meeting must vote in favour of a proposition to bestow Aldermanship. |
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The Type II process was complicated by the proposition of Vickers that there should be a move to the newly developed turboprop power. |
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The removal of the heated air, steam, stive, and flour from the millstones, is a proposition which does not appear to be more than sufficiently well understood. |
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Beatrix agrees to the proposition and is quite convinced that she will not change her mind, telling her parents to prepare for an October wedding. |
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This proposition, made within 15 minutes of conversation between the two, appalled the air hostess but she chose to ignore it given the reputation of the player. |
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Christ's Hospital in Horsham is one of the examples, large proposition of its students are funded by its charitable foundation or by various benefactors. |
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But what about the neo-Malthusian proposition that unsustainable economic practices lead, at some point, to environmental overload and social catastrophe? |
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Life baronies under the Life Peerages Act are created by the Sovereign but, in practice, none are granted except upon the proposition of the Prime Minister. |
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The proposition that James had ceased to be King had been the rallying point of the two parties which had made up the majority. But from that point their path diverged. |
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Previous researchers have considered the possible effect of program trading on volatility, a proposition which requires a model for the natural evolution of volatility. |
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Indeed, until the 1940s no one knew how to prove, even to state properly, the kernel of truth in this proposition about perfectly competitive market. |
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