We can propound the idea that entertainment is not optional, but a constituent element of human development. |
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And how can those who profess to revere this charismatic figure, propound views so intolerantly divergent from those of their great leader? |
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These works actively propound the belief that the unexamined death is not worth dying. |
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That's not a very romantic vision to propound right after Valentine's Day, but, as they say on the Continent, c'est la vie. |
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The President was allowed to unashamedly propound misleading political propaganda at the Johannesburg Summit. |
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Sometimes the State or certain government agencies propound rumours with the clear objective of manipulating public opinion. |
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Such an argument is very simple to propound since it has no technical basis, unless considering the very long term. |
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It also attempted to propound the idea that stakeholders vary in their importance or potential for good forestry and livelihoods. |
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It's just too tempting to use cable TV's monologue format to propound comfortable dogma and ignore unsettling counter-evidence. |
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In doing this, we must guard against a tendency to propound intellectual interpretations, as if that were the point. |
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They each propound basic spiritual truths and standards of behaviour that constitute the very basis of social cohesion and collective purpose. |
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The White Paper's purpose is not to put forward a programme of measures, for the Commission has no miracle remedies to propound. |
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Provided that you agree to this, I shall resolutely propound these principles to the European Council on 19 and 20 June in Brussels. |
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Every day propound to yourself a rosary or chaplet of good works to present to God at night. |
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He does propound to you a similitude from yourselves: do ye have partners among those whom your right hands possess, to share as equals in the wealth We have bestowed on you? Do ye fear them as ye fear each other? |
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Untethered from good, practical Minnesotan oversight, Bachmann is free to propound whatever messages her fillings are picking up these days – and the DNC can't even easily fundraise off them. |
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He has the right personal qualifications to propound his views. |
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Over the course of four years of congressional hearings McCarthy used innuendo and intimidation to propound charges that, in virtually every case, proved groundless. |
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That is why the philosophy that I try to propound in the tenth European Development Fund is all about saying that we absolutely must make these States more able to provide. |
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It is even less helpful to propound remedies, which in practice serve only to alleviate certain consequences for the moment but which, in the short and medium term, will not change anything. |
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Such are the similitudes which We propound to men, that they may reflect. |
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As in other fields of scholarship, if one neglects what has been done, one is likely to repeat errors and mistakes and propound views that have already been found inadequate. |
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Sade's philosophy flowed from his radical egotism, which led him to propound militant antitheism. |
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Whilst pretending not to realise what a profound effect such policies will have on the economic and social situation of the Member States, they continue to propound more of the same, which we roundly reject. |
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It can be merely descriptive or it can propound substantive propositions. |
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While we certainly wish to cast no doubt on your linguistic dexterity, we feel it safe to say that we will understand you all the better if you propound your text in your own rather than a foreign tongue. |
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In indirect appeals, the situation is somewhat different. The Constitutional Court can propound a different interpretation from the one given by the court that put the question. |
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