It is therefore forbidden to provoke a person, thereby causing him to sin in anger, even though it is not certain that he will do so. |
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In these days of media gross-outs, it's incredibly hard to provoke a visceral reaction in anyone anymore. |
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They would sing, dance, and even strip naked at social occasions to provoke distinguished guests into offering donations. |
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So bold an enterprise, so boldly undertaken, is bound to provoke not merely thought but dissent. |
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You can provoke consideration of the grandest themes by telling a simple, everyday story. |
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So why does the idea of expert patients provoke such antipathy within the medical profession? |
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We observe that the masochist has constantly to provoke the object in order to project his own aggression on to him. |
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Sectarian tensions had already been running high, and the abductions threaten to provoke armed conflict. |
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This position requires no formal qualifications beyond antiquity and a willingness to amuse and provoke in equal measure. |
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Perhaps even less unified than Acmeism, Futurism sought to provoke and outrage. |
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It is inaccurate to call the tsunami an act of God, because God did not intervene to provoke the disaster. |
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It was best not to provoke them, and others like them, at a time when maximum unity was necessary. |
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The Internet poses several potential challenges to the regime that provoke a reactive state response. |
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Hence even if disarmament were achieved, conflicts would eventually provoke rearming. |
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However, it is the possibility of charges under s. 22 of the Theft Act 1968 for handling stolen goods that will provoke the most argument. |
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Although her children are relieved when she wakes up, the doctor tells them that any sudden shock could provoke another heart attack. |
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Such a large-scale expansion would be bound to provoke opposition from countryside groups and local residents. |
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But a country can hardly expect amity and friendship from others while continuing to provoke their most sensitive spots. |
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Thus to reply to his caveats in cold print rather than over warm food would seem to provoke argument where I sense none is intended. |
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Only the husband may repudiate his spouse, although the wife may provoke him to make that decision. |
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I know that she shoots from the hip and is liable to provoke righteous indignation. |
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These assumptions often provoke heated disagreements because it is so hard to find anyplace to look to settle them. |
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The political coup by the radical right wing has already begun to provoke a political response from below. |
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For a while they tried everything they could think of to get a rise out of him, to provoke a response. |
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Many now argue that the reporter is needed to provoke engagement with the viewer. |
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There are some really good movies that didn't even get a look-in, and many that will no doubt provoke surprise and comment. |
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These proposals were eventually rejected for fear that the use of the bomb might provoke a nuclear exchange with the Soviet Union. |
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In his intentions, this running fire of a provocative and fascinating thesis should provoke a healthy optimism. |
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It relied on what the French or Russians did and the actions of one would provoke a German response and not the other way round. |
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He'd often lucked into local publicity by pushing the limits of good taste, but he'd never actually set out to provoke. |
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Either she was blissfully innocent of being a tease or she knew what sort of effect that was likely to provoke. |
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So as far as you could tell, do you think the rumours of police infiltrating the protests to provoke violence were largely true? |
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They did this despite warnings from a number of quarters that the secessionist acts would provoke violent conflicts between ethnic groups. |
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This development in turn would almost certainly provoke another military coup to prevent it from happening. |
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By bluffing and faking, you have to somehow provoke and deceive this system of defense. |
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House dust mite being the wee beastie that lives in carpets, cushions and bedding, and seems to provoke asthma. |
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It would appear that most inorganic mercuric and mercurous salts do not provoke immune reactions. |
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Singaporeans have deliberately tried to suppress their ethnic Chinese cultural characteristics lest they provoke a counter-reaction from Muslims. |
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And yet there is no disputing that the event, its militant tone and its choice of target will provoke terrible memories and associations. |
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France countered by getting Russia to propose a general congress, intended to isolate Austria and provoke a casus belli. |
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The purpose was to provoke a response that could become a casus belli for invasion. |
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This traditional group of people no longer seems to provoke the interest of the Bulgarian people. |
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I know, the author's intention is to provoke strong reaction but there's more to it, and it sounds too much like a trial balloon to me. |
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Genetic art can help provoke public dialogue about bioengineering and its effect on society. |
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With a diverse mix of issue and feature based stories, the series well seek to entertain and provoke in equal measure. |
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These peculiar blobby silhouettes will surely provoke breathless imaginations. |
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So what would provoke an exceedingly individualistic, sufficiently unbeholden band to pledge such slavish devotion to a classic rock titan? |
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These stories are rife on the streets and provoke much fear, among the rich and poor equally. |
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My aim is to provoke a debate on a sacrosanct subject that has remained undebatable for far too long. |
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But we can provoke a quicker second hit by treating the animals with a chemical mutagen or a carcinogen. |
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News that two young East Yorkshire men are set to become dot com millionaires will provoke a myriad of reactions. |
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He seems to feel duty-bound to provoke a reaction whether it is outrage, exasperation, outright hostility or unreserved admiration. |
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Any attempt to drag these senators through the courts will provoke further protests and unrest. |
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Other flies are downright lures, which look nothing like a natural but provoke a response when pulled fast past a feeding trout. |
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It is entirely proper that such a major work, with its unsparing criticisms, should provoke a response from within the establishment. |
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While this story is not entirely without gaping plot holes or rampant silliness, it should at least provoke a good supply of laughs and snickers. |
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Such outlandish and unsubstantiated claims should provoke skepticism in all but the most gullible. |
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Not only did this nightmarish thing provoke instant nausea, it blocked my entire view of the stage! |
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The matter of UK versus US English continues to provoke erudite and informed opinion. |
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Flouting of convention can provoke conflict which is just as sharp as that caused by non-observance of laws. |
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Although nonsense words lose their novelty very quickly, when first presented they often provoke interest, curiosity, and even some amusement. |
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And to attack us in a way that might provoke a response, I don't think is in his interest. |
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Admission was free and the four played for nothing, which has yet to provoke the organisers' gratitude. |
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These anonymous briefings have been finely calculated to provoke a mass of critical scrutiny about the enterprise minister. |
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Foods that tend not to provoke an insulin response include meat, fish, eggs, green vegetables, most fruits, nuts, beans and pulses. |
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Perhaps they stayed their hand because they knew closing a newspaper would provoke criticism stateside. |
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We also hope that these papers will stimulate interest and provoke responses which readers may wish to share. |
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The dispute is still thought likely to provoke a stormy, if not violent, showdown. |
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But on this particularly sunny April Saturday, the circling helicopters and marching Orangemen did not provoke trouble. |
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However he sounded a note of caution, warning that the glut of orders could provoke a disturbing crisis in manufacturing capacity locally. |
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Matters of preference, like music and interior design, do not provoke moral outrage. |
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In other words, adopt interpretations that will provoke a legislative override that will make it clear what the legislature really wants today. |
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This initial scepticism was compounded by the suspicion that infections might actually provoke allergy. |
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That is why even a kids' film like The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe can provoke such hostility. |
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Avoid wearing shiny or sparkling swimwear as this makes you look like fish-like and may provoke a shark attack or big fish attack. |
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The opening scene is likely to provoke a Pavlovian drool reaction in the audience. |
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The expressions on the faces of the players in close-up provoke emotion in the audience. |
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The shooting appears to be a clumsy attempt to provoke violence that would justify their continued presence in the country. |
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However, the Oompa-Loompas, a rare tribe of identical pygmies who work for Wonka provoke mixed feelings. |
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War would not only sever these supplies, but would also provoke a big influx of refugees. |
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In other areas, sleeping on a pillow stuffed with Mugwort leaves is claimed to provoke dreams that reveal one's future. |
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Incorporation of harder or more fibrous material in the diet could provoke such a need. |
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The question is why an innocuous Hollywood film should provoke such a reaction. |
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What Barsamian's questions provoke is an eloquent and desperate plea for direct, instantaneous action. |
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His record-breaking performance will provoke a mixture of congratulation and resentment. |
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Certainly they're not going start a war, chemical, biological or nuclear within the country unless we provoke them to it by invading the country. |
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Yet these are still fascinating questions, questions that provoke us and bring forth all kinds of creative thought and invention. |
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You can provoke them, you can alarm them, you can put rockets under them and turn flame-throwers on them. |
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At some points, the irreconcilable differences revealed by the different exhibits actually fuel debate and provoke thought. |
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Regiments travelled extensively to attack each other and a host of enemies who were foolhardy enough to provoke us. |
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Even the smallest bunch of freesias bought with carefully hoarded pocket money can provoke tears or pride and delight. |
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The fugato textures provoke the disturbance of complacencies even while the tonal centres remain secure. |
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And that is because no sooner are they announced than they provoke widespread fear and condemnation from an army of professional naysayers. |
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The new field of imagery may not provoke the passions of an image war, but we are often troubled by a pronounced need to know. |
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We don't bring up to these issues to provoke people to throw a massive revolt or to propagandise political left views. |
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It can be used as needed or prophylactically during times of increased stress that may provoke symptoms. |
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In his debut novel he sets out to provoke strong reactions and, given his subject matter, doubtless he will succeed. |
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The anger lasted for a long time, trying to provoke her into saying things she would regret. |
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We managed to provoke him to get up once, when he challenged Opposition members to substantiate their arguments. |
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Secondly, we need a leader of charisma to badger and provoke his colleagues into action. |
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She is also comfortable following a traditional line with novels that do not seek to challenge or provoke the reader. |
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Rather, they make her work harder to achieve it and they also provoke her to motivate other associates for the cause. |
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There are times when you have to provoke people, challenge them to go further. |
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So we don't want to do anything to provoke him or to incite the violence we're trying to prevent. |
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I couldn't see why anyone would wish to provoke me to the point of anger over not having a significant other. |
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Men of all ages simply kept their distance, though sometimes every now and then one would come and try to anger and provoke her. |
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I look forward to the discussion my choices provoke and the number of irate emails I get before Godwin's Law comes into play. |
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A disagreement between four boys was all it took to provoke the gang into descending on the area and attacking people at random, the court heard. |
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Many feel the capture of their leader will provoke diehard terrorists into wreaking ever more horrific reprisals. |
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Profanity is defined as language so grossly offensive as to provoke violent resentment. |
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I was neither one of those nitwits who wasted my time on a futile endeavor to provoke her, nor one of the curious who was drawn to this unusual character. |
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In equivocal cases or when a patient has been on a gluten-free diet, a gluten challenge test may be used to provoke the gastrointestinal lesion and serologic response. |
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They may not take offense at the men's do-rags and throwback baseball caps cocked to the side, but some of the women's tight jeans and skirts would certainly provoke ire. |
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The first is the continuing power of album cover art to provoke emotional responses from people normally unmoved by graphic design and visual culture. |
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Coming up later, we travel to the Australian National University in Canberra, where artists go bush in search of inspiration and provoke heated debate while they're at it. |
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The holiday may see more Hongkongers hit the streets, which in turn could provoke the authorities to take more-draconian measures. |
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According to Hamburger, the devotional image develops in order to record and provoke the visionary experience cultivated by the nuns and, to a point, imitated by the laity. |
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Under what conditions does populism temper the potential ethnicity to provoke disintegrative social conflict, and instead promote pluralist democracy? |
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But lin can also produce the feelings of existential wonder that all good novelists provoke. |
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He tried to provoke Mr Archer, who is in his 40s, into a street fight but he did not rise to the bait, even when he had turned away and was pushed in the back. |
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They're walking punchlines to jokes that don't even provoke a chuckle. |
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Chelsea's artful and stylish Portuguese manager courts controversy so often that it's clearly part of his game plan to provoke and unsettle the opposition. |
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Earlier this year, the British journal Lancet published a report saying that a test of strands of George III's hair contained arsenic, which can provoke porphyria attacks. |
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Actress sienna Miller described paparazzi spitting at her to provoke a reaction they could photograph. |
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It is abrasive to the skin and may provoke allergic reactions. |
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And it might even cause Georgians to miscalculate American military support against Russia and foolishly provoke Moscow. |
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It's a test, designed to provoke an emotional response. Shall we continue? |
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Acetylcholine is released by neurons to provoke muscle contraction. |
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Mr Baggs expected his decision to stand in the election would provoke controversy, but said he is prepared to put his head above the parapet for what he believes in. |
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But he insisted that there is nothing about her death to provoke additional scrutiny. |
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I think it's meant to provoke a reaction to a classroom full of students at Columbia University Facebooking and GMailing and IMing instead of paying attention in class. |
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A look back at his work would reveal a persistent obsession with pain, suffering and the sinisterly hypnotic potential of martyrdom to provoke and inspire. |
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The cast members in the wings looked on with mouths agape, but the two on the stage didn't notice, caught up in the sadness and regret an impossible love could provoke. |
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She was more interested in the way fashion played out in popular culture, they way it could arouse, empower and provoke. |
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His declaration is the first time a sitting Conservative MP has advocated a complete break with the EU and is sure to provoke a sharp rebuke from party whips. |
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I mean isn't that exactly what the print media and the media more generally should be doing in order to stir up the imagination and to provoke debate within the community? |
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A single untied shoelace, one feels, could provoke a major tragedy. |
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Every designer deserves a degree of poetic license, leeway to shock and provoke. |
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He said there is no deliberate attempt to provoke feelings of isolation, but the looped video of a train constantly leaving the viewer stranded is a touch eerie. |
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Or will it intimidate the country into greater obedience, fearful that disobedience will provoke a whirlwind? |
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Flexion force applied against long finger extension distal to the proximal interphalangeal joint may provoke pain over the extensor muscle mass in the proximal forearm. |
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It is in the film to horrify and provoke an emotional reaction. |
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City officials are worried that another horrific police killing could provoke an explosion of popular anger given the deepening social crisis in New York. |
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They wanted to see if they could provoke a strong reaction from me. |
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Perhaps your article will provoke more reminiscences from those who remember him still, and perhaps this will prompt an enlightened curator or two to try to do more for him. |
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The Dark is based on Simon Maginn's 1994 novel, Sheep, and is designed to provoke memories of classic supernatural chillers set in rural settings such as The Wicker Man. |
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Spectator, both to entertain and to provoke discussion regarding serious philosophical matters. |
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In 1664, English ships began to provoke the Dutch by not saluting in return. |
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Nor does television screen violence provoke nationwide carbon-copy murders. |
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Should it even try, it would likely provoke an instant scarcity and quickly drive up the prices of spices astronomically. |
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For this reason some overfamiliar or recycled accounts provoke boredom or disbelief, and can be made to seem propagandistic. |
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Public debt of this magnitude can provoke punishing tax rates and crowd out private investment. |
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Using these powers in contravention of tradition would generally provoke a constitutional crisis. |
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Whoever with intent to provoke a breach of the peace, or under circumstances such that a breach of the peace may be occasioned thereby. |
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Moderate demands, but enough to provoke the employers and the forces of law and order. |
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It is, of course, the kind of survey that will provoke much wailing and gnashing of teeth among fustier members of society. |
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From ancient Sanskrit to this very moment, chiasmi have been employed to inspire, insult, seduce, teach, and provoke. |
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While the violent death of a narcotrafficker might not seem that unusual, the straightforward photos provoke a visceral reaction. |
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They never wanted to provoke, disobey, or be activists of any sort. |
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Insulin tolerance test causes hypokalaemia and can provoke cardiac arrhythmias. |
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These so-called honeypots feign weaknesses to provoke attacks and as such act as early warning systems. |
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If John is dead set on marrying Catherine, his parents' objection will only provoke a falling out. |
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However, the choice of a husband might also provoke political instability or even insurrection. |
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Napoleon refused to manumit the Russian serfs because of concerns this might provoke a reaction in his army's rear. |
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Sutcliffe went in hard, did everything to provoke him. Got him as mad as a cut snake. |
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Burke knew that many members of the Whig Party did not share Fox's views and he wanted to provoke them into condemning the French Revolution. |
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Orwell liked to provoke arguments by challenging the status quo, but he was also a traditionalist with a love of old English values. |
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It must be stressed that the purpose of such lists when published has never been to ascribe any kind of ruling but rather to provoke discussion. |
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It has long been recognised that some cultivars provoke dermatitis more readily than others. |
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In 1105, Henry sent his friend Robert Fitzhamon and a force of knights into the Duchy, apparently to provoke a confrontation with Duke Robert. |
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The book is sure to provoke controversy, especially Cross's emphasis on a gradual, largely unidirectional process of change. |
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The editorial said that if the Philippines continued to provoke China, a counterstrike will be hard to avoid. |
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Henry invaded again in July 1106, hoping to provoke a decisive battle. |
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Fathers, provoke not your children to anger, lest they be discouraged. |
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According to the researchers, the Yop M-mediated inhibition of caspase-1 is required for Yersinia to subvert immune signaling, delay inflammation and provoke severe illness. |
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Those particular 'fans' were seemingly on a mission to march to the far end of the ground to provoke the Castleford fans into some kind of confrontation. |
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All meeting rooms at the Hotel Sax Chicago are designed to provoke the utmost creativity and willingness to participate from professionals of all industries. |
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Fearing Suetonius's punitive policies would provoke further rebellion, Nero replaced the governor with the more conciliatory Publius Petronius Turpilianus. |
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Breakdown products from the necrotic osteocytes provoke an inflammatory response that represents the initiation of the body's attempt at repair of the infracted area. |
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The procedure was suspect on a number of points, which would later provoke criticism of the tribunal by the chief inquisitor who investigated the trial after the war. |
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More common techniques used to provoke all patients with seizures include hyperventilation, photic stimulation, sleep deprivation, and AED withdrawal. |
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Several Provoke photographers were children during World War II and were obviously influenced by the atomic age. |
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Bell Laboratories introduces its newest product to help PMPs control rats, PROVOKE Professional Rat Attractant, a food-based gel which entices rats to rat traps. |
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