Plans are afoot to refashion the uniform in a bid to make the movement founded by Lord Baden-Powell more appealing to teenagers in the cyber-age. |
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In my vain yearning to refashion my self in the model of Nigella, I would be wise to consider several basic truths. |
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One possibility would be to suggest ways to refashion the treaty to improve it, rather than to abandon it altogether. |
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Another set of approaches for enhancing resource productivity attempts to refashion production processes. |
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They can fashion and refashion their identities, and through much of their lives that is just what they do. |
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Robert Dayton plays a recently divorced nebbish who decides to refashion himself as a ladies man. |
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With a little help, they are ready to roll up their sleeves and do their part to refashion the future. |
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At the intermediate level, users are able to refashion and combine learned material to meet their immediate communication and learning needs. |
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The preached word does not merely communicate an abstract truth but can refashion lives and society. |
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How can we refashion the processes of architectural creativity in the context of globalisation and the age of sustainable development? |
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But it is possible to make choices, to recover a portion of this field, to cut and refashion a section of the legacy for the imagination. |
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As this information spreads, community colleges and institutions of higher learning will have to refashion themselves. |
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When the facts did not suit her, my mother would go to great lengths to refashion them altogether. |
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Now, they are looking for a way to refashion memories even years after they were created. |
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Sulla used his power as dictator to refashion the Roman state. |
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Kundera was reacting against the efforts of 20th-century totalitarian regimes to refashion novelists as propagandists. |
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Mastering a tradition of authoritative texts and the facility to refashion these authorities in contemporary contexts were essential elements of clerkly discourse. |
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Not everyone in Chile needs to trick out their entrées to refashion the public's perception of Chilean cuisine. |
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Its founding fathers had the prestige to refashion the nation to confront military and economic threats. |
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The crisis offers a unique chance to refashion globalisation to work for the majority. |
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How can they remodel and rethink it, restructure the State and refashion society to make it fairer, and create a different kind of future? |
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The report offers the United Nations a unique opportunity to refashion and renew our institutions. |
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The challenge lies ahead in how to refashion our tools and reformulate our strategies to capture the opportunities and to make more of a difference. |
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To create, refashion, imagine and invigorate. |
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They moved to refashion old community associations and create new ones. |
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When, in the 1970s, it became possible to isolate individual genes, refashion them and copy them in cells, huge commercial possibilities opened up. |
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Indeed, it may even prise apart and refashion Europe's political families. |
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During the 1990s, when the world was gripped by dotcom fever, he cleverly sought to refashion an old-economy business literally as grey as they come into something more alluring. |
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In January 1540, King James V commissioned the royal goldsmith, John Mosman, to refashion the Crown of Scotland. |
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