Secularism does not reject religion but attempts to bar any single religion from gaining political control. |
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In the case of symmetrical lupoid onychodystrophy, Greyhounds form antibodies against their toe nails, and reject them. |
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I reject totally any statement by the opposition that we have in some way been ambivalent. |
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The system will reject any amendments that are on paper or do not have the appropriate password. |
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While they do not reject all modern technology, the Amish recognize that some are more threatening to their community and its values than others. |
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As a woman, how do you reject a man who is amorous in his advances in a way that doesn't scar him for life. |
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Such a rethinking would not necessarily reject outright the possibility that such images represent their subjects through physiognomic likeness. |
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A jury could reject entirely your client's statements and say all of the evidence is consistent with his being involved in the contract killing. |
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Like other constructivists, he came to reject pure art as a parasitical activity. |
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For a moment, she was afraid he was going to reject her until she felt his hand covering hers, interlacing their fingers together. |
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Do you reject this idea because you've thought through the issue, considered it from various angles, possibly testing it and then rejecting it? |
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Should you have reasons to reject this offer, please destroy this mail, as any leakage of this information will be too bad for us. |
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There were significant restrictions on the freedom of individuals to question or reject church doctrine. |
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Must we reject the theory of plate tectonics because the movement of the earth's crust cannot be reproduced? |
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Of course, when the likes of Miller reject God's propositional revelation in Scripture, they are misleading themselves. |
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The government also decided to reject the review body's recommendation that betting should be allowed on the National Lottery. |
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With respect to the many systems objection, an obvious first move is to reject its identification of coherence with mere logical consistency. |
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They reject classical liberalism's singularly optimistic view of international relations. |
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It's quite possible to reject social conservatism without falling into some exaggerated libertinism. |
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For Sartre, we should reject intellectualism, we should reject all metaphysical speculation, including philosophy itself. |
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Previously there had been a presumption in favour of housing, making it difficult to reject plans for flats and apartments. |
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They reject conventional norms and rules of warfare and fight with asymmetric means. |
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The need of the electorate was to reject and eject a corrupt administration, Labour being an inoffensive alternative. |
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Finnie's decision to reject an organic action plan has been widely condemned. |
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Thus they must reject that conciliar document and not just its implementation. |
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Some children show signs of good engraftment initially, but ultimately reject the donor marrow. |
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I reject also that it is a result which arises from the application of common sense. |
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Residents are still concerned about the plans and are lobbying Councilors to reject them. |
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During these trials the ability of the missile to reject countermeasures and remain locked on to its target was assessed. |
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A telltale sign of this trick is the rule, established by the assertor, that one may not reject any portion of the assertion. |
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Unfortunately, I think this is used as an excuse to reject the need for a comprehensible plot or characterisation. |
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To carry this through, workers must decisively reject all forms of communalism and racism. |
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However, those who reject a physicalist ontology of consciousness must find ways of modeling it as a nonphysical aspect of reality. |
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After all, theoretical purists reject the idea that we should lump different and incommensurable arguments into one broad sweep. |
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The only way to destroy theism is to reject all forms of transcendence, personalism, and dualism. |
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Arius did not reject the idea that the Son was fully God, but merely asserted that he had not been God coeternally with the Father. |
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Certain people, particularly those who have an almost idolatrous view of human reason, will reject this concept outright. |
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I reject and denounce pay-to-play politics and have no involvement whatsoever in any wrongdoing. |
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Last week, Riverside County voted 3-2 to reject a proposal to provide clean hypodermic needles to intravenous drug users. |
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In your particular case the airline is within its rights to reject your compensation claim. |
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But to reject process cladism on the austere grounds of some idealised pattern cladist purity of inference is equally mistaken. |
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He said Australians would emphatically reject a hung Parliament at the next poll. |
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This, coupled with Norway's decision to reject the European Union, suggests a simmering and underestimated particularism and nationalism. |
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The Parliament has the power to reject the budget and fire the Commission if it so chooses. |
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For reasons to which I have referred already I would reject each of those criticisms. |
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We reject your attempt to portray our community as a howling wilderness of thieves as a baseless and destructive smear. |
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Equally chowderheaded was the European decision to reject the merger between the two companies on grounds that were spurious, at best. |
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I reject the notion that this is a superweed or that it will confer genetic resistance on other weeds and make them superweeds. |
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Strikes that crippled North Yorkshire last month are expected to be repeated as union chiefs urge council workers to reject latest pay offers. |
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It has been a sign of heresy to reject or ignore any part or portion of Holy Writ. |
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There are many unique qualities to this film that reject the formulaic Hollywoodization of historical figures and battles. |
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Virtually all wives had one, and probably many, opportunities to comply with or reject an unwanted sexual overture. |
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Misinformation and fear also cause some families to reject children who are HIV-positive or who are perceived to be. |
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The imprisoned, the hungry, and many other sufferers all reject the proposed bargain. |
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If two-thirds of voters in any three provinces reject the charter in the referendum, the constitution will be defeated. |
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But, equally, I reject the claimant's counsel's submission that the defendants have brought this all on themselves. |
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To reject giving a child a jab in favour of chancing it with the disease is to absolve oneself of responsibility. |
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The body uses humoral and cellular immune responses to reject a transplanted graft. |
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All the animals on the farm reject the duck, until a twister threatens the henhouse, dropping the baby chicks in the river. |
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People choose not to buy advertised goods, and even to stridently reject advertising. |
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What happened to me was not ordinary and average and commonplace and I reject any word that makes it appear so. |
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The truth is, therefore, at least as likely to be found among those who reject majority opinion as among those who embrace it. |
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Tribals, incensed by the military operations, could reject the dominion of the federal government. |
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Finally, notice that it's only if we reject moral relativism that we are free to promote tolerance and open-mindedness as universal virtues. |
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The council is expected to reject the proposal on June 14 when the two groups meet for what may be a stormy debate. |
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Is it heartbreaking to have an entire prison population reject your lasagna? |
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Instead managers and inspectors explained away grievances, developing stock phrases with which to reject them. |
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We have no right to reject their instruction and captiously insist that nothing but positive command shall bind us. |
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Maybe it is time to reject cant and hypocrisy, shed this sham of political correctness. |
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Those of a logical bent might use Occam's razor to reject biorhythms in favor of this simpler explanation. |
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Many strange things are possible if you accept the plenitude principle and reject Occam's razor. |
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One, that we did not reject out of hand a great offer that was made to us in Camp David. |
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Anyone else have an opinion on this matter than I can reject out of hand or use to bolster my position? |
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To be a university president, you are supposed to reject any such notion out of hand. |
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Howard claims to be flabbergasted that anyone should reject it out of hand. |
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The Sunday Herald has seen the confidential document which prompted the SRU to reject the deal out of hand. |
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This does not mean we should reject the specificity of our traditions, our religious texts, holidays, observances or prayers. |
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The duty surely includes an obligation to investigate suspicious proposals and to reject those animated by hostility to religion. |
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Religion is a product of nurture and therefore a matter of choice. I reject discrimination on the grounds of religion. |
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Green's arrogant belief that he has been dragged down by his environment and peers leads him to vitriolically reject the class he was born into. |
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Instead, I reject the cultural establishment's contention that politics can be rejuvenated by a splash of paint or an arty video slot. |
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More and more, African-American iconoclasts reject victimology and embrace American possibility. |
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They admit variation as a vera causa in one case, they arbitrarily reject it in another, without assigning any distinction in the two cases. |
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For these reasons, many modern Austrian economists reject the doctrine of consumer sovereignty. |
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It's the first study to show that birds have learned to recognize and reject cuckoo nestlings. |
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It has also been shown that birds may reject novel prey on the basis of unfamiliarity alone or neophobia. |
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This is the shadow side of desire, manifested in the impulse to negate, deny, and reject that which is unpleasant or unwelcome. |
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They bracket the most important questions, the political, legal, and cultural questions that ought to lead Americans to reject state killing. |
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His objection to this thesis is that we should reject the relativist's assumption that there is a plurality of mutually untranslatable languages. |
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At other booths, the photographers allowed participants to reject their first photo in favor of a more flattering one. |
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You've got to downplay the compliment but you can't reject it because that seems ungracious. |
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Then an overall wearing reject would wander up to the local women and offer them a jug of moonshine for a little slap and tickle. |
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If such a body of belief exists, I would totally reject it, as would all of my friends. |
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And maybe some fans will reject their heroes because they don't want to see their soft underbelly. |
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Both reject the possibility of developing an independent revolutionary socialist movement, based on this class. |
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Deputy Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi quickly mounted the podium to move that the conference reject the resignation. |
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First, some women reject feminism in favor of more orthodox forms of religion. |
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I am sure the working class of Sri Lanka, Tamils and Sinhalese alike, will reject this perspective. |
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A much broader spectrum of historians reject such simplistic monocausal explanations. |
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They reject accusations of tunnel vision and deny they are motivated by professional envy at not having got there first. |
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Corrosion also causes higher reject rates, especially for molders of high-quality transparent parts like automotive lenses. |
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Even so, the two poles reject the analytical spirit of modernity, to which they oppose a synthetic approach. |
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The Australian researchers reject the conventional view that short-sightedness is a genetic problem in the East. |
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It was essentially a sort of collaboration across both things and I completely reject the view that I was misappropriating money. |
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Should the recipient's body reject the transplant, it raises the possibility that the patient will be left worse off than before. |
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Harrogate planners at a subsequent meeting determined that they were minded to reject the plan anyway. |
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Conservation groups are also split, the Ramblers Association calling on the park authority to reject the plans. |
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Her family are adamantly opposed to her relationship and friends reject her as a traitor. |
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How could Milton the classicist, the tragedian, the epic writer, reject Plato, the Greek tragedians, and Homer himself? |
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As someone who has hitherto needed to reject one thing before moving on to another, Juliet is on her mettle, and she knows it. |
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These writers reject the metanarrative form, gravitating more toward densely sketched texts. |
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Research on tomboys suggests that most do not reject traditionally female activities but rather embrace traditionally male ones. |
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I also observe that while not bound to accept a joint submission, the court must seriously consider it and not lightly reject it. |
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However, Plato's distrust of sensory perception led him to reject the visual arts. |
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Our identity is a story we tell ourselves to bind, balance or reject from the whole range of input sensory data. |
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While the motion was tinkered with, the decision was made to reject the draft plan. |
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She is right to be suspicious of a visitor got up in an old trilby hat and a raincoat that any Oxfam shop would reject with scorn. |
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They must reject the abhorrent demands of hostage takers and bandits and, if necessary, commit more funds and more troops. |
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If you have had an autologous transplant, your body will not reject the bone marrow. |
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For that matter, mayflies are not morphologically so different from thysanurans that we can reject Nardi's suggestion out of hand. |
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There can be no doubt that the magistrates were entitled to reject the argument of self-defence or defence of another. |
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Advice workers carry out difficult and demanding work for pay most professionally qualified people would reject out of hand. |
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Experts would make jurors and trial judges overly skeptical and inclined to reject the testimony of eyewitnesses. |
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As the technology stands today, there's also the thorny question of deformed or reject clones. |
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The chief reason to reject this view is the presumption in favour of equal consideration. |
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Three judges will then decide to either quash the conviction, reject the appeal or order a retrial. |
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Language issues can be intimately linked with assimilation, as children sometimes reject both their Mayan language and customs. |
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Medical opinion holds that if the patient's body doesn't reject the bone marrow within five years, it is a perfect match. |
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What Jesuit higher education was is clear, but all the authors reject a return to the past. |
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To argue otherwise now is to acquiesce in a rhetoric which those of us who accept universal human rights have no choice but to reject as racist. |
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Then an overall wearing reject would wander up to the Appalachian Jezebels and offer them a jug of moonshine for a little slap and tickle. |
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But we reject any such market, and we don't budge when an economist observes that prohibiting free transfer generates deadweight loss. |
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It seems the Gemara does not reject that certain Mitzvot are logically correct. |
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I don't reject friends because they politically aren't like me, or they are racist, gay or whatever. |
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This anatomical atlas, although drawn from dissection, did not reject Galenism as did the Fabrica of Vesalius. |
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I certainly reject any submission that Dyson J. held that the rules of natural justice do not apply to adjudication. |
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Make sure to send the master because making a copy lowers the video quality so much that a company will automatically reject it. |
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Who could blame her if she decided to reject Royal status in favour of freedom from the burden of civic responsibility? |
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Furthermore, member states are free to accept or reject international standards. |
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The body possesses an innate tendency to reject and destroy any foreign material introduced into it. |
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Mothers find their pups among the many whitecoats on the ice floes by scent and reject all but their own. |
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One must therefore reject the notion that an argument for celibacy is a futile gesture, foredoomed to failure. |
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The government's reaffirmation of its decision to reject calls for an immediate public inquiry has fuelled questions about its intentions. |
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If they continue repulsing air attacks the aggressor might reject the idea of developing invasion. |
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To reject a course of action as clearly undesirable is to reject it on practical grounds. |
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We would be discussing whether the San Francisco Ballet was within its rights to reject an aspiring ballet dancer. |
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I know the combat roll is very different from what most aikido, judo and jujutsu practitioners have been taught, but don't reject it outright. |
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The idea that children are natural rebels who reject convention and prefer a state of anarchy is bunk. |
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The chairman described the council's decision to reject the scheme as a kick in the teeth. |
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But what happens if the air line or pneumatic cylinder that controls the reject station fails? |
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The working class must reject all such attempts to foment nationalist sentiments in the name of defending the welfare state. |
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Publishers don't use recorded delivery, so it was unlikely to be a reject letter. |
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It is intuitively plausible, yet many philosophers, especially pragmatists and Wittgensteinians, reject it. |
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He went on to reject the proposal made earlier that evening by Vice President Gore for a state-wide manual recount of the votes in Florida. |
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In fact, however, historians of technology and engineering usually reject this view. |
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It would of course be wrong to reject the possibility of mounting a counteroffensive at the initial period of war. |
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The AFL-CIO, the teamsters and others have vowed to force congress to reject the bilateral agreement. |
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He appears to have been the kind of performer who would never knowingly reject an offer of employment or disappoint a paying audience. |
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Workers this week voted overwhelmingly to reject the agreement that would have forced them to start work as early as 7am and work back to 9pm. |
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But who in the right mind will ever reject a good present that comes with beautiful wrappings? |
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I cannot imagine submitting my material to a label and having them reject my new work and refuse to release it. |
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We totally reject the serious allegations and innuendos contained in the article. |
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You must conquer the cities and the people for Babism and don't be at peace with those who reject Babism. |
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You dont have to reject the representation, you have to reimagine it, question its meanings. |
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With modernism and the avant-garde, postmodernists reject realism, mimesis, and linear forms of narrative. |
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The wine must pass an analytical test and is blind tasted by a panel which may reject wines judged faulty or atypical, and often does. |
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In total, slightly more than 75 percent of union members voted to reject the contract. |
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He was part of a Saskatchewan delegation that visited several European capitals last October to get the European Union to reject the ban. |
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Should the union accept or reject the Communist party's leading role in government? |
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The games are hard to counterfeit because players must connect to a server, which can detect and reject software pirates. |
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If we are to reject foreign intervention and reunify the country independently, we must categorically oppose flunkeyism towards great powers. |
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They realised that being evil is no matter because people will always reject you. |
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Michael had the tainted innocence of an outcast, but I knew he was better than the very people who would reject him. |
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Would people reject me just because I'm too pale, my nose is too long, and my hair too light? |
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This might eventually cause others to reject the depressed person and to avoid future interactions. |
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The results also show that female heart transplant patients were more likely than men to reject the organ. |
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In many instances, bodies reject transplant organs because their immune systems see them as foreign tissue. |
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Never leave a popular classmate stranded with a social reject for group projects. |
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We were forced to woo younger guys or scavenge in the reject bin of the older group. |
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He may have been in a mood which made him irrationally reject what he was taught. |
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Chelsea barely glanced at the next shirt before deciding that it wasn't right and tossing it in the reject pile. |
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So, when more than one chemist went over the same list of 2000 compounds, how similar were their reject lists? |
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The ring also allows users to accept or reject incoming calls, speed dial numbers and notify if you've pocket-dialled someone. |
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To the consumer this means the product is a reject in Brazil and is not fit for human consumption. |
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This plutonium is a reject load being returned to British Nuclear Fuels by Japan. |
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People can reject dualism at a conscious level, but the intuitive sense that body and soul exist is here to stay. |
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It also can alert you to text messages, mute or reject incoming calls, and shuffle the songs on any of the new Walkman phones. |
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To comply, the Housing Department decided to reject any tender bid should the monthly wages of subcontracted workers be less than the market value. |
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For the sake of our novel experiment in broad-based multiracial democracy, I hope they reject the Cathie Adamses of their party. |
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Earlier in the week, 50,000 clerks and baggers who belong to seven UFCW locals voted by a 98 percent margin to reject the employers' concessions demands. |
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Some quantitative analysts reject the idea markets are either driven purely by mood or purely by traditional factors, seeing the two in a symbiotic relationship. |
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Today, acceptance of ideas of supernatural causality is more common among women, while some men, particularly those with party or military backgrounds, reject such ideas. |
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Eventually, Peter moves into the house too, also shared by a slightly loopy spinster, Miss Byron, and the pair feel free to reject society's expectations by acting up. |
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Officers who reject the idea of racial profiling are certainly in denial. |
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Gardeners are being urged to vote with their wellies and reject peat after a trial in North Derbyshire proved that plants can do just as well without it. |
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Why, whensoever they have made a covenant, does a party of them reject it? |
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Likewise, in a famous passage, Buridan is driven by his own experience to reject Ockham's explanation of condensation and rarefaction as kinds of locomotion. |
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Last week, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev felt the need to reject the Mayan cosmology. |
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We cynically reject any attempt at sincerity nowadays, but when it comes to the past we are as credulous as little children. |
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Should a professor choose to reject the study or insist on changes not agreeable to the sponsor, another university scientist will very likely be more solicitous. |
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That report has not been put in the public domain and councillors discussed its implications behind closed doors before reconvening to reject the plan once again. |
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It lost money despite the studio's efforts to recut the film so as to overcome aspects of it that had caused preview audiences to reject Huston's original version. |
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He also invoked the Charter of Rights and Freedoms to reject the requests. |
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She hated her sister's vanity and secretly hoped Lucas would reject her. |
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She's a short, rather chubby woman who always dressed the same, in those long dresses and skirts that looked like she plucked them out of a reject bin. |
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We sat back on the bright orange reject couch and admired our handiwork. |
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It is not at all difficult to reject many of the criticisms of globalisation that have recently been made, and it is right that rejectable points should be repulsed. |
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Contrary to some critics of parsimony methods, cladists neither deny the possibility that true ancestors are being sampled nor reject the reality of anagenesis. |
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The very settled approach in the United States is to reject such claims. |
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Reviewers of manuscripts sometimes reject research because it is anecdotal, based on a case study, or founded on too small a sample and therefore not generalizable. |
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An attempt at tragedy in the book's last quarter all but tips the book into oblivion with the revelation of a family secret so silly that Sunset Beach would reject it. |
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By that I mean that the choice of whether to accept or reject Russell's theory has had profound consequences for our philosophy of language, epistemology, and metaphysics. |
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But W-R-C reject this objection by breaking away from the classical Ricardian approach which postulates pregiven labour value from the physical production process. |
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Some other economists hold that the natural rate fluctuates over time and reject the notion that the natural rate can be approximated by an average figure. |
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Philosophers who advocate a naturalistic approach to epistemology sometimes intend only to reject the high apriorism mandated by the idea of epistemology as first philosophy. |
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For its own sake, the Republican Party should reject this idea as forcefully as possible. |
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Clients are free to reject the advice and insist that cases be litigated. |
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But on the ground, their own sectarianism and fanatical puritanism often lead the Salafi to reject or alienate those who might otherwise be their allies. |
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Hopefully, the members of the Florida House, Democrats and Republicans alike, will reject Senator Hays' proposed legislation. |
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Indeed, the National Cancer Institute, the American Cancer Society and the World Health Organization, none of which have an ax to grind, reject the notion. |
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And the higher the socio-economic status of women, the more likely they were to reject full-time employment. |
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In the other are those who forcefully reject new tourist attractions, preferring to remain a quaint backwater, undisturbed by 21st-century concerns. |
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The criticisms of his testimony and the points derived from the documentation are not, in my view, of sufficient force to cause me to reject that evidence. |
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If a writer on True Blood came up with the character of Jody Hice, the producers would reject it for being too over the top. |
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A man fully steeped in the niceties of Austrian economics might still reject these ends, and not be forced to endure the pain of self-contradiction. |
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The government had given unions until yesterday to accept or reject its final offer of a six percent salary increase plus a one percent bonus for performing workers. |
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The board has mighty powers to reject or approve the proposed hike. |
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Fundamentalists reject a larger portion of secular society, maintain strong commitments to strict literalism, premillennial dispensationalism, and moral traditionalism. |
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One of the main reasons I reject religion, especially submissive Eastern cults like Transcendental Meditation, is that the mind is not supposed to be peaceful! |
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He is likely to be in hospital for at least a month and will be taking drugs to suppress his immune system so that his body does not reject the transplant. |
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Doing so would smash parliament's claim to ratify or reject treaties. |
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The author is convinced that the officers should be taught to think originally, to reject shopworn patterns and approaches, and to avoid bureaucratic quagmire. |
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Only 53 percent reject out of hand the possibility of a military government taking power. |
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For the most part, undead Canadians reject the violent methods of the more militant zombies. |
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There are individuals and organisations who would more consciously distance themselves from Trotskyism, because they specifically reject some aspects of Trotsky's politics. |
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As president, he's been an unqualified proponent of experimental charters, which reject the job stability of traditional schools. |
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The Brotherhood left no choice for the whole rest of society, united, to reject their governance. |
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Those for whom scientific integrity is secondary might reject the science faculty's position if they perceive it has been made in an unscholarly or arrogant manner. |
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This is why we on the left must reject the sneering insinuations of the liberals that in our no we find ourselves with strange neo-fascist bedfellows. |
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And on the penultimate episode of The Bachelor, Assistant District Attorney Andi became the second to reject him. |
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In imagining new futures, it is strategic to reject a view of ourselves as neutrally immersed in a present beyond our control, determination, or hope. |
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The promise so rankled the Taliban they issued a statement insisting that Pakistan should reject all foreign aid. |
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The problem for concerned people was not merely to do the obvious thing and reject apartheid, but to decide what to do about it. |
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He is convinced that, in the end, economic reasoning will force Scots to reluctantly reject independence. |
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An obligee may reject the obligor's partial performance, except that the partial performance of its obligations does not harm the obligee's interests. |
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The frugal virtues of Buddhism and Jainism were rejected and followers were encouraged to reject all religious observances and make the most of life's pleasures! |
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We reject them because they will put still more power to politicians and bureaucrats, because they stifle economic development rather than fostering it. |
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The immune system will reject an organ transplant that is trying to maintain the body or a blood transfusion that is not of the same blood type as itself. |
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Nor can they claim that Lochner violates the original meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment, since these legal analysts by and large reject originalism altogether. |
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Please reject this underhanded attempt to subvert democracy in Illinois. |
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Federal prosecutors are free to cherry-pick high-profile or politically expedient cases, knowing that the cases they reject probably will be prosecuted in state court. |
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The chalk-browed mockingbird, rufous-bellied thrush and brown-and-yellow marshbird reject pure white cowbird eggs, while the rufous hornero rejects eggs according to size. |
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He is suspected of avenging himself on women if they reject him. |
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He called on the government to reject any demands from the hostage takers. |
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Even so, you can't expect the DUP to press for the implementation of anything promoting equality of status or parity of esteem since they reject the concepts. |
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Every year around this time, college admissions officers can be heard humblebragging about how painful it was to reject so many qualified applicants. |
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To reject these teachings is to reject our manners and civility. |
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They have to believe that we would reject payola in any form. |
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When an attorney exercises peremptory challenges, she uses her discretion to reject potential jurors who are not, objectively speaking, objectionable. |
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While software had previously been able to detect and reject fake notes, counterfeiters had now evidently become more sophisticated and could fool the system. |
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Some private schools and colleges still reject the public school position which consists of accepting the standard of the age and teaching political correctness. |
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Researchers familiar with spectrometry and colorimetry will know this, but there might be many readers that dogmatically reject any animal color study without reflectance. |
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I reject the comments made by the previous speaker that any attempt to debate these issues openly and fearlessly is somehow engaging in racial hysteria or racial division. |
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Putting it in the negative, I reject the idea that law should be used instrumentally by judges to achieve the judge's idea of what constitutes good policy. |
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I feel that those who portray an aggressive, vulgar, debased attitude towards life are conniving in that life, and I think publishers should reject them. |
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The use of military force for conquest and expansion is a security strategy that most leaders reject in this age of complex interdependence and globalization. |
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I would urge Bolton Council to tell the developers to stop playing for time, get this through the planning committee once and for all, and reject this application in any form. |
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The website reserves the right to publish or reject any message. |
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It deals with two women who reject their suitors because they've decided they want to marry men who are more fashionable, affected and accustomed to courtly manners. |
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At other booths, the photographers allowed participants to reject their first photo in favor of a more flattering one, but the old crow and her minion hurried me off the set. |
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But some conservatives fear a falling away of members, even if the majority of presbyteries eventually reject and thereby nullify the General Assembly action. |
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And I was wondering how you combat that impulse to reject the young? |
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There are also various heterodox theories that downplay or reject the explanations of the Keynesians and monetarists. |
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Conservative Friends completely reject all forms of religious symbolism and outward sacraments, such as the Eucharist and water baptism. |
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They reject using state power to construct a socialist society, favouring strategies such as the general strike. |
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In leaving the established Church, however, they did not reject the principle of establishment. |
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One of their actions was to pass the Veto Act, which gave parishioners the right to reject a minister nominated by their patron. |
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During the late 19th century, Whistler began to reject the Realist style of painting that his contemporaries favored. |
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The Waverley Novels express his belief in the need for social progress that does not reject the traditions of the past. |
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The enormity of the offence led Anselm to reject personal acts of atonement, even Peter Damian's flagellation, as inadequate and ultimately vain. |
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Each congregation was free to choose or reject its own pastor, but once he was chosen he could not be fired. |
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Later historians would reject parts of the Kenneth produced by Skene and subsequent historians, while accepting others. |
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The tie between fractionation and reject thickening was also examined in this study. |
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Protestant churches reject the idea of a celibate priesthood and thus allow their clergy to marry. |
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The religious revival saw some communities completely reject rugby and local clubs, like Senghenydd, disbanded for several years. |
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Well at long last our blushing bride TBI has told the French suitor to frog march off by advising shareholders to reject the offer from Vinci. |
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Until that day, there is no need to reject the assumption that the theory is true. |
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He came to reject state socialism and large centralized control, instead emphasising localised administration within a socialist society. |
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Just as Mannerism rejected Classicism, so did Romanticism reject the ideas of the Enlightenment and the aesthetic of the Neoclassicists. |
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Cultural sociologists tend to reject scientific methods, instead hermeneutically focusing on words, artifacts and symbols. |
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Now there may have been a series of arguments, which led them to reject Francis. |
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Lieberman's study also showed that more women reject the concept of race than men. |
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We may reject and reject till we attenuate history into sapless meagreness. |
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There he convinced the Sultan to reject the Russian treaty proposal, as compromising the independence of the Turks. |
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For example, merchants in England generally accept Scottish and Northern Irish bills, but some unfamiliar with them may reject them. |
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The SDLP reject this argument, pointing to their strong support in Derry and their victory in South Belfast in the 2005 election. |
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As the number of petitions increased, the Committee gained the power to reject petitions itself. |
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On the other hand, turbojets accelerate a much smaller mass flow of intake air and burned fuel, but they then reject it at very high speed. |
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If you are Bluebook born and raised, don't reject this position out of hand. |
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Celeste falls into the category of BDD sufferers who subconsciously reject any positive comments made about them. |
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