By now, his hostile rhetoric has carried him beyond the self-discipline of consistency, and he becomes merely quarrelsome and captious. |
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Visions of Shanghai and Singapore provide seductive images and useful rhetoric. |
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It is a rhetoric of participation and community to disguise a world of discontinuity and short-termism. |
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I think that they could pull the country together a lot better by just toning the rhetoric down a bit. |
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Whatever high-flown rhetoric comes from the president next week, the reality is clear-cut. |
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He should then appreciate the fine line between Churchillian rhetoric and hyperbole. |
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Alas, for every valuable insight which emerges, we find a greater proportion of heady rhetoric and circumlocution. |
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Here is to be found the origin of much of the rhetoric of universal human rights. |
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These leaders are past masters in bending the rhetoric of ideology to justify the corporate company they keep. |
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He challenged me with one of the feebler bits of rhetoric the faithful adopt to clinch the argument. |
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Indeed, you engage in precisely this sort of rhetoric yourself while hypocritically decrying the heated rhetoric of the left. |
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But even public rhetoric slid to new levels after it became clear that the Congress would form government at the Centre. |
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Certainly the inclusivist language of cultural pluralism was swiftly replaced by rhetoric stressing national homogeneity. |
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Despite all the rhetoric and unkept promises, a light still flickers in the darkness. |
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Such statements may indeed be a useful component of the rhetoric of justification, but never of the process of deliberation. |
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Sadly, political fluff and rhetoric again ignores clear indisputable facts. |
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It's just hard to sort out the real issues from the smokescreens as the rhetoric heats up this election year. |
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That fierce, murderous eloquence does make me wonder whether the rhetoric of modern Islamists is comparable. |
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The last thing children with incarcerated parents need is more rhetoric and empty promises. |
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My main critique of the netroots would be that I sense a large degree of willingness to elevate shrill rhetoric over actual policy. |
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In his analyses the visual rhetoric of the image has been discourteously discarded in the decoding process. |
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But Keynes smoothed over the harsh Marxist anti-individualism with artful sophistry and clever rhetoric into something salable to Americans. |
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He dissertated on rhetoric in American colleges and made a great splash among compositionists with Themes, Theories, and Therapy. |
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But his explanation was little more than simplistic rhetoric about how evildoers had wronged us and they would now be forced to pay. |
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What is troubling about this rhetoric of Irish exceptionalism is that not too long ago, it had an opposite, but equally extreme, flavour. |
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The explanation of the anecdote's use begins with a return to the rhetoric of travel writing. |
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Now is not the time to revert to extreme rhetoric and draconian sanctions against those who support abortion rights. |
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The rhetoric of rights has the capacity to gorgonize in mass politics just as it has in constitutional politics. |
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Anti-Western and, specifically, anti-Australian rhetoric has long been part of his political stock-in-trade. |
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Two historical circumstances render this questioning especially relevant to an understanding of the cartographic rhetoric of Ulysses. |
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Health, despite the rhetoric of the WHO, is not the summum bonum of good government. |
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Here was Bruni displaying his rhetorical skills as a Ciceronian orator, conducting a formal exercise in rhetoric and dialectic. |
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He urged both parties to cool their rhetoric and put the nation's interest ahead of partisan advantage. |
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Even the corporate media, for all its fawning cowardice, hasn't been as derelict as blog rhetoric would paint it. |
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Watching it, I found myself quietly appalled by the smugness, condescension and bogus rhetoric on display. |
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Coming from media conglomerates and other corporate giants, that sort of rhetoric is notably self-serving. |
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In this fourth stage, it is clear that preachers dismiss rhetoric to their own peril and to the peril of the religiosity of their congregants. |
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The rhetoric serves to perpetuate the myth that perpetrators have no control over their behaviour when they are drunk. |
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Aristotle separated rhetoric from poetics, treating rhetoric as the art of persuasion and poetics as the art of imitation or representation. |
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Some close correspondences can be found between the rhetoric of Robinson and that of Cicero and, to an even greater extent, Quintilian. |
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He denigrated a foreign policy that delivers the rhetoric of freedom and not the reality of economic progress and true liberty. |
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He consequently suffuses his speech with a rhetoric that effaces differences among Celts and Saxons. |
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With O'Neill, though, there is no need for diplomatic rhetoric about the club having been turned around. |
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Lest this seem like the predictable rhetoric of those in high dudgeon, consider the undertones. |
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This means a hardened Euro-sceptical rhetoric from him, but also heightened tensions with the real Tory Euro-sceptics over withdrawal. |
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There is a troubling darkness in its soul, which the righteous rhetoric and cynical evocation of God seem only to enhance. |
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He controls his rhetoric to the point that there is absolutely no space for double meanings or misunderstandings. |
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She rightly gave Bush credit for the effectiveness of his rhetoric and for telling the country it would be a messy, drawn-out conflict. |
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It is this Burkean notion of rhetoric which animates the spaces of everyday life. |
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The rhetoric of rights legitimates claims and mobilizes support for groups demanding autonomy. |
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I found the rhetoric of cultural revitalization to be prevalent at all levels of society. |
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The rhetoric and actions of these wanna-be revolutionaries are interesting, though. |
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In the process, his incendiary rhetoric has alienated much of the middle and upper class, who accuse him of being authoritarian. |
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Despite Daniels's incendiary rhetoric about gays, when asked by CNN's Paula Zahn if he was homophobic, he said no. |
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Websites and satellite television channels then supply visual images and incendiary rhetoric from any place where they are fighting. |
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It is the common rhetoric in the aftermath of wars that, with the war once won, the peace must not then be lost. |
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This rhetoric was imitated in Elizabethan schools and began to make an impact on the stage. |
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Born into a rich provincial family, he studied philosophy as well as rhetoric and law. |
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In either case, we can see that both argument and rhetoric are designed to persuade and impress. |
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Young Athenian democrats needed rhetoric to persuade the democratic assemblies. |
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In short, one can take the science out of rhetoric but not the rhetoric out of science. |
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It is as if everyone has been given a dictionary of war rhetoric to make us believe we are fighting for a reason. |
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Such insipid, sophomoric rhetoric is best left in the empty heads that created it. |
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It actually shows up the huge amount of rhetoric and empty wording piece by piece. |
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In their moment, election slogans, rhetoric and symbols seem to mean so very much. |
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As a result, his promises have raised the art of empty rhetoric to new heights. |
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Many parties sound the same in their rhetoric and even look alike in their symbols. |
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I am a sucker for rhetoric and a bit of uplift in some circumstances can be helpful. |
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I have been impressed by rhetoric on dealing with inefficiency in the public services. |
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The visit should not be seen by the Acehnese as another act of empty rhetoric by Jakarta. |
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It presents an example of Chicana feminist rhetoric and an inroad to this rhetorical tradition. |
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As rhetoricians, we generally take as a starting point that rhetoric involves action. |
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It not only stifled dissent, it bred a whole new rhetoric antipathetic to civil liberties and due process of law. |
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In spite of socialist rhetoric and tight economic controls, socialism was in no way a serious prospect. |
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The movement's patriotic rhetoric often inclines into aggressive nationalism. |
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When the rhetoric is that of the rightward fringe of the Republican Party circa 1952, I worry a lot. |
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It counterposes the countryside to the city, and its rhetoric runs along clearly reactionary lines. |
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No doubt there'll be some spurious, nebulous rhetoric about rights and responsibilities, respect, choice and other such middle class emollients. |
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His true politics are unknown but much of his campaign rhetoric positioned him as more pro-business than pro-labor. |
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The literal-minded insistence that all government rhetoric be entirely scrupulous strikes me, in view of the above, as weird. |
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In classical rhetoric it denotes real or pretended doubt about an issue, uncertainty as to how to proceed in a discourse. |
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But they've put that on the back burner and use their voice to spew political rhetoric and propaganda. |
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Its armed forces are toothless, and its rhetoric is tired, repeated out of habit rather than conviction. |
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Her breathtakingly stupid comment indicates how far behind they are in developing a modern political rhetoric for their values and ideas. |
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The rhetoric was vintage Reagan, and the scripts were mostly written in longhand by the politician who delivered them. |
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The continual references to the toponymy, or place names, of Dublin suggest the chapter's investment in the rhetoric of cartography. |
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The new conservatives saw that the rhetoric of self-sacrifice had become meaningless to the generation born after the revolution. |
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For eight years the policy of containment has worked and despite the bellicose rhetoric being bandied about last week, it will probably continue. |
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He has the rhetoric of a neo-Marxist and as a matter of fact he was promoting struggle of class, he was promoting even problem of colors. |
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The mid-century wars had generated much patriotic rhetoric in praise of Britishness. |
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Now comes the biggest test of whether the rhetoric of connectivity can be marshalled into effective action. |
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For the Greeks, negotiation formed part of rhetoric and Aristotle's manual is still an important sourcebook. |
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It is music without any rhetoric or goal, in which periods of time are filled with washes of instrumental colour. |
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Beyond giving vent to frustrations at a relationship gone seriously awry, such rhetoric augurs a troubled future. |
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Modern religious rhetoric is dilute and ineffectual, and where it isn't, it seems mad and aberrational. |
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I tuned in mostly out of a sense of duty, expecting to have to sit through a turgid display of tired political rhetoric and waffle. |
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This kind of meaningless rhetoric vitiates Craven's discussion of the issue. |
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There is an abyss between such rhetoric and the world we actually live in, an abyss called power. |
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They must have some inside information that this sort of rhetoric is helping. |
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It took me a long time to see any form of rhetoric as more than trickery which played upon the accidents of language. |
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Let's keep the psychology and rhetoric of argument in mind while we debate our differences. |
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In the process, his analysis has been vulgarised into the rhetoric of a war on terrorism. |
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German scientific forestry was couched in a rhetoric of development and modernization. |
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The rhetoric can be likened to the dated concepts held by eugenicists, craniologists and social Darwinists. |
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Almost everyone is forsworn at some point, and high-handed rhetoric is continually enlisted to justify it. |
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For all of the rhetoric about teamwork in the health professions, most work is fractiously divided. |
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They need to be reminded we had eight long years of their rhetoric and we are now beating them at their own game. |
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In a culture like theirs, so precariously balanced between nature and culture, such reactionary Calvinist rhetoric seems odd. |
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Traditional rhetoric describes metaphors as emerging from a hierarchical relation between a primary and secondary context of language use. |
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Representation is problematized by exposing its rhetoric as well as its more opaque meaning. |
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Was this piece of paper reason to stop talking completely and ratchet up the rhetoric? |
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Such is the trade policy rhetoric of Reaganomics, a rhetoric combining free trade grandiloquence with policies of the merchant. |
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Its rhetoric is one of violent aggression against anyone seen as its enemies. |
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He was one of the first modern scholars to argue that Athenian rhetoric is valuable precisely because of its connection to democratic government. |
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In his most lucid moments, however, Emerson disavowed his Dionysian rhetoric. |
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The growth of rhetorical criticism in recent years reawakened interest in rhetoric of the Roman empire. |
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So, in other words, another international confluence of hot wind and gassy rhetoric thus comes to pass. |
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Most intriguing was the company's bizarre melding of feminist politics, anticapitalist rhetoric, and parody with quasi-softcore sexploitation. |
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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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In addition, radical students espousing forms of Marxism, some combined with religious political rhetoric, joined the disaffected. |
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But there is something collectively out of joint in European culture, if rhetoric like this really resonates with the public. |
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Fortunately, the rhetoric is kept to a minimum, and overall the film is graceful and admirably compact. |
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The history of trade negotiations is littered with hypocritical rhetoric and squalid deals. |
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The rhetoric of both men focused more on moral values than policy specifics. |
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They do so, paradoxically, in a rhetoric strongly reminiscent of that long associated with the right. |
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His rhetoric is larded with mythic grandiosity that amuses the jaded Western ear. |
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He lards his speeches with religious rhetoric and aggressively woos religious groups, a key part of his electoral base. |
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But Morse's unerring moral sense is not recuperable to law and order rhetoric. |
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None of them states this in so many words, but it is the inescapable consequence of their rhetoric about contracts and deals and obligations. |
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But he occasionally re-emphasised the anti-Communist rhetoric, as if to remind Gorbachev that he needed to continue on the path to reform. |
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In exploring the rhetoric of singularity, then, I might seem to be backing the wrong horse. |
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Your tax dollars are really being shuffled around in a shell game of paper work and political rhetoric. |
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The government bureaucrats may continue in the old, wrong-headed, and unscientific rhetoric, but the public health people should know better. |
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But the rhetoric of Marxist exploitation and alienation does not speak to the needs of non-labourers, and may indeed oppose them. |
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Election returns show that political alignments around social issues have shifted much less than their rhetoric would suggest. |
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Such rhetoric and policies can only be regarded by the extremist right as giving approval to their own xenophobia and racism. |
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Hence it has been alluded to that there exist a plethora of underlying considerations and motives behind the rhetoric a manager uses. |
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Scientific presentations, whether for a gathering of colleagues or a general audience, benefit from techniques of stagecraft and rhetoric. |
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But also you have to get rid of this free-trade rhetoric and jargon, because it's kind of a religious devotion to the notion of free trade. |
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Rather, for other readers the thinkers featured here, and the implications for rhetoric, have been so absorbed as not to need a lengthy reprise. |
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The warm, fuzzy rhetoric of the sisterhood is completely at odds with our brutal, individualistic, competitive society. |
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You don't even have to be a sophisticated analyst to see what they are doing with the visual rhetoric and verbal anchorage. |
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The real problem is that the rhetoric currently focused on the band either treads water too obviously or overreaches in apparent hipness. |
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Women's temperance rhetoric and activity bolstered brotherhood temperance efforts and to an extent influenced union policy. |
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The rhetoric combined the moral style of bourgeois temperance advocacy with an emphasis on alcohol's impact on the man and the family. |
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The rhetoric that accompanies high-minded discussions of the deficit has grown shopworn. |
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The constellation of these artists and their painted and sculpted expressions is impressive in its rhetoric and spectacle. |
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No amount of rhetoric, clever policies, threats, or even extra resources will improve a service if the staff are demotivated. |
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Like Graham himself, the 24-minute announcement speech was solid and sensible but devoid of quotable rhetoric. |
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What is certain is that this rhetoric provides a useful cover for a very traditional policy. |
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Let us hope that going beyond empty rhetoric, nations are becoming indeed united in the effort to see Iraq through its difficult transition. |
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He camouflaged his fundamentally conservative policies in liberalish rhetoric. |
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Although increasingly stranded politically by the ebbing tide of socialism, he has refused to tone down his rabble-rousing rhetoric. |
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The rhetoric is often more deliverer-driven than consumerists desired but not always as windy as skeptics surmised. |
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Those finding the answer in rhetoric or semiotics will alike pick on the more graphic elements in his music. |
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They are the problem, and they need to acknowledge that fact and start cleaning up their own mess rather than spouting denialist rhetoric. |
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The twins enjoyed confusing the Neophyte with their cryptic words and alembicated rhetoric. |
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Philip's rhetoric was also existential, and it strongly influenced my thinking. |
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But some general principles can be discerned, even if only at the level of the rhetoric of English criminal law. |
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The film played in perfect synchrony with rhetoric about the necessity of increasing military power and the amassment of nuclear arms. |
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But many are beginning to regard such sentiments as little more than well-meaning rhetoric. |
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It's useful also to put this in context, given the rhetoric that surrounds it. |
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All that effort, toil and rhetoric is finished and now winners and losers have to face the results. |
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The statement is representative of much of the official rhetoric employed by the regime to engender support. |
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While indulging in anti-government rhetoric at public meetings, he appealed to the courts to install him as a member of the same government. |
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These figures, which document an out-of-control war on drugs in the city, contradict the rhetoric we are hearing from all quarters. |
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His work included zoology, Arabic grammar, poetry, rhetoric and lexicography. |
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In the late twentieth century rhetoric has been revived as the study of the structuring powers of discourse. |
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From this perspective, Ovidian rhetoric works to conceal the very desire that organizes it. |
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But both these opposite models of our selves are equally powerful in current rhetoric. |
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The devices of rhetoric, however, did not lose their links with poetry or their practical ties with the law. |
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It can not be guaranteed by either rhetoric or philosophy, by rhetorical pragmatism or foundationalist theory. |
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Her vernacular Dutch writings reflect familiarity with Latin, rhetoric, numerology, Ptolemaic astronomy and music theory. |
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By the time we reach the new poems, Duhamel's line and rhetoric achieve a powerful harmony. |
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In ancient Greek rhetoric, the aposiopesis occasionally takes the form of a pause before a change of subject or a digression. |
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But I also can't help but wonder how the rapidly apostatizing UK looked at this rhetoric. |
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His effective rhetoric reassured a country unsettled by the tumults of the 1960s and 1970s and perceptions of American decline. |
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The league should be proud of that, not hiding behind stiff fines and harsh rhetoric. |
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In contrast, this is brain-dead pap that will be forgotten in a week, another floater in the sewer of empty rhetoric. |
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His earliest plays were political, ridiculing the wooden locutions of communist rhetoric. |
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First, the rhetoric requires motherhood to be cast in unrealistically negative terms. |
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Amid the usual blah-blah of political rhetoric, I found this assertion really offensive. |
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Walker traces the history of ancient rhetoric to a common root with lyric poetry. |
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The speech is a masterpiece of shameless rhetoric and inversion of the topoi of legal oratory. |
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This paramilitary-industrial complex converts the rhetoric and conceptualization of fear into an economic reality. |
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Stormfront has become a bridge to the mainstream, where controversial comments strangely mirror the rhetoric of avowed racists. |
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Let us quote the official figures, not the bodgie rhetoric from the National Opposition. |
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One of the robed elite, more handbill pusher than ideologue, seemed above, apart from, or perhaps, by now, simply oblivious to the rhetoric. |
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The figures of speech are the four main categories of tropes, although tropes have been multitudinously identified in treatises on rhetoric. |
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He's always used liberal rhetoric and programmatic boilerplate to sell himself. |
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He created a nationalist and revolutionary rhetoric in order to transform the heterogeneous state into a unitary entity. |
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His verses which have influenced Arabic balladry for centuries are filled with the splendour of his rhetoric, imagination and advice. |
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Although the rhetoric of the military is all about discipline, the daily practice of the troops is a cut throat entrepreneurialism. |
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When he returned to Sardis he entered the circle of local Neoplatonists, learned theurgy and medicine, and mainly taught rhetoric. |
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The impassioned egalitarian rhetoric that asserts this supposed obligation cows many people into acquiescence. |
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Their experiences and rhetoric are often hard to disentangle in the autobiographical strata of the novel. |
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He is by turns violent, sentimental, maudlin, self-pitying, and sadistic, and has a fine line in rhetoric. |
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A cultural turn-around is usually marked by emotive rhetoric, sometimes even dazzling oratory. |
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Listen, I've had long conversations with him and Brown separately, and their level of rhetoric and oratory rises when they talk about this. |
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In their place, Echenoz proposes a rhetoric of platitude, insisting upon the commonplace, the dull, the ordinary. |
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Because the main point about Howard's rhetoric was that it has become totally irrelevant. |
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The shrillness and strident rhetoric probably did their cause more harm than good. |
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Bad rhetoric is all about the metaphor, ornamentation etc without the logic or concern for truth. |
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So while I think this is a cause for concern, it's not cause for the kind of overblown rhetoric I've seen around the web. |
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Despite their high-sounding rhetoric, however, initial reforms were halting, and throughout the 1990s Ukraine endured severe stagnation. |
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This high-sounding rhetoric is all well and good as theory, but it goes only so far in the real world, as other passing novelists point out. |
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In the flood tide of official rhetoric, the Prime Minister's contribution still stands out. |
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We can toothcomb the statistics, scowl over the double counting, curl a lip at florid rhetoric. |
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We will hear the result soon, amidst the usual overheated rhetoric of slippery slopes and miracle recoveries. |
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As the Middle Ages continued, rhetoric stayed present in historiography, but other elements began to emerge. |
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The accusations sound pretty wild, even considering California's usual election histrionics, but they're more than just overheated rhetoric. |
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He was eight years old when he witnessed the Battle of Britain in the form of Churchillian rhetoric on a radio set. |
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The mock-heroic story is full of rhetoric and exempla, and it is regarded as the most typically Chaucerian in tone and content. |
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Its election manifesto is replete with populist rhetoric opposing privatisation and defending the public sector. |
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A militant suffragist, she energized the movement through her hunger strikes and her fiery rhetoric. |
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Together, these mobilizations set a different political tone to the meek, me-too rhetoric of the Democrats. |
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Such rhetoric would be forgivable if sugar-coated by a genuinely interesting film. |
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Perhaps most usefully, however, the book offers a repertoire of rhetorical suggestions, topoi for the specific topic of rhetoric. |
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There isn't going to be a compromise until folks start trying to engage with each other and dial down some of the rhetoric. |
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He is already grappling with the difficulty of converting diplomatic rhetoric into actual money. |
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His use of rhetoric to play with the facts was not a trick or sham, but a legitimate part of a historiographical method. |
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The Democrats will by and large continue to cater to those interests and palliate the rest of us with rhetoric. |
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However, journalism did not change overnight and it still indulged in the Soviet practice of wordiness and high-flown rhetoric. |
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Unlike Kurtz, he sees civilization in practical terms rather than through high-flown rhetoric. |
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Setting aside the high-flown rhetoric of the age, the issues raised are with us still. |
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They strain credibility by taking the universal language of face-saving and meaningless political rhetoric to the limit. |
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This father's rhetoric is very forceful and incorporates a language of dominance and power. |
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The result is wild rhetoric and ill-conceived laws that interfere not just with gamers' fun but with an art form in its infancy. |
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The rhetoric now divides the party between the converters and the persuaders. |
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So much for rhetoric, always preferred by politicians and other hail fellow well met charmers to the cold steel of logic. |
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Her avoidance of traditionalist rhetoric and assumptions strengthens her persuasiveness, but there is room for ingenuity. |
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In the end, Cicero himself fell prey to a collapse of the representative system of government his vision of political rhetoric had fostered. |
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The PM's Churchillian rhetoric was well suited to the horror of the events. |
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Tertullian and Augustine transformed the inheritance of Ciceronian rhetoric into an art of preaching. |
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This rhetoric could only reassure if you were a blinking idiot and hadn't seen any news coverage of the current situation at all. |
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Dramatic performance and rhetoric were taught at Oxford and Cambridge as part of a classical humanist education. |
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Not for the first time, the rhetoric of equality and brotherhood was employed in the service of unspeakable evil. |
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This incendiary rhetoric, Chege believes, helped fuel the Rwandan civil war of 1994 in which 850,000 Tutsi died. |
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Invoke the slippery slope and construct a straw man to knock down with one fell swoop of rhetoric. |
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Are the audience really shocked into new ideas about rhetoric, oppression and language? |
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Gellert's lectures on poetry, rhetoric, and ethics were exceptionally popular. |
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He too is the victim of the fashionable notion of rhetoric, logic and truth that was so widely admired at the time. |
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It may well be that the cities no longer had the resources to support a roster of teachers of grammar and rhetoric. |
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But during his twenties he was not only teaching Latin literature and the arts of rhetoric. |
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They may have seen themselves as reviving a more ancient tradition, that of rhetoric. |
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Is it no more than rhetoric, designed to scare the mullahs and force them to drop their nuclear programme? |
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Behind all the pomp and the communist rhetoric, this is a peace loving country. |
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Don't simply opt for apparently powerful but ultimately empty, meaningless rhetoric. |
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You want to keep on pouring out the same old toxic separatist and communalist rhetoric. |
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And you know, in the case of the captain, that is more than just empty rhetoric. |
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We must implement a health strategy that puts patients first, not empty rhetoric. |
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He delights in personal enrichment and seems to be lacking in political rhetoric. |
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The Old Man, as he is known, would not want to be seen as the hapless prisoner of his own empty rhetoric. |
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Problems pile up but important Ministers are content to keep their date with rhetoric. |
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Such work is likely to be outside the home unit's understanding of rhetoric, which will require educating colleagues who are not rhetoricians. |
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If rhetoricians are the approved practitioners of rhetoric, they can expand their territory by an expansive definition. |
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He believed in modernizing socialism, abandoned Marxist rhetoric, and replaced it by a responsible managerial attitude to the economy. |
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In the arithmetic of superpower rivalry during the Cold War people tended to be forgotten, the reality buried under rhetoric. |
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It has an oddly functional feel for a play that glories in rhetoric, rodomontade, swagger and swordplay. |
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A legal ban on biotech research will have little effect on corporate profits, despite Sanders' rhetoric. |
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Meanwhile, ballyhooed efforts by state and federal prosecutors to build an investor restitution fund are more rhetoric than reality. |
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And we must become critical of the real role of the WTO in society, contrary to the government rhetoric parroted by the media. |
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He became a martyred hero whose soaring rhetoric inspired many in the United States and abroad. |
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And having but one piece of rhetoric remaining, she bolked it out. |
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Indeed, in conflict situations the rhetoric around honor often intensifies. |
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I was in graduate school, involved in a lively discussion about the rhetoric of architecture. |
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His conduct has been measured and statesmanlike and his rhetoric inspiring. |
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Hailing, as he did, from Memphis, having grown up during the Purist tensions of the sixties and seventies, he was already sensitized to the rhetoric. |
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Despite the doomsday rhetoric, I have yet to see a single example of how a particular class of citizens sanctifying their union via marriage will wreck that institution. |
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Again, that distinguishes American political rhetoric from the rhetoric of other western nations. |
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Rawcus has to provide a solid argument in his rhetoric to make such an accusation, even in jest. |
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Badly scripted, obvious rhetoric is spewed from a platform of speakers. |
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Here again, this rhetoric is inflated, hyperbolic and unjustified. |
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Picture him standing before a conference hall full of besuited greenies, delivering some powerful and inspiring rhetoric about making Scotland sustainable. |
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The inaugural addresses of the presidents are, for the most part, a wasteland of howling rhetoric and dried-out inspiration. |
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However, the belief in the reality of a mental substance was part of the rhetoric of the theory of individualism, not the discovery of that reality. |
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Whether this can be viewed as mere rhetoric or not is a debatable issue, but the message it sends to radical groups within Iran is unquestionable. |
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The museum's aims of scholarship and preservation of real objects are being displaced by an emphasis on virtual experiences, theatricality, and emotional rhetoric. |
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Suddenly it seemed that Naziism was alive and well and living in Vienna, not least because Haider's anti-immigration and anti-EU rhetoric seemed to hark back to a darker past. |
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Of course, the rhetoric is different, and while I'm not condoning it, there's a big difference between an ignoramus mouthing off in a pub, and firebombing someone's home. |
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Stirring rhetoric would have been nice, but stirring rhetoric frightens the Europeans, much as the sound of a newfangled motorcar makes the horses nervous. |
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In the 1950s and 60s, Marxist-Leninist rhetoric was looked at askance even by professional Sovietologists, few of whom accepted that the Party could produce real believers. |
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And really, sometimes it takes a popcorn movie to cut through the rhetoric around a hot-button issue. |
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Fortunately, scientific questions are not resolved with rhetoric and powerpoint. |
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Overall, epideictic rhetoric may address policy or value issues, can issue blame as well as praise, and bears a close conceptual relationship with song. |
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He argues that epideictic rhetoric with its traditional concern with the noble provides the model from which a contemporary reasoning about ends could proceed. |
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On the other hand, epideictic rhetoric implies that tradition or social standing authorizes the rhetor to locate the object of praise in the criteria of excellence. |
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Nonetheless, epideictic rhetoric may have political implications. |
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Twenty-five years later, he wrote a mealy-mouthed not-quite apology for his rhetoric. |
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However, by 384 Augustine was unsatisfied and he broke away from the Manichees to open the New Academy, a school of rhetoric, in which he became the official orator of Milan. |
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A somewhat lengthy disquisition on epideictic rhetoric is notably broken up by a discussion of the figural strategies of auxesis and epistrophe in the cartoon's obscene song. |
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On this account of Isocrates' understanding of antilogy and his uses of the speeches, Isocrates' students would learn that reality is what rhetoric presents it to be. |
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Some films and television shows about trials lawyers in American courts, invite the conclusion that anger, hyperbole and bombastic rhetoric are persuasive. |
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Brachylogy is part of Socrates' dialectical strategy and functions as an argumentative trump card that enables the philosopher to disclose the limits of rhetoric as a form of fact finding. |
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Parallels between persuasive oratory and eloquent musical performance are evident, but the precise relationship of music to rhetoric has often been unclear. |
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And as the president, his rhetoric has been studiedly non-inflammatory. |
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The ancient Athenian roots of rhetoric instruction stressed paideia. |
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The author of this nauseating palaver is obviously so in love with what he thinks is his own eloquent rhetoric that he fails to notice his laughable double entendre. |
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It was characterized by apocalyptic and incendiary rhetoric, anger, impatience, and revolutionary zeal. |
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At that point, it leached back into the wider culture, slightly altering the rhetoric, but not necessarily the essential substance, of demotic antiscience. |
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