Forty years of sanguine, sorry history have confirmed this truth in Algeria. |
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None of these essays is sanguine about the current situation, but all three offer positive views of the future. |
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We are not sanguine that all the conditions can be fulfilled in a timely manner. |
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The first is pessimism, the conviction that social transformation is, contrary to the sanguine illusions of the optimists, profoundly difficult. |
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While I do not condone some of the more rapacious acts of Australian companies, I am not so sanguine about local small scale operators either. |
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I managed to spit out a stream of the sanguine liquid before dodging just in time to miss her foot. |
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As Shakespeare wrote it, The Chronicle History of Henry the Fifth is an intensely masculine, simple, sanguine drama of kinghood and war. |
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Some analysts are also more sanguine on the outcome of the case than the pessimists are. |
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Areas can also be kept just the reddish brown of the sanguine, umber or black, depending on the artist's wishes. |
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It's terrible that a sword meant to save mankind from tyranny is corrupted to sanguine and destructive ends. |
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Concepts of fire and damnation have given way to more sanguine personal exhortations to love, service, and devotion. |
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Sara was not sanguine about the prospects, for all of Midgarde had been held too long in thrall. |
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While the Spanish government is openly optimistic that the worst has passed, residents and environmentalists were not so sanguine. |
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Proud, reactionary, occasionally intimidating, fiercely independent, bloody-minded perhaps, but not sanguine. |
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The man of sanguine temperament builds high hopes where the timid despair, and the irresolute are lost in doubt. |
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The orators who had advocated the war loudly triumphed in the seeming fulfilment of their sanguine predictions. |
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That this in no way reduces his sanguine view of future economic prospects is as unbelievable as it is disconcerting. |
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If you view competition as bad for consumers, you can't have a very sanguine view of their ability to resist corporate come-ons. |
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One should not, however, be sanguine about the prospects for such international behavior modification. |
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The Mexican press has been more sanguine about the prospects for the Zapatistas. |
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This fall, many on Madison Avenue are feeling sanguine about the prospects for TV advertising, the default choice of big marketers. |
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On the fixed-income side, it is now a much less sanguine case of studying balance sheets and deteriorating cash flow positions. |
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Yet all of its military uses, from scouting to strategic bombing, had already been foreseen by an eager, if overly sanguine, public. |
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In this age of computer design, stadium mood and atmosphere can be engineered to give an aura of menace to the most sanguine opponents. |
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Instances later, she was a beautiful young maiden with sanguine hair and a scarlet dress. |
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It was his fresh and sanguine complexion, which struck me as a rather bizarre contrast to his flat eyes. |
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Even a sanguine complexion, therefore, did not guarantee rational capacity in a man. |
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He lay sleeping on his king-sized bed, covered under a crimson sheet with the sanguine hat tilted forward onto the bridge of his nose. |
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After World War I they were less sanguine about progress and more inclined to the hereditarian pessimism of eugenics. |
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It is impossible to be sanguine about the state of international tension that hangs so threateningly over us. |
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Nearby, a colleague who had carried out four burials that day, was less sanguine. |
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Finally, financial markets have been atypically sanguine and even levelheaded. |
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Blood predominated in spring, and a person with a natural excess of blood would have a sanguine physical and psychological humoral constitution, or temperament. |
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Those of a sanguine constitution, those weakened by famine or those who indulged in hot baths, excessive exercise, work or sexual indulgence were particularly vulnerable. |
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Some of his fellow activists are less than sanguine about the shift from a strategy of opposing corporations to one of beating them at their own game. |
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The more sanguine can be found in the green room, drinking cups of tea, gossiping and smoking with other equally sanguine cast members and eternally bored understudies. |
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Since we were both born in 1948 this was a particularly sanguine reminder of mortality. |
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Riffing on Digby's post earlier, I agree that Bush et al are too sanguine. |
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But others, while conceding that growth has slowed, are more sanguine about the economy's prospects. |
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There is perhaps little reason to be sanguine about the contemporary efforts to achieve these coordinative goals when other attempts have failed. |
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The more sanguine, meanwhile, insist that inflated local markets in smaller cities can burst without puncturing the national economy. |
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She is equally desirous of Levine, as animalistic and eager to consume him while sticky with sanguine fluid. |
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Other observers in the music industry are not so sanguine about the arrival of this international musical stew. |
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Nevertheless the players present at the draw party were sanguine about the outcome. |
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However, union members were less sanguine about their employability in another job. |
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The experience left them sanguine about the sometimes vitriolic opinions of strangers on the Internet. |
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Markets will not be so sanguine if it is the Spanish or Italian banking system that needs an infusion. |
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Kiyomizu, a bright alizarin, is youthful, sanguine and lusty. |
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Freudo, on the other hand, is determined to be a more serious, sensual escape behind the seemingly sanguine outer layer of society and into its reprobate nether regions. |
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I am just indicating to you that you may not be justified in taking an entirely sanguine approach that your client's position is entirely separate. |
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Despite the precarious position of the oil market, financial markets remain extraordinarily sanguine in regard to the prospects of another major oil shock. |
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It was also sanguine about the economy's prospects in light of strong productivity growth and the stimulus provided by the current accommodative policy stance. |
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These days, she is sanguine about the twists and turns of her career. |
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Yet Sweeney remains sanguine in the face of such universal naysaying. |
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Similar, if less sanguine, interpretations can be constructed around globalization, environmental agendas, and economic immiseration in the South. |
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But other scientists are not as sanguine about this use of high frequencies as a discriminant, at least not yet. |
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Since the predominance of a Humour has an impact on the character, we can identify four basic temperaments: choleric, sanguine, melancholic, phlegmatic. |
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Only the suave Gerald Finley, today's anti-hero, is entirely sanguine, but that's because his mellifluously baritonal Don has already been acclaimed in half the capitals of the West. |
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For a man who suspected he was being screwed by all sides at once, Poroshenko seemed remarkably sanguine – a big teddy bear trying to make the best of a bad job. |
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Of a sanguine, somewhat irritable temperament, Davy displayed characteristic enthusiasm and energy in all his pursuits. |
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From the smallest details to grand gestures, the insides of Etihad are designed to please the frazzled flier and the sanguine snoozer. |
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The sloth proves neither strifeful brute, nor sanguine, but sincere. |
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It was clear that Dr. Gwynne was not very sanguine as to the effects of his journey to Barchester, and not over anxious to interfere with the bishop. |
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He's a sanguine extravert who is, at his core, a quick-start entrepreneur. |
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His general disposition was sanguine, though he had a quick temper. |
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