The warm, fuzzy rhetoric of the sisterhood is completely at odds with our brutal, individualistic, competitive society. |
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It is true that many of us became involved in the feminist movement with unrealistic expectations of bonded sisterhood. |
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The girl then responded to the bishop's queries about Pusey and his dealings with the sisterhood. |
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So in terms of sisterhood, it behoves us to stay married if it is an option. |
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Maria resisted convention by joining an Anglican sisterhood, and Christina, who never married, became the finest poet of the Tractarian movement. |
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Girls initiated together form a bond and this sisterhood lasts throughout their lives. |
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In 1991, Juliet made Blood Sisters, a film essay which explored the mythologies of sisterhood. |
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They based the ridiculous behaviour around the same conniving behaviour performed in the sisterhood of all elementary school girls. |
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Anyone who has a sister, as I do, understands the mental, emotional and spiritual complexities that biological sisterhood imparts. |
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There was such a feeling of sisterhood the like of which we had never experienced before and probably will never experience again. |
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Many say a sense of sisterhood motivates them to protect other mothers from the fear and pain they have faced. |
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There is peace, there is communication and there is brotherhood and sisterhood. |
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This focus continues, encouraged by international scouting events and an emphasis on sisterhood and brotherhood across cultures. |
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Cut the ties that bind us together, cut the bond, cut our brotherhood and our sisterhood, and we suffer. |
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It probably feels to your friend that your're breaking a law of sisterhood when crossing that state line. |
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Their bravery, sisterhood and spirit inspired me and gave me new courage to meet our challenges head on. |
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This bond of sisterhood reflects the bond of brotherhood within US infantry squads where men are broken down into smaller teams. |
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In other words, what we need is a genuine commitment to the principles of universal brotherhood and sisterhood. |
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Still, the way the insolent and foul-mouthed Tora and the starchily patronizing Selma go from hostility to sisterhood is not without interest. |
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It was a magical evening of tears, laughter, and special feelings of connection, sisterhood, and joy in the beauty and the strength of women. |
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And her zany warmth, along with Ms. Shellys mischievous mousiness, fill out the movies affectionate, comical view of workplace sisterhood. |
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Documentary exploring the cloistered world of Notting Hill's strict Carmelite sisterhood. |
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When she meets the other clones she finally feels a sense of 'being home' – a sort of sisterhood, like twins have. |
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To protect single seniors, a 1:1 sisterhood service with medical providers, students, volunteers, and religious groups is being promoted. |
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Aboriginal services, elder services, Native brotherhood and sisterhood programs, and Native liaison officers are in place. |
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We are grappling with a sisterhood made up of women who live at different levels of power and privilege. |
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It is a celebration of motherhood, sisterhood and womanhood. |
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Amy Siskind on how the most powerful woman in politics betrays the sisterhood. |
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I can't know what it's like to be a woman, or even how exactly to be a dad to girls, but I know something of sisters, and even perhaps of sisterhood, if I may be so bold. |
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There is no sisterhood among sisters here, only envy fuelled by despair. |
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The idea was to raise our consciousness and love ourselves until eventually sisterhood would be powerful enough to make us an army of lovers who could not fail. |
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I get irritated at the ritual speeches and show of public sisterhood. |
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It's an embarrassment, a sign of succumbing to the ever-increasing pressures of society, failing the sisterhood, giving in to the boring aspirations of the perfect body. |
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He thanked Sellon for her presence in the Diocese of Exeter and the notable achievements of the sisterhood among the poor, especially the orphan girls. |
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The power of religious belief and commitment that motivated women to enter a sisterhood and engage in social activism is often downplayed in historians' accounts. |
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Deborah Tannen knows all about sisterhood, sister-speak, and the pitfalls and perplexities of sibling rivalry. |
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Special thanks go to the community that welcomed us with extreme cordiality which allowed us to enjoy a beautiful and joyful experience of sisterhood in sharing the same way of life. |
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Though our congregational needs are often demanding, we need to find time and place our talents at the service of our international Dominican sisterhood. |
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Your contributions are many and too often you do not receive the appreciation deserved as you continue in sisterhood and solidarity to struggle for just and fair treatment for all. |
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We are asking ourselves what role our congregations, continental organizations and DSI play in our developing consciousness as an international sisterhood. |
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Promote a feeling of sisterhood and fun among participants. |
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She felt she was part of a sisterhood of so-called working wives. |
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When the sisterhood stab one of their own in the back … I wonder how loud former prime minister Gillard screamed when her own sisterhood knifed her in the back and took her out. |
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This would certainly be the greatest sisterhood of all time! |
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They are now in essence a sisterhood joined together by a vile incident. |
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Thus, by carrying out these repugnant deeds that are contrary to whatever values or culture we shared as Somlis since the millennium, the SNM dealt a mortal blow to any bonds of brotherhood and sisterhood we shared. |
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Over dinner in Beverly Hills recently, the sisterhood was palpable. |
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Nascimento believes that the patron saint of the sisterhood, behind Nossa Senhora da Boa Morte, is Nana Buruku, the Old Orixa. |
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Our union is powerful because of our sisterhood and solidarity. |
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Children of the Eagle tells the story of five women and their mother, thus setting the stage for an intense daughterhood, sisterhood and motherhood in the narrative. |
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The sisterhood was founded by the Bishop of Truro, George Howard Wilkinson, in 1883 and closed in 2001 when the two surviving nuns moved into care homes. |
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