It's rare in a service industry to be able to create something so tangible and enduring. |
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Regrettably, there is still no tangible legislation that tackles the problem of sexual harassment in the workplace. |
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The new government should win the public trust by exerting itself to attain tangible results in its efforts to translate the promise into action. |
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There was a need for the Authority to centralize power in order to deliver effectively in the form of tangible results of the peace process. |
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But seldom has such a celebrated political project seen so little tangible circulation. |
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But the film is strikingly bereft of tangible anger, its mood more poignant than incendiary. |
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Unfortunately, they come up short in providing a tangible value proposition that quantifies what the product actually means to a business. |
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These points are concrete objects, being either coloured or tangible, according as they are susceptible to sight or touch. |
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The tangible proof of that was seen in the hundreds of cards, greetings and messages of hope he received during his brief illness. |
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Aside from generating buzz, the free newsletter has garnered some tangible benefits for the company. |
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One of the most tangible connections I've made in the past few days is between my leg and a piece of wood while biking in Pacific Spirit Park. |
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The less tangible aspects such as trust and the quality and depth of relationships are almost impossible to measure. |
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Pride at this Highland showpiece event was tangible in the faces of directors and supporters alike before the game. |
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The dialectic of display and secrecy essential to Mouride visuality is what gives Serigne Faye's imagorium such tangible impact. |
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If this is cultural arrogance, it has perhaps some of its roots in insecurity and takes a tangible form in architectural monumentalism. |
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And thus it is speakable or tangible only as perceived in the changes it effects. |
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Moreover, their impact is often more obvious and tangible than it was in an earlier era. |
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And did this blizzard of deal activity generate tangible additional value for their shareholders? |
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Still, the sight took on an ominous face, especially when the blob began to from a solid tangible shape. |
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Sliding behind the futuristic facia there is a tangible feeling of both solidity and comfort. |
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But what previous generations would have considered tangible personal prosperity spreads its net ever wider. |
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But her narrative gains from the tangible physicality of theatre and gleefully combines eroticism and wit. |
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The central point for writing a history of the new woman is that the referent proved conditional, situational yet nonetheless tangible. |
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I like the tangible reward of a blue ribbon after I've subjected myself to the torture of riding without stirrups in an equitation class. |
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Although imaginary in itself, the Blue Riband offered immense tangible rewards. |
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One could justly add that Spielberg's magic touch is tangible, even if it appears a little unconcerned. |
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A feeling of unquietness and fear was now in the air, an almost tangible tension. |
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Right now I am just nothing more than a body bag with a name, address and some tangible characteristics added in. |
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Instead of being sold the unimagined exotic, department stores now sell us tangible sleaze. |
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Boomerang kids should pay rent or contribute to the household in a very real, tangible way. |
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But there was a tangible atmosphere of exasperation towards the week's end. |
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Water vapour becomes tangible entities that look like stalactites and stalagmites. |
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But actions speak louder than words and previous competitiveness white papers have yielded few tangible results. |
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It said it wants to advertise this fact in a more tangible way hence the commission's presence at the show. |
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Good colleges, scholarships, white-collar jobs, a nice homemaker wife, and two kids were already tangible in his future. |
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As long as calm heads prevail, it can be reasonably hoped that tangible progress will be made in the future. |
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If there was a clear sense of nervousness in the air, it was tangible on the ground. |
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Flesh and bone, or, as in the later idiom, flesh and blood, thus epitomizes kinship, the tangible bonds between family members. |
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But regrettably nothing tangible did come out after so long years of the Board's coming into existence. |
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We certainly don't think of relationships as tangible, as empirically demonstrable entities. |
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In other words, for all the images and metaphors music often presents us with, an album cover is its tangible embodiment. |
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And if physical resemblances were undeniable, that made it more important to defend the less tangible ground of mentation or behavior. |
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What it may lack in song structure it makes up for in real, tangible, effectiveness. |
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Both companies offer health insurance, share options and performance incentives as more financially tangible perks of the job. |
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Old sportswriters tend to use mysticism to clarify events that have prosaic, tangible explanations. |
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Minakakis' passionate, incendiary delivery provided tangible pathos to the band's awe-inspiring but detached musicianship. |
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It has tangible positive effects on the physical and emotional health of the doer. |
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How can such preaching be as tangible as the taste of bread in our mouths, as life-giving as water on our foreheads? |
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As for governments, when you print promissory notes that are not tied to anything tangible, the urge to print more notes is overwhelming. |
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To the casual visitor, there seems little tangible evidence of uplift, despite the rivers of money sluicing round the casino tables. |
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Governor Blagojevich's signing of this bill is evidence that making your voice heard can have a tangible effect on the laws that are passed. |
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We have seen the tangible benefits to those living in rural areas, especially older people living on their own. |
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It is something he possessed by birth through virtue of being a Frenchman and for other equally potent but less tangible reasons. |
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Of course, there's no tangible way to value a bitcoin aside from what someone else believes it is worth. |
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I can't make sense out of debate for the sake of debate when more tangible and perceptible issues of our own lives are left unspoken of. |
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It translates these purported interactions into a mode perceivable and tangible to man. |
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Their hostility towards each other, however, was tangible and frequently led to quite irrational behaviour. |
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The fact is, the reformists have failed to attain any tangible achievement. |
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Things were obviously being created but they were tangible and tactile which allowed you to accept them more easily. |
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But translating ideals into tangible policies and alternatives have not been easy. |
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The respondents identified tangible or practical barriers or resources for fathering. |
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Thus, in a tangible and pragmatic sense, systematics is the framework for all comparative biology. |
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The buzz has been almost tangible as the first match of the Six Nations gets closer. |
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We were talking earlier about the multitude of voices in your poems, and the plenitude of the tangible world in them. |
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He was a tall man with grey hair and a long mustache, with an almost tangible aura of power about him that didn't fit the role of a waiter. |
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The tangible and intangible aspects of the dynamics then are mutually bound to each other and always function conterminously. |
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He carries that sorrow with him now, just under the surface, almost tangible. |
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She held me tightly while I cried, never saying a word, and the sheer strength of her love was almost tangible. |
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I was in Oxford Street later in the evening and I can report that the hysteria in the air was almost tangible. |
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In each of these popular histories, the salt tang of the sea is almost tangible. |
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Capabilities are less tangible and result from the organization of resources, internal systems, and skills. |
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After the silence grew almost tangible in the room, he cleared his throat, and spoke. |
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Throughout the group there was an almost tangible feeling of excited expectation that she couldn't understand. |
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There is not enough bran in this book, not enough of the tangible grit of reality, happening at a specific instant in a precise place. |
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I was on the London Tube the day after the July 7 attacks, and the fear of another attack was almost tangible. |
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That feeling of heaven, that bliss, had disappeared, leaving an almost tangible sense of absence. |
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The attraction between us was almost tangible, electricity visible to the naked eye. |
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Gut contents of Carboniferous arthropods, which include lycopod xylem elements and spores, are a tangible demonstration of phytophagy. |
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This type of allocation is a physical transfer of a tangible asset from the company to the investors. |
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It's just like paper money, they say, which isn't real or tangible but is backed only by the promises of the government. |
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Being labeled hypocrites is a price worth paying if it yields tangible results in the real world. |
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Like so many things, it's a combination of social reality with a tangible, physical reality. |
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Another issue, in design writing at least, is that online writing is separated from a tangible physical object. |
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People here will see this as a small but feasible and tangible antidote to perceptions that the country is the enemy of the rest of the world. |
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The speedscope is not capable of producing a visible, tangible record as is envisaged in the legislation. |
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Though full equality is a long way from being achieved, the gains have been real and tangible. |
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I am very satisfied with what we have done and can really see some clear and tangible results. |
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It would be a visible and tangible means of bringing Glasgow and Edinburgh together. |
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Maybe one day he will understand that there are real and tangible consequences to mistakes. |
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So, many are putting their cash into tangible assets such as real estate and gold. |
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The result will be a thorough, intelligent market research study that is likely to yield tangible results. |
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To achieve tangible results, command personnel will also require training in the field of criminology. |
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As a society we are far too preoccupied with measuring things in terms of tangible commercial results. |
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These are tangible, physical assets and totally unlike the stock of a typical NYSE company. |
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There comes a point in making a new garden when a sudden transformation happens and what was a wasteland becomes a visible, tangible garden. |
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Could it be that there was actually a real and tangible hope that we would get out of here? |
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In any broken place there rests tangible evidence of those who came before us and in touching what they left, we can for a time touch them. |
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This is not quite a brutish indifference to everything beyond the tangible. |
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A triumph for him would allow him benefits that extend way beyond the tangible. |
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My thoughts cling to the tangible memory of you and your every little gesture and movement like a drowning person clings to their saviour. |
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In representing American economic interests in the absence of a tangible American presence, Fort Union was a surrogate for federal authority. |
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So he accepted Empedocles elements as a kind of intermediary between this imponderable stuff and the tangible world. |
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Viewers walking about become ghostly figures in empty rooms, their tangible bodies transformed into shadows whenever they pass behind the scrims. |
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He expects that the Super Bowl efforts will generate tangible results three to five years after the 2005 game is played. |
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It stands to reason then that intangible means not tangible, unable to touch, or impalpable. |
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To them, time is every bit as tangible, every bit as measurable, and every bit as valuable as money. |
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After a month of fair words Artois came away in April 1793 with a jewelled sword inscribed With God, for the King but no more tangible support. |
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Process Group develops a process improvement project with tangible milestones and measurable objectives. |
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He was the tangible symbol of the Baby Boom, its conceits, its self-absorption, its lack of discipline and failures of responsibility. |
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I could always feel the distance separating us as tangible as a stone wall. |
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The promise of heaven is rather less tangible than the promise of a sun-drenched holiday in the Caribbean. |
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It gave voters a substantial and tangible personal reward and it was something Labour would never do. |
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For faith is belief in the absence of tangible evidence or proof. |
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And discrediting Rouhani will be easier if they can point to tangible signs of Western bad faith. |
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Relationships that have blossomed via social media and the Internet can feel just as real as any tangible one. |
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Beyond all the emotions, there are tangible benefits that can be accrued. |
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For all the children, sport offers a tangible sense of achievement. |
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It's been a while since an album has taken such great lengths to show that there is some tangible relation between the worlds of electronic and acoustic music. |
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The songs came fast and mostly furious, delivered with a tangible urgency, as if they're worried that their mics and amps would be shut off at any moment. |
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Planting trees to expand reserves and create corridors between protected tiger reserves is one tangible way to help the big cats survive and multiply. |
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I initially had great hopes that this 10-part miniseries would have a tangible impact on enlarging the jazz audience. |
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When it comes to tangible gifts, the sharing economy really starts to flex its holiday disrupting muscle. |
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Pleasure seekers and Aristotelians alike will find comfort in the research findings that there are actually many tangible advantages of happiness. |
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There were many factors that led to this rare bit of tangible progress on gitmo. |
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Her voice broke the humming silence, almost tangible barrier between them. |
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The excitement with which I am tingling at this moment is almost tangible. |
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Was it the promise of the almost tangible chemistry between the two? |
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When we stopped getting outbreaks in the autumn of last year the relief, not only in country areas and among farmers but nationally, was almost tangible. |
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She walked quickly, and her resentment toward him was almost tangible. |
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These priority projects are real, tangible evidence of the company's work. |
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The flowers are also meant to reflect the optimism of spring and act as a tangible and touching reminder for those who sponsor a bulb in memory of a loved one. |
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Resources are tangible, visible, and relatively easy to measure. |
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He was a tangible threat each and every time he touched the ball. |
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Although it appeared to be important for this student to share this information, it did not apply to any tangible aspect of the text or discussion. |
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Does coming to terms with the past require the destruction of its effects, tangible or intangible? |
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The question of making it tangible and measurable really is key. |
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It was very tangible, because I knew that I would get to set and I would don the jumpsuit. |
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His ability to translate that fleeting moment into a tangible design that others can wear has been a meaningful experience. |
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Today, in most middle schools, students have no tangible connection to past academic years or future performance goals. |
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My session produced little more than a mild feeling of relaxation, and a twenty minute burst of calm a few hours later was the only tangible effect. |
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More than a sheer representation of nature, mimesis, as an integrating part of the poetic function in fables, adds a tangible and active dimension to human tragedy. |
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Rachmaninov, who put up with truncations to most of his works, absolutely refused to shorten the concerto and played it complete and unabridged in a state of tangible tension. |
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By sticking to the line that the air marshals alone are right and everyone else is wrong they betray a mindset which smacks of cover-up and hints at lack of tangible evidence. |
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Pires would be a Bosman signing and would be the first tangible evidence that hiring a coach of Le Guen's stature will attract big-name players to Ibrox. |
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Native title owners might voluntarily surrender their native title to the Crown in exchange for tangible commercial benefits for the local Indigenous community. |
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What if the pandemonium of the internet was turned into something more indexical and even tangible? |
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He realizes that he was looking for something tangible and definite in his quest to find Atman and Brahman within himself and to understand the meaning of life. |
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At his death, Franz Mayer left his collection of viceregal Mexican art to his adopted nation to afford the people of Mexico tangible evidence of their rich colonial heritage. |
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Expect some tangible proof of this fact in the form of a bonus check or other ritzy rewards. |
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He argues that social activists need to realise that if they want substantial and tangible results, it is the government above all else which they need to influence. |
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We know that some people do refrain from overusing nonrenewable resources, from forests and fish to less tangible resources such as clean air and physical space. |
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As a musician, some deeply ingested logic automatically pivoted the vision before me to a tangible translation of a triad's triple arch in heavenly suspension. |
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We offer tangible value to the individuals behind the idea and then, by hothousing the concept, we offer investors a very sound proposition indeed. |
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With nothing tangible at stake in terms of league positions, one might have been forgiven for imagining that it would develop into a fairly mundane affair. |
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Though it has little tangible value in the physical sense beyond the paper it is printed on or metal the coin is made from, cash has a very real value in the commercial world. |
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With the exception of Turkey, however, none of them received any positive inducements, in the form of tangible carrots or expressions of empathy to their objections. |
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Also, by setting myself deadlines and being much harsher on myself and less indulgent, I was able to really push through to a tangible finish line. |
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Maybe in an effort to offer people something tangible to do, he counselled citizens to prepare for the worst and ensure that every home had its own personal preparedness plan. |
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In America the first tangible result was Radburn, an idealistic effort to build a self-sufficient garden city within two square miles of New Jersey. |
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The distaste was tangible across his face and he shuddered perceptibly. |
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Where Staffel has layered strips and nubbins of clay onto the underlying form, their opaque shapes bring us back to the tangible surface. |
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Compressively, there are very tangible points and facts that might need attention of the western world to oversee. |
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In short, a system of intellectual property rights is not compossible with a system of property rights to tangible objects. |
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The Phoenicians not only traded in tangible goods, but were also instrumental in transporting the trappings of culture. |
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All real and tangible personal property located in the state of Maine is taxable unless specifically exempted by statute. |
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The diverse origins of Malagasy culture are evident in its tangible expressions. |
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Clothing, like any useful tangible good, when captured as booty, would be distributed out. |
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Japan has a developed system for the protection and promotion of both tangible and intangible Cultural Properties and National Treasures. |
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They are tangible objects, with a physical presence intended for use either permanently or just at next meal. |
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It is used in marketing to describe the inability to assess the value gained from an activity using any tangible evidence. |
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Acucote has extended its line of tangible, voiding and tamper-evident products to include complete customization. |
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It's the less tangible potential of national service that really counts. |
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Fortunate aside leading tone will open our lips to pout worn in tangible overglide. |
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This new definition is aimed to exclude payments to applicants who exercise no real or tangible agricultural activity on their land. |
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The team was a dedicated and passionate group led by Joseph Pupe, the operations manager, and they were making a tangible difference. |
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Less than 10 percent of the purchase prices were for identifiable tangible assets. |
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Walker is coerced into a partnership with Wild West sheriff Roy Pulsipher, forming a demonically dull duo who share no tangible chemistry. |
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Only tangible things are endowed with real existence, the rest are imponderabilia. |
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I do hope the police will give some tangible support to that young constable who I believe must not be a fall guy. |
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Collectables are a type of tangible investments alongside commodities and property. |
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The item traded may be a tangible product such as apples or a service such as repair services, legal counsel, or entertainment. |
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The Sodium Nitrite conversion and the new purge process have already delivered tangible sustainability benefits at the Mount Vernon site. |
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The campus was aswarm with eminently harassable young women and strapping boys emitting almost tangible hormones. |
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To assure that it meets the net tangible asset requirements, the Company took a series of steps in the last three days. |
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But the audit focused on measurability and how we make a tangible difference to our clients' bottom lines. |
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The LocalMaven app creates a mutually beneficial situation where businesses, Mavens and customers all receive tangible benefits. |
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The successful machine politician also made sure that the city, or his piece of it, functioned well enough so that voters saw tangible results. |
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Amidst the Rust Belt rhetoric, there's a danger the tangible, long-term benefits of the agreement will be overlooked. |
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The routinizing of ethics gives some tangible assurance that a system is in place, but it also undermines deliberate attention to ethical issues. |
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Harlem comes through as an urban hothouse mean with exotic hustle and violence, a tangible asphalt jungle with its own abrasive laws of motion. |
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Life was neither fair nor unfair, neither cruel nor uncruel. Rather it was a tangible, real thing, precious, and not easily affordable. |
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Sounds and some tangible qualities solicit their proper senses, and force an entrance to the mind. |
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For my part, I think we ought to rejoice that this same beard is of real tangible shaveable hair. |
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The monetary union proved one of the few tangible results of the Scandinavist political movement of the 19th century. |
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The Astley Green Colliery Museum and Gin Pit Miners Welfare in Astley are two of the last tangible reminders of the once thriving industry. |
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Over time the standards developed to cover many aspects of tangible engineering, and then engineering methodologies including quality systems, safety and security. |
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However, there is no tangible support of the presence of Norse voyagers in Cape Cod, and the view is not generally accepted by archaeologists or historians. |
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It was the most tangible link between the instrumental style we discussed a few pages ago and the truly dubwise occurrences of a year or two later. |
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It is offered in US English and German layouts with either blue switches for a clicky tangible feel, or brown switches for a softer, more tactile experience. |
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Children learn to associate these tangible touch and feel experiences with holidays of the month of Tishrei such as Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, Sukkot, and Simchat Torah. |
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Science, it cannot be too often repeated, deals with tangible phenomena. |
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Such ambitions of authenticity function to factify the fiction, literally to prop it up, performing a positivist role as the tangible trace of a lost era. |
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It took the combined skills of three great civilizations far apart in time to frame that godlike concept in which the tangible universe itself was only a single factor. |
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Situation aspect are abstract terms that are not physically tangible. |
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This is important to the ends of tangible geography, as well in the construction and arrangement of tables, as in every description of cartographic composition. |
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As previously announced on July 9, 1999, the Company was granted a qualifications exception from the net tangible asset requirement by the Nasdaq Listing Qualifications Panel. |
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The Purple Heart Trail is a visual reminder on tangible turf of the long road that these soldiers traveled in order to preserve our freedom and way of life. |
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By charting this otherworldly universe, Matthew Carl Strecher makes palpable for the reader a bizarre literary landscape where the metaphysical and the tangible often collide. |
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The attempts to delegitimise the dialogue by imposing preconditions on the agenda are delaying the opportunity in providing positive tangible results. |
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Since the end of the 1994 civil war, tangible progress has been made on the diplomatic front in restoring normal relations with Yemen's neighbors. |
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This risk of unintelligibility increases over time as the generation that fought a war dies out, replaced by individuals who paid no tangible price in that conflict. |
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