It uses moments of slapstick to deliver comic relief where none is warranted. |
|
However, several unusual attributes of crested auklets, Aethia cristatella, warranted further investigation. |
|
From water filters and water conditioners to reverse osmosis systems and saltless water softeners, all of our products are warranted. |
|
The practice may be warranted, however, to prevent injuries to pigs and sows. |
|
A worker may be so experienced and have so misconducted himself or herself that a finding of contributory negligence is warranted. |
|
Masks, face shields, protective eyewear or water-impermeable gowns may be worn as warranted by the circumstances. |
|
If symptoms are severe enough to prevent effective trauma-focused therapy, pharmacotherapy is warranted as a next step. |
|
Both goals were stamped with class but it was tough on City, who hardly warranted being behind by one, never mind two. |
|
Therefore, encouraging ascertainment of health information for three generations of relatives is warranted. |
|
Even at my worst, I never believed in heaping extra abuses on any feeling being that didn't do something that warranted it. |
|
The birds are in the trees, and if I could coax them down to my shoulder, then my trek may be warranted. |
|
This indicated that no specific attention was warranted to these near zero or small positive values. |
|
His steal of third base in the fourth and deciding game of the ALDS didn't get as much pub as I thought was warranted. |
|
Whether this assertion is warranted and what exactly it amounts to is quite another question. |
|
He even obliquely references suicide as a possibility, although I didn't think a suicide assessment was warranted at this time. |
|
But they said the area continued to receive a smaller share of the cake than was warranted by the amount of crime committed in it. |
|
Such drastic tactics may be warranted, according to Horne, because the current situation is putting drug agencies in a quandary. |
|
Further studies are warranted to examine the possible therapeutic effects of evening primrose oil for hot flashes. |
|
Treatment may be warranted if the insects are actively feeding and defoliation is expected to increase. |
|
Instead, when warranted, use a light protein pack or hair mask followed by a clarifying shampoo. |
|
|
Thus, studies of asthma in racially diverse populations appear to be warranted. |
|
The poor condition of that tiling and the defective mortar to the verge tiling generally warranted further investigation, in Mr Bruce's opinion. |
|
An adrenocorticotropic hormone stimulation test can be administered if clinically warranted. |
|
Overseeing a crew of 40-odd plumbers, carpenters, electricians and sculptors, he says it cost far more than was warranted. |
|
Further research regarding the etiology, natural history, pathophysiology, and treatment of subclinical hyperthyroidism is warranted. |
|
He said the enthusiasm surrounding the event warranted making the event an annual affair. |
|
Additional research is certainly warranted examining factors associated with ruminal degradability of barley grain. |
|
In the agreement the vendor warranted that the pool machinery was properly constructed and free of structural deficits. |
|
While caution is warranted, it is surely too soon to write off neuroeconomics entirely. |
|
He explained that the attack had been carried out with a knife, not a blunt instrument, and warranted more serious charges. |
|
I am always ready to believe the worst when warranted, but this has all the earmarks of a wild rumor. |
|
Specialty referral is warranted for suspected complications and inpatient detoxification programs should be considered. |
|
It was precisely his impersonality or lack of message that warranted his relegation to the status of second-rate playwright. |
|
These matters are remitted to the Ontario Court of Justice for the imposition of a sentence warranted in law. |
|
If you think our presence here is not warranted, you have the misfortune of not being able to see the faces of a liberated people. |
|
An unfair apportionment limited upcountry representation in the legislature and gave the parishes more power than their population warranted. |
|
Up until this season the umpire closest to any suspicious or contentious incident would review the game tape and lay a charge if warranted. |
|
A future study investigating a broader range of psychopathologies is clearly warranted. |
|
Treatment of typhlitis with G-CSF has already been reported, and formal clinical trials are warranted. |
|
Are people who report near death experiences also warranted in believing that, say, the passage to eternity requires moving through a real tunnel? |
|
|
After advising against travel to the affected areas, Frieden said increased caution is warranted. |
|
The home team matched Falkirk's efforts and for some of the time at least played well enough to have warranted a more positive result on another day. |
|
They have tended to advocate a certain view of Russia's prospects and of the East-West relationship that may not be warranted by the actualities of the situation. |
|
Even asking questions in class warranted a lash of the whip. |
|
The giant powerful lights can pump out more than 300,000 watts all up, with each bulb requiring 2 kilowatts of power and warranted for 10,000 hours. |
|
For that reason, it is essential for a neutral and detached judge to make the decision whether any particular query is warranted. |
|
Perhaps that is warranted in this case, but there is peril in generalizing. |
|
The member states were persuaded that an independent audit body was warranted, given the emergence of an EU budget with supranational characteristics. |
|
Watch video of her underage drinking, public indecency, and extortion that warranted time in the slammer. |
|
Isaacs says that the epidemic is inciting panic worldwide that, in his opinion, may soon be warranted. |
|
Yes, there are the usual references to color-changing T-shirts and Jurassic Park, but it feels more warranted than throwaway here. |
|
Meanwhile, the massiveness of the throne warranted some model-making ahead of time, with an interesting twist. |
|
While in some instances the criticism might be warranted perhaps we have been short-sighted, forgetting just what some of these people have done for us. |
|
Were they keeping a list instead of getting their work done, perhaps discipline is warranted. |
|
Governments at all levels will face short-term costs, of course, but the economic fear of immigrants has never been warranted. |
|
Considering the multi-billion-dollar industry pulp romance novels have become, a documentary on their popularity and the no-name writers who create them would seem warranted. |
|
It is unfortunate that this movie could not have been produced entirely in Spanish, with asides in English for the sporadic encounters where they are warranted. |
|
Turns out they'll do a cardiogram and, if warranted, an angiogram. |
|
Male surgeons have no difficulty maintaining much higher degrees of vigilance about contamination in an operating room than would ever be warranted in housecleaning. |
|
I believe some degree of circumspection, if not caution, is warranted. |
|
|
What appears to be warranted are concerted efforts by parents and educators that engage and involve the cognitions and affects of these young people. |
|
Because of a curvilinear relationship in which resolution gains decline with increasing sample size increments, larger sample sizes were not warranted. |
|
If such claim in equity is warranted, the breach of which provides for a right of action and compensatory damages for any loss established, no limitation period applies. |
|
Prophylaxis for infective endocarditis is warranted only in those patients with the true disease of thickened redundant mitral leaflets, mitral regurgitation, or both. |
|
Systematic investigations assessing the concordance of survey and social indicator data in estimating the prevalence of substance abuse are warranted. |
|
Dewey's instrumentalism was both a theory and a method of inquiry for solving problems and for generating truth, or what he called warranted assertion. |
|
This wish is warranted to perform within the usual implication of good tidings for a period of one year, or until the issuance of a subsequent holiday greeting. |
|
Further research is warranted to clarify the role of pulmonary mechanics as correlates of weaning outcomes in patients with and without pulmonary disease. |
|
But to generate knowledge independently of experience, a priori warrants must produce warranted true belief in counterfactual situations where experiences are different. |
|
One-way analysis of covariance, with pretest scores as covariants, were used when tests for homogeneity of variance dictated that ANCOVA was warranted. |
|
I believe in full-throated criticism of judges where warranted. |
|
Depending on what aspects of the evidence you choose to stress or underplay, it's not that hard to conclude that belief or disbelief in afterlife is warranted. |
|
No data were available on any likely disbenefit resulting from designing for the higher crash test and further research is warranted to confirm this. |
|
In patients with significantly discomforting or disabling symptoms that are not controlled with standard measures, specific allergy testing may be warranted. |
|
Occasionally a germ tube or immature appressorium is observed which suggests that f urther study is warranted. |
|
A distinct regional term is warranted, however, by the location and chronology of the sites and the exact typology. |
|
Speculation about anything which God has not revealed through his Word is not warranted. |
|
Courts will decide if the allegations have merit and order police to act in lieu of the accuser's office if warranted. |
|
It was in the Early Modern period that Avebury was first recognised as an antiquity that warranted investigation. |
|
Would it be fair to say that Gregory had recognized a sociolect in the original that warranted its rendition in Kiltartan in translation? |
|
|
Surveys of coyotes and other canid populations may be warranted in the WMDs of origin to establish the source of infection. |
|
At one time, scholars perceived Posidonius's influence in almost every subsequent writer, whether warranted or not. |
|
Although some criticisms of corporate short-termism are warranted, others are exaggerated. |
|
We are contesting that it warranted a notice of violation,'' said Newhall Land Vice President Marlee Lauffer. |
|
His desertion barely warranted a comment, but he was not hailed as a hero. |
|
Comparative studies of different glucocorticoids are therefore clearly warranted. |
|
Until these nations can provide basic health care, the fear is warranted. |
|
In other words, one can be fallibilist about both claims that are said to be apriori warranted and the a priori warrants for the claims. |
|
Nevertheless, the backdowns to business pressure documented by Kelsey seem more than were warranted by either political or economic necessity. |
|
Additional common crimes include theft, arson, and the destruction of property not warranted by military necessity. |
|
Therefore, a re-examination of the nutritional value of mustard press cake for poultry seems warranted. |
|
Prince Edward Islanders feel the cost to run an office is not warranted due to accessibility to their local representative. |
|
The accommodator often knows when to give in to others, but can be persuaded to surrender a position even when it is not warranted. |
|
The rapid growth of the local population warranted that the building be rebuilt into the current structure. |
|
Very often theorists are prone to overconstruct facts, that is to endow them with greater meaning than is warranted by the observations. |
|
Latest single Outlines rounded off a set of electro-fused post rock that not only warranted the crowd's admiration but also their money come its July 25 release. |
|
The St George's Cross defaced with the arms of Dunkirk flown from the jack staff is the warranted house flag of the Association of Dunkirk Little Ships. |
|
A century and a half later, the statutory provision for nuncupative wills disappeared in England.As of 1960, forty-two American states warranted nuncupative wills. |
|
Among other problems, this traditional classification of the continental West Germanic dialects can suggest stronger ties between dialects than is linguistically warranted. |
|
As a consequence, specifying works that contain considerable ossia passagework is warranted since they often introduce drastic changes to the song as a whole. |
|
|
Governments did not dispatch their most elite units, men who are truly not replaceable, unless the situation warranted a razor-sharp slice and not a wide-handed slap. |
|
Lawsuits and countersuits almost always result in CPAs spending far more in attorney fees and in lost billable time than is warranted for the fees owed to them. |
|
Given these opposing views, a closer look at macrobiotics is warranted. |
|
In a per curium opinion, the majority concluded Schenck had willfully violated the stipulated provisions of the Code in a manner which warranted the penalty assessed. |
|
The best kind is a flexible, UV-resistant material such as 45-mil EPDM rubber, which is fish-safe, patchable, and warranted for 20 years or longer. |
|
For example, since more users rely on a large company's audit report, an auditor's hability risk for failing to issue a modified report when warranted with company size. |
|
The Blues appealed against the dismissal which occurred late during the 2-1 win at Upton Park on December 22, and the FA panel agreed it warranted a rescindment. |
|
Additional studies on helminths of bats of the northern Great Plains are warranted to further advance our knowledge of chiropteran parasites and their geographic distribution. |
|
Error terms were assessed graphically for autocorrelation by analyzing autocorrelation function chart and the partial autocorrelation chart if warranted. |
|
Apparently, in the NBA's crackdown on on-court misbehavior by calling technical fouls, that warranted his second technical of the night and, thus, an automatic ejection. |
|