"It doesn't have to follow the dictates of the news cycle; it follows the dictates of the Kremlin," Mr. Nimmo said.
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The dictates of art and the dictates of entertainment don't always conflict, but wherever they do, Miles can be counted on to entertain.
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Its protagonist obeys the dictates of her conscience instead of the dictates of the state, thereby satisfying our national appetite for righteous outlaws.
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He adds ... "common sense" dictates leaving the law unchanged.
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Her depictions aim to dismantle "types" as society dictates them.
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Moore's Law dictates that processing speed doubles every 18 months.
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In fact, Williams' faith dictates they do the very opposite.
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Fan engagement dictates if and when new issues will drop.
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So, logic dictates MJ steer wayyyyy clear of Khabib, right?
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We all live on the rubbish: it dictates our thoughts.
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This axis dictates how Pluto moves if its mass changes.
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That always dictates the direction I want to go in.
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Nature dictates that the grass should eventually grow into form.
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Al Jazeera is not following the dictates of any government.
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Royals usually follow a strict protocol that dictates their behavior.
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It steers the cultural conversation and dictates our social lives.
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You can't change the past, because it dictates the future.
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Anybody growing up their parents' child dictates everything they do.
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He is mercurial and often dictates policy by Twitter feed.
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The Force dictates who wins and loses based on balance.
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The fashion industry dictates what's in fashion, what's cool, what's acceptable.
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One controller dictates the behavior of all of the constituent parts.
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Often, what we have materially dictates how we feel about ourselves.
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And the size of the shell dictates who can wear it.
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Truffles are fragile, and climate dictates the health of each harvest.
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Motherhood dictates Sheryl Crow's life these days — even her dating life!
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This kind of thinking falsely dictates a path to Black achievement.
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It's only at True Directions that gender automatically dictates certain behaviors.
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Logic dictates that Microsoft needs to get in the game here.
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Michigan law dictates that her sons will split her estate equally.
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How they are broken dictates what I can do to them .
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Suddenly, ultra-cool girl code dictates that hair is totally optional.
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The solution, not surprisingly, involves light, which dictates our circadian rhythms.
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In several places custom dictates that only men can inherit land.
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TRADITION dictates that bad children get coal in their Christmas stockings.
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It dictates absolute loyalty from the military to ensure regime security.
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But what if the states themselves decided to change those dictates?
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The level four advisory also dictates that Americans cannot travel abroad.
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State law dictates that only those involving "serious injury" require investigation.
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When orthodoxy dictates behavior, entire worlds of pleasure can be missed.
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Two of the books' dictates seemed like they were demonstrably working.
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German identity can never be a simple thing; history dictates that.
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"They have to act as the situation dictates," Mr. Puglise said.
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Stig, meanwhile, is impervious to American social dictates — or is he?
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A woman alone can know the dictates of her own conscience.
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The zeitgeist dictates that the uglier the trend is, the better.
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Ultimately, one thing dictates whether you'll generate results: Did you decide?
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McDonald's only dictates policy for its relatively few corporate-owned stores.
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But convention dictates that he should try to maintain the status quo.
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A person's city or country dictates the primary ingredient in his diet.
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Tradition dictates that the outgoing president pens a letter for his successor.
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How they signal to the public dictates how the country should respond.
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He will not use the magisterium or papal dictates to force progress.
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The modern game dictates that these types of numbers not be ignored.
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"However, further consideration dictates that other solutions will need to be considered."
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Beyond that, the wind largely dictates the flight path and landing site.
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And that dictates how these objects interact with one another in space.
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But they keep people in prison far longer than public safety dictates.
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|
But the cycle dictates that as sponsors cash in, inventors feel forgotten.
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|
The narrowness of Britain's vote -- 52% to 48% -- dictates a moderate course.
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China has a non-market financial system that dictates the yuan's level.
|
|
Yet as basic economic principles make clear, caution dictates no such thing.
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"Mylan nor any other industry partner dictates our position," Ms. Winders said.
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They built "a private culture in defiance of government dictates," he writes.
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They have an innate ability to become whoever context dictates they become.
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Music is so powerful that way: It dictates and soundtracks our moods.
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Israel has depended on U.S. aid yet it consistently ignores U.S. dictates.
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Conventional wisdom dictates that you should do so as soon as possible.
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Money dictates what kind of movies Marvel makes or doesn't continue making.
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|
Spain's electoral calendar dictates that the next election would fall on Dec.
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Swift was dumped because society dictates that she must be alone forever.
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Hardly. Too many dictates about wine interfere with the pleasures it brings.
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Corrupt bosses lord over them with arbitrary dictates and inconvenient work schedules.
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|
But I don't think that necessarily dictates a hopeless situation going forward.
|
|
"Noone dictates Turkey," Mevlut Cavusoglu, Turkey's foreign minister, wrote in a tweet.
|
|
"The pitch dictates what we're going to do," said Martinez, who hit .
|
|
I'll be releasing new rankings every week or two -- as news dictates.
|
|
Natural modesty, of course, dictates that he seeks no credit for it.
|
|
Jewish law dictates that the menorah be lit around nightfall, he said.
|
|
This anxiety dictates my current "apathy" toward him, and I hate it.
|
|
And so the novel follows its own dictates, creates its own history.
|
|
But the president's dictates and their own approach haven't helped them any.
|
|
After that, the Constitution dictates little about how the proceeding should run.
|
|
What is it about congressional culture that dictates a meeting like this?
|
|
The genre dictates Blanc should be a world-class thinker and deducer.
|
|
It may mean speaking up when a CEO dictates the news agenda.
|
|
Social upheavals simply do not abide by the dictates of partisan politics.
|
|
The material, often clay, dictates a lot of what can be manifested.
|
|
Maryland law dictates that car windows should be no more than 65% opaque.
|
|
If convicted, state mandate dictates he receive a sentence of life in prison.
|
|
Krawcheck understood that how much a woman makes dictates how much she invests.
|
|
This motion then dictates how the entire mass of bacteria move and align.
|
|
He produces her show at the news station, and her success dictates his.
|
|
"It dictates that we should obey and hear the ruler," says Sheikh Mohammad.
|
|
And compound interest dictates that wisely invested money will grow exponentially over time.
|
|
"Scientology dictates every choice in life and informs every decision a Scientologist makes."
|
|
Entropy dictates an arrow of time that runs only in one direction: forward.
|
|
Why was I making myself anxious because of the dictates of the "ought"?
|
|
Humanity dictates that the rich world admit refugees, irrespective of the economic impact.
|
|
Therefore, as their new dogma dictates, inflation must be achieved at any cost.
|
|
"That just completely shifts and dictates the rest of my day," she says.
|
|
That's barely a blip, and overall spending remains constrained by these prior dictates.
|
|
Sure, it's plenty of time for the Pats, but logic dictates...oh, no.
|
|
Turkey's foreign minister responded forcefully on Twitter to Trump's threat: Noone dictates Turkey.
|
|
I think fairness dictates that they all be judged with the same standard.
|
|
Mr. Katz's supporters accused Mr. Netanyahu of caving in to ultra-Orthodox dictates.
|
|
Rather, your internal response to your boss is what dictates how you feel.
|
|
And keeping up deals means more than obeying the precise dictates of agreements.
|
|
" Conservative thinking dictates that we manage the Boundary Waters under the "precautionary principle.
|
|
Tradition dictates that you have to eat the caterpillar fungus at the bottom.
|
|
No one person or group dictates the primary calendar from the top down.
|
|
Nor would we ever ask him to violate the dictates of his conscience.
|
|
But at the end of the day my budget dictates: cheaper is preferable.
|
|
Measures of inflation are imperfect, and prudence dictates maintaining some distance from zero.
|
|
This is where the Code of the Spoilers dictates that I become evasive.
|
|
The law, moreover, dictates that the deadlier an attack, the richer the reward.
|
|
This is a contract that dictates how partners can buy each other out.
|
|
Price, taste, and convenience is what dictates consumer choice for just about everybody.
|
|
Culture is king, and our culture dictates that cannibalism is this horrible taboo.
|
|
That's because of an old British, royal tradition that dictates men shouldn't wear jewelry.
|
|
Custom generally dictates, though, that it at least wait until the debate has started.
|
|
A European Union directive dictates levels of lead and other heavy metals in components.
|
|
The content is the same, but the medium dictates an entirely different business model.
|
|
The last two hours of your day dictates your energy for the next day.
|
|
Royal protocol dictates that women are only able to wear baby pink or nudes.
|
|
The participant is invited to feel regret, longing, or fear as the story dictates.
|
|
The way a planet's interior forms also dictates what kind of planet it becomes.
|
|
If the weather dictates, we'll be ready to put that water on the greens.
|
|
We live in a world where physical appearance often dictates our role in society.
|
|
The speed with which startups address (and even anticipate) these challenges dictates the outcome.
|
|
How a fighter covers or fills that space dictates the course of the fight.
|
|
It is not an issue that can be handled through federal dictates or regulation.
|
|
Industry practice dictates that a licensee will obtain a license from each writer's PRO.
|
|
I think the way you make a movie dictates the movie that you make.
|
|
Of course, she is an elf, which dictates the sylvan qualities of her beauty.
|
|
Fashion and culture are what dictates that a girl should be slim and trim.
|
|
"The map dictates the budget and timing," said former NRCC executive director Rob Simms.
|
|
Instead, the president dictates tweets to Dan Scavino, the White House social media director.
|
|
When the Obamas and the Bushes appear in public together, protocol dictates that Mrs.
|
|
Those changes, Schiff said, were not approved by the full committee as protocol dictates.
|
|
One thing remains certain — this epidemic will not follow the dictates of government declarations.
|
|
The law, moreover, dictates that that the deadlier an attack, the richer the reward.
|
|
The "road map" dictates how the two companies will get from signing to closing.
|
|
In the second, Donaire dictates the first 30 seconds, just in terms of movement.
|
|
But the tribal dictates of Google's own workforce made lying low pretty much impossible.
|
|
Wisconsin is the pivot For Trump, Wisconsin is the pivot and dictates national strategy.
|
|
The age of designer dictates is over; this is the dawn of designer humility.
|
|
The first dictates that sites like Google need to pay for aggregated news content.
|
|
Common sense dictates that this occur before the Chinese takes control of the company.
|
|
"The action of the suspect dictates the action of the police officer," Canterbury said.
|
|
US military policy dictates that a human operator authorize a drone to deploy weaponry.
|
|
And yes, a minor first-round prophecy dictates that the more talented teams wins.
|
|
Modern political convention dictates that candidates receiving such embraces instantly and publicly spurn them.
|
|
Common sense dictates that information should be made easier, rather than harder, to understand.
|
|
Common sense dictates the answer, but musicals, and love, don't run on common sense.
|
|
It's not large, with 2100,73 people, but the Midwestern friendliness dictates a certain pace.
|
|
Simple math dictates that the entire exercise is a veritable bonanza of carbon emissions.
|
|
A combination of social custom, religion and government regulation dictates what Saudi women wear.
|
|
Grit seems simple: it's the work ethic behind your actions that dictates your success.
|
|
The nature of the event dictates the sort of wine that will be best.
|
|
This bugs me, because I believe etiquette dictates flatware should be on the left.
|
|
New dictates from the Communist Party arrived daily concerning what was or wasn't palatable.
|
|
State law dictates that the governor appoints someone to fill the open Senate seat.
|
|
And experience dictates that domestic violence correlates to violent societies — indeed, violence begets violence.
|
|
The rule dictates that the receiver must, in official parlance, survive going to ground.
|
|
Balkin agrees that open defiance of clear court dictates could qualify as a crisis.
|
|
Much has been written about how sexism dictates whether a garment gets usable pockets.
|
|
State law dictates $6.9 billion in payments to Illinois' five pension systems by next June.
|
|
The law dictates that these assets be equitably divided unless a prenuptial agreement states otherwise.
|
|
The one difference is that there's no single leader who dictates the culture and doctrine.
|
|
Classic Wall Street advice dictates that good investors should know when to cut losses short.
|
|
But what happens when computer code dictates when your light bulbs have to be replaced?
|
|
We should be treating and assessing pain appropriately, in the way our medical training dictates.
|
|
Unlike markets in Northern Africa, where Islamic culture dictates marketplace structures, women dominate Ghanaian markets.
|
|
Following the dictates of his culture, the old chief did the honorable thing and proposed.
|
|
The nature of aviation dictates that one country's security lapses can quickly become another's problem.
|
|
"We are in a situation where unlimited Communist money dictates our American values," he tweeted.
|
|
In fact, the size dictates the color and the gaps between neighboring pixels the saturation.
|
|
The motherboard also dictates how many input and output ports you've got on your system.
|
|
The unwritten rule of being a superhero dictates that when two heroes meet, they fight.
|
|
This increasingly dictates today's museum world, including the Harvard Art Museums where the course originated.
|
|
In the US, no single legal authority dictates requirements or limitations on prenatal genetic testing.
|
|
The Church's ethical investment policy dictates that all investments should be compatible with Christian values.
|
|
We're able to do whatever the game dictates, and we're able to adjust to that.
|
|
Actuarial Value, which dictates the average share of health care costs insurers must pick up.
|
|
Like it should be, without all the bullshit expectations and etiquette that dictates everyday life.
|
|
Conservation of momentum dictates that any purely electromagnetic system that is enclosed cannot produce thrust.
|
|
He was keenly interested in exploring the nature of reality beyond the dictates of history.
|
|
For Democrats today, politics dictates morality, not the reverse as has been the case traditionally.
|
|
Hawley calls those rules "one-size-fits-all dictates from Washington" that drive up costs.
|
|
We're a balanced team, and whatever the game dictates, we're able to adjust to that.
|
|
The Gospel of Wealth dictates that this is not only their ability, but their responsibility.
|
|
This in turn dictates how powerful the processing power can be in a quantum computer.
|
|
Royal protocol dictates that royal family members hold off on wearing tiaras until they're married.
|
|
This president dictates how the administration and White House function, not the other way around.
|
|
Most important for workers, flexibility in governmental dictates is clearly preferable to lack of coverage.
|
|
Tradition dictates that it's the children who must cut the tongues out of the fish.
|
|
" These are, as it happens, a few of the very dictates in "Draft No. 4.
|
|
She dictates the rhythm of his life in the everyday texture of his bereaved loneliness.
|
|
Questions cannot be answered by platitudes, and ideas cannot be shut down by crude dictates.
|
|
Sure, he argues, one can acknowledge that "psychic pain" dictates this, er, imaginary man's behavior.
|
|
It also dictates that people under the influence of drugs and alcohol cannot give consent.
|
|
The federal government could not force a state to follow its dictates, the president claimed.
|
|
The many ways Cambage dictates the action are the primary reason for optimism in Dallas.
|
|
The upper one belongs to the "little clockwork girl" and dictates everyday words and actions.
|
|
As Aptiv's president of autonomous mobility Karl Iagnemma noted, each place dictates different driving behavior.
|
|
The strange process dictates how the star is going to behave for the next decade.
|
|
All tags and online listings indicate the condition of the item, which dictates the price.
|
|
A culture of fins For many Chinese families, culture dictates the consumption of shark fin.
|
|
Regulators have often griped that the state dictates rules for the country as a whole.
|
|
But it's not only trade law that dictates there's no equivalency; it's also personal taste.
|
|
Humar watched her Han classmates absorb the dictates while she herself sat on the sidelines.
|
|
Every day, we make big and small decisions in response to what our environment dictates.
|
|
This logic dictates that the Trump administration grant its support for India's membership in APEC.
|
|
You get the lovely ribbed-shell shape with no effort — the pan dictates the form.
|
|
It takes a majority of senators to pass a resolution that dictates who will testify.
|
|
The film actually dictates the tone and the look and the feel of everything else.
|
|
Accepted protocol dictates that alliance members do not discuss internal business in front of nonmembers.
|
|
The screen dictates everything about the iPhone X's design, including its lack of a home button.
|
|
In addition, competition for a role largely dictates how closely applicants must match an employer's demands.
|
|
India's constitution gives women equal rights but custom dictates that land is inherited by male sons.
|
|
"Common sense, for instance, dictates that close family members be defined to include grandparents," Watson wrote.
|
|
Like many other states, Minnesota dictates that if there's no spouse, the children get the estate.
|
|
We've created a system where the neighborhood you grow up in pretty much dictates your success.
|
|
Do you think the fact that abortion is illegal in Poland dictates people's opinions on it?
|
|
"The currency bouncing ball dictates tourism flow spend," said Stacey Widlitz, president of SW Retail Advisors.
|
|
What I can say is our obsession with the customer experience dictates everything that we do.
|
|
And physiology dictates that you need to use both hands in order to put it on.
|
|
But Sverre is no staid royal child content to simply smile and wave, as protocol dictates.
|
|
And while Islam dictates that women dress modestly, the definition of modesty is up for interpretation.
|
|
The size of the transistor, of course, dictates the number you can squeeze onto a chip.
|
|
Sure, he "tweets" in the sense that he dictates things to his personal assistants and interns.
|
|
To paraphrase crudely: eternal return dictates that all existence must recur endlessly, never improving or changing.
|
|
Transcripts illustrate the absurdist nature of American racism as it dictates social policies then and now.
|
|
So I write what I need to write, and the production dictates exactly where it goes.
|
|
We play with power structures within our relationships on our terms, and not what society dictates.
|
|
There's one obvious reason, of course: They do it because of the dictates of the market.
|
|
That's especially true when the gender gap dictates that most of your visitors will be male.
|
|
Tradition dictates that the start of the race is signaled by Laz lighting a Camel cigarette.
|
|
Logic dictates that financially literate people should be less susceptible to any type of investment fraud.
|
|
That dictates where I work and when I work because it's my main job right now.
|
|
KERNEN: YOU KNOW, THE ECONOMY AS USUAL SHOULD BE WHAT DICTATES MIDTERMS AND THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION.
|
|
The coronation of the new king will occur some time after the funeral, as tradition dictates.
|
|
We will see nurses report undocumented patients when their oath dictates they provide care without discrimination.
|
|
Sikh men wear a turban to cover their hair, which Sikhism dictates they do not cut.
|
|
Donate as your conscience dictates to those groups that seem best to you, but support them.
|
|
And as sure as shit flows downhill, the editorial dictates began to pour down from Uptown.
|
|
It dictates whether you are destined to elevate into glorious immortality, or fade dejectedly into irrelevance.
|
|
But each attempt to do good is conveniently compromised by the new rule, which dictates survival.
|
|
I find it offensive when any faith (including, yes, Islam) dictates what a woman should wear.
|
|
I want socialized healthcare because my divorce dictates that I'm responsible for my kids' medical expenses.
|
|
Along the Missouri, John Remus controls a network of dams that dictates the fate of millions.
|
|
It dictates what levels of wind (in common conditions) are tolerable for a range of activities.
|
|
It's tempting to interpret the fluctuating style of "His Favorites" as a rebellion against Master's dictates.
|
|
One of its core principles dictates that one should always protect those seeking sanctuary, even enemies.
|
|
Dr. Sonnenburg speculated that the diet of the Hadza dictates the composition of these bacterial communities.
|
|
Liberal Justice Elena Kagan appeared convinced that the 2012 ruling, which she authored, dictates the outcome.
|
|
"Common sense, for instance, dictates that close family members be defined to include grandparents," he wrote.
|
|
The audience grows with the demand, and the market dictates what your ticket price should be.
|
|
How that vote comes down dictates your choose-your-own-adventure timing for the final vote.
|
|
In addition, they know that their financial situation dictates that these loans take time to repay.
|
|
Current U.S. policy dictates that 50 percent of U.S. food aid be shipped on American vessels.
|
|
The rule dictates how banks keep records on who owns the companies that use their services.
|
|
The thermodynamics of information copying dictates that there must be a trade-off between precision and energy.
|
|
It's a comprehensive and growing set of rules that dictates how Google's user interfaces look and behave.
|
|
Chinese civil aviation law dictates that passengers found to endanger flight safety can be held criminally liable.
|
|
Fashion tradition usually dictates that royal women do not wear off-shoulder or other more revealing styles.
|
|
If HTC can design around that, logic dictates that it can also design around a headphone jack.
|
|
The Supremacy Clause, broadly speaking, dictates that when state law conflicts with federal law, federal law prevails.
|
|
The golden rule of the internet dictates that if something exists, there is probably porn for it.
|
|
This is because Bitcoin's core code dictates that every 210,000 blocks mined, the mining reward is halved.
|
|
This says that new weapons must comply with "the principles of humanity" and "dictates of public conscience".
|
|
How women rally around their candidates and their leaders dictates how free they are to actually succeed.
|
|
"This young man, this football player, is acting according to the dictates of his conscience," Lewis said.
|
|
Agency policy dictates the drug would be either sodium thiopental or pentobarbital, both of which are barbiturates.
|
|
And experts say the jet stream — which dictates weather in the Northern Hemisphere — is again behaving strangely.
|
|
Salafism's fatal combination of retrograde thinking, reactionary dictates, and revolutionary violence is the very essence of fascism.
|
|
Maduro's government dictates the price of not only labor, but of nearly every good and service imaginable.
|
|
How did we get to a place where religious opinion dictates the health and wellbeing of Americans?
|
|
That's because researchers only roughly understand the nature of the strong force, which dictates those phase transitions.
|
|
I'm debating wearing my new heels today, which really dictates my outfit since they are bright fuchsia.
|
|
It always seems crazy to me that Europe dictates so much to the running of this country.
|
|
After a medical procedure goes awry, his family discovers that Dodge's will dictates he be cryogenically preserved.
|
|
Sometimes the weather dictates fashion and my sense of style and sometimes it's the city I'm in.
|
|
No side has ever won three outright Championships in a row – so history dictates Ireland will stumble.
|
|
The CHOICE Act's micromanagement of the FSOC even dictates how the council should hold its internal votes.
|
|
The longtime policy here at Stein Line HQ dictates that there can be no revising of predictions.
|
|
The same logic dictates that the two states share the city they both claim and revere: Jerusalem.
|
|
The department has a media policy that dictates guidelines investigators must follow before seeking a reporter's records.
|
|
Standing precedent dictates the EPA is bound under the Clean Air Act to curb greenhouse-gas emissions.
|
|
Few understood that the size of the employer dictates whether a worker is protected by this law.
|
|
Consider his dictates of what he has pronounced should be the results of specific private commercial transactions.
|
|
Common sense dictates that political leaders should support initiatives that are designed to help vulnerable military populations.
|
|
This new order was tailored to the dictates to the 85033th Circuit's, in my opinion, flawed ruling.
|
|
"Common sense dictates that a President can, of course, have very real conflicts of interest," he added.
|
|
The dictates of Marxist ideology gave little space to divergent disciplines such as sociology, psychology, or philosophy.
|
|
For $22,215, the teacher trainees spend nine weeks living in a hotel where Choudhury dictates their schedules.
|
|
"At the Tour de France, somebody else dictates the pace 95 percent of the time," Hayman said.
|
|
It may sound like a small difference, but it's one that dictates the earbuds' comfort and fit.
|
|
If the Cavaliers could win a championship this year, perhaps destiny dictates that the Indians will, too.
|
|
We stand ready to cooperate and ensure facts - rather than partisanship - dictates any process involving the #whistleblower.
|
|
The Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act dictates how migrant children who arrive alone are to be handled.
|
|
Nesbit, however, will have to adjust his inner timetable to the dictates of rain and crop conditions.
|
|
Pakistan's powerful military dictates the South Asian nation's security plans and foreign policy, including relations with India.
|
|
If they ever questioned the numbing consumerism that dictates their aspirations, they are deaf to it now.
|
|
One Afghan tradition dictates that single women belong to their fathers and married women to their husbands.
|
|
The bear's body language also dictates the best response, said Ms. Stasyszyn of the Department of Environment.
|
|
This move would require state action, because a state law dictates how specialized schools admit their students.
|
|
GM, Reuss has said, plans to introduce multiple models a year in multiple markets, as demand dictates.
|
|
She was playing Vandeweghe, who normally dictates the flow of matches with her aggressive style of play.
|
|
No such vote is necessary because the Constitution dictates no fixed process for impeachment investigations or trials.
|
|
Contrary to the dictates of their nature, vampires have thrived during their recent time in the sun.
|
|
If Wine School has demonstrated anything over its three years, it's that the occasion dictates the wine.
|
|
The achievement of that performance isn't its physicality — it's the psychological torture that defines and dictates it.
|
|
Consider Vice President Pence, a man who regularly tries to make policy obey the dictates of faith.
|
|
Department policy dictates that investigators aren't supposed to talk publicly about why they are not bringing charges.
|
|
The thought of getting into a contract where a third party dictates our pricing options seemed disastrous.
|
|
And he had made the requisite first request for the drugs two weeks earlier, as procedure dictates.
|
|
Our democracy, she says, has a brutal hierarchy that dictates who has the power to establish truth.
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And like the railroads of yore, Amazon dictates terms and prices to those dependent on its rails.
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"Common sense, for instance, dictates that close family members be defined to include grandparents," Judge Watson wrote.
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Iranians refusing to be cowed by the regime's propaganda and dictates should know they have our support.
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"Is it really fair on the lower court judges struggling to apply this Court's dictates?" he asked.
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Since that time, neither the regulation, nor the subject areas it dictates be taught, have significantly changed.
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The answer to this question dictates much of how the rest of Baltimore's offseason will play out.
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Is it a world run solely by the dictates of power or a world run according to norms?
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The law, which dictates which bathroom transgender people must use, has damaged the state's economy and national reputation.
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The need to earn money — and how much of it we make — dictates how we spend our time.
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It assumed firms would move sourcing and manufacturing out of China only as much as economic logic dictates.
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" Nevertheless, he said, "Common sense dictates that a president can, of course, have very real conflicts of interest.
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Bolanos hopes to inspire all women to feel beautiful and love themselves, despite what the larger culture dictates.
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Which is why I find it weird that society dictates we sleep in a bed with our partner.
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It's all has to do with your autonomic nervous system (ANS), which dictates your "fight-or-flight" response.
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It is addressing the misogynoir that also dictates how Black girls show up as sexual beings on screen.
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In recent years, the Fed largely has followed market dictates when it comes to raising and lowering rates.
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Protocol dictates that May can only become prime minister once Cameron has tendered his resignation to the Queen.
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Solvency II dictates the amount of capital an EU insurer must hold to reduce the risk of insolvency.
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She reportedly understands Trump in a way others don't and the president allegedly dictates his tweets to Hicks.
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Here, avant-garde musicians, experimental filmmakers, poets, and artists challenged the dictates of habitual form and heterosexual power.
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Performing only when the regime of Kim Jong-un dictates, the North Korean cheerleaders aren't easy to follow.
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"Right now based on research there is an exact number that dictates when you have damage," Ma said.
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In this case, Apple dictates the terms and rules for the iPhone, but the iPhone itself has competition.
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Generally, social etiquette dictates that the children of politicians are off-limits to both social and political commentary.
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He dictates what they wear during his show and refuses to let them give interviews without his permission.
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While federal law dictates that the commission shouldn't be influenced by the president, Trump's visit was largely ceremonial.
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"Prudence dictates" against changing long-established governments, or withdrawing consent for "light and transient causes," said the declaration.
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"I think regardless of distance, I don't think that dictates any relationship strains," she said at the time.
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Glen Keane's Duet employs a more subtle approach, as the viewer's gaze dictates the progression of the narrative.
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The latter is governed by the Wilderness Act of 1964, which dictates how these areas can be used.
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When your past unequivocally dictates your future, personal development through spontaneity, open-mindedness and experimentation becomes more difficult.
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That Republicans remain beholden to the NRA, and consistently vote the way the organization dictates, is not surprising.
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The golden rule of the internet already dictates that if anything exists, there will be porn for it.
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I think for a lot of artists, it's the sun or weather that dictates the pace of painting.
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Two people meet on a date within a system that dictates an arbitrary time limit to all relationships.
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In his own words, Patterson is antagonistic to women who do not order their lives after his dictates.
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Office of Refugee Resettlement policy dictates that its director, Scott Lloyd, sign off on all major medical care.
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Logic dictates that campaigns refine these techniques to adapt to evolving voter habits rather than pursue unproven alternatives.
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She hasn't yet internalized the unspoken caste system that dictates where everyone falls in our national pecking order.
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Chinese regulation dictates small, non-systematically important banks are subject to a minimum capital adequacy ratio of 10.5%.
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Tradition dictates that if anything were to happen to the monarch, "the same fate will befall" the hostage.
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And, as history dictates, it will check against reacting into ideally (and morally) ambiguous alliances under geopolitical impulses.
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For example, GDPR dictates that companies must notify their users of data breaches that could affect said users.
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A prenuptial agreement dictates that the McCains' money is in Cindy McCains' name, reports the New York Times.
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Protocol dictates that there will be local flight restrictions and road closures for the duration of Trump's trip.
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The legislation would reform policies established by a 1995 law that dictates how congressional staffers can report harassment.
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He thrilled his crowds by ridiculing the donor class that he said dictates much of the Washington agenda.
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This is because the market economy dictates answers to the most important question—what is our time worth?
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The NFL slotting system dictates the outlay of money for all players in any slot in the draft.
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It's an interesting thing to consider: your remembering self, according to Kahneman, dictates what your experiencing self does.
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Tribal custom dictates that chiefs are the custodians of communal land, and responsible for allocating land to villagers.
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As is usually the case in football, tribalism and collective pride ultimately trump the convoluted dictates of conscience.
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USSR is no more but my art still lives there, 'nonconforming' to the state's cultural dictates and proscriptions.
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That is what the Constitution dictates, and that's what the American people expect and deserve from their leaders.
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He envisages a world where we are beholden only to our individual whims, not the dictates of society.
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Their duty dictates that they go door to door as a team, but their united front is strained.
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The thornier issue is bellowing his name as many times as his squad number dictates: Mertens wears 14.
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New York State law dictates that bail should be designed to ensure that a defendant return to court.
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"The balance sheet dictates the value of the sale, not necessarily the parcel of land," Ms. Szynaka said.
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The digital dictates may enable governments to exert more social control and enforce social distancing during the pandemic.
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The twins attend a Boston-area charter school that dictates skirt length, shoe color, nail polish, and makeup.
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I think safety for our kids dictates they shouldn't play tackle until at least age 133 or 14.
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Another angle: China's authoritarian government is introducing mandatory smartphone software that dictates whether a person should be quarantined.
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Inserting itself into the doctor-patient relationship, government dictates what treatments are allowed, based in part on cost.
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Several of them said store managers were under pressure to comply with the dictates of Starbucks' software system.
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"The nature of our business dictates that a vocal minority will almost inevitably oppose specific developments," Lindsay said.
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While Congress appropriates funds, the executive branch generally operates the process that dictates when the money is deployed.
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Common sense dictates that should be a precondition of any move to increase the debt limit yet again.
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Such dictates could slow the resolution of a dangerous situation or ultimately prove deadly to officers, they say.
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She's after a truth more profound, and more disturbing, than whatever the strict dictates of realism will allow.
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But understanding the dangers of empowering Uncle Sam in this realm separates an education secretary's desires and dictates.
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It's Christmas Day in most of the world, and as (late-capitalist) tradition dictates, Christmas Day means gifts.
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A 2008 anti-trafficking statute dictates that certain minors must be taken out of immigration detention within 72 hours.
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Toebbe, who draws on Persian miniature traditions, takes pattern farther, submitting her entire image to the dictates of rhythm.
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" He added that, "At some point, we're going to have an efficient market where payroll dictates where you finish.
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Most people didn't vote for that, but the dictates of the Electoral College elevated him to the presidency anyway.
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Basically, you might need more fuel for one mission versus another, so that dictates where a booster can land.
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A tradition in Nepal called chaupadi dictates that girls and women must stay outdoors while they have their periods.
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"Common sense, for instance, dictates that close family members be defined to include grandparents," Watson said in his ruling.
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If an opportunity arose for Mr Chiwenga to amass more power, logic dictates that he would happily seize it.
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Popular culture dictates that we fear certain numbers — 13 leaps to mind — and welcome others — hello, lucky number seven.
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I hate that I've bought into a patriarchal moulding that dictates women need to remain youthful to be relevant.
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The BoE's current policy dictates not starting to reverse QE until interest rates are materially higher than at present.
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Legend dictates that if Phil does not see his shadow on Groundhog Day, there will be early springlike weather.
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Narrative convention dictates that one, at least, must die, and that we must be wrong-footed about which one.
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The trust instrument, which governs the trust, dictates who controls Viacom and CBS upon Mr. Redstone's death or incompetency.
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A belief in the market as a kind of god: an impartial arbiter whose dictates we could believe in.
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In our system, because of the dictates of fundamental fairness, it is at the trial that things go public.
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" He continued, "We stand ready to cooperate and ensure facts — rather than partisanship — dictates any process involving the #whistleblower.
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And he believes that where you live dictates the kind of money you're able to make as an artist.
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"Your budget, your sentiment, your desire is what really dictates what you want to get for them," Post says.
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But no matter where they are, Muslims should be able to fast according to the dictates of their conscience.
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While a challenge is pending, the legislation dictates, the special counsel's staff, documents and other materials would be preserved.
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These valves are fitted with a thermostat that turns the valve on or off automatically as room temperature dictates.
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My production style dictates that I can't make a work if I'm not given a theme or a deadline.
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The channel merely dictates the format of the marketing collateral and content that one creates within an overall strategy.
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Perhaps it's time to move or to cut off that relative who dictates what you can and can't do.
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How you respond to life's curveballs dictates the outcome, so I try not to let emotions cloud my decisions.
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ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has said she "will not hesitate to bring new cases" in Libya, where evidence dictates.
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Another angle: China's authoritarian government is rolling out mandatory smartphone software that dictates whether a person should be quarantined.
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If public health dictates that I stay away and I stay home, then that is what I will do.
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Quarantines have been imposed over the centuries, but longstanding case law dictates that they not be unreasonable or arbitrary.
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If you expect it to do its job, conventional wisdom dictates you replace it every seven to ten years.
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We should not pretend that science-t itself dictates an answer to this debate, or to any political struggle.
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That's far different from observing the rights of men to worship God according to the dictates of their conscience.
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I like the idea of trading worldwide, easing our way out of reliance on the United States' mercurial dictates.
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Despite their biological sense of needing to flee, modern society dictates that they must respond in some civilized way.
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Conventional wisdom dictates that you have to book a round-trip itinerary in order to get a great price.
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Conventional wisdom dictates that you have to book a round-trip itinerary in order to get a great airfare.
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A neighborhood ordinance dictates that the restaurant can't be open for dinner (except private events) or serve hard liquor.
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Since race cannot be "seen," there is very little meaningful discussion about how it dictates one's experience in America.
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When he fails to honor the dictates of the game's corrupt elites, it threatens his career — and his life.
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We've come to different conclusions fellow senators, but I trust we have all followed the dictates of our conscience.
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Similarly, we can defend our faith not with the dictates of power, but the appeals of reason and virtue.
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"We are using resources as appropriate to the commander's priorities and as the situation dictates," a military official said.
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And it's not always the President tapping away, he often dictates messages to an aide who ultimately presses send.
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But they have been eclipsed for far too long for the sake of power and the dictates of bigotry.
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Fundamental fairness dictates that the same principle be applied to tribal governments; as it was from 1935 to 2004.
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All states have a framework that dictates how your cash and belongings ought to be distributed when you die.
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" She was initially encouraged to keep quiet, Sloan says, because the culture of Washington dictates that staffers show "loyalty.
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When soldiers rape and impregnate a young woman fetching water, convention dictates that she and her child are cursed.
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Protocol dictates Guyger should have taken cover and called for backup, at least one of Guyger's fellow officers testified.
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Our many policy differences with national Democrats remain, but our shared fidelity to the Constitution dictates a common effort.
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The design of a chair dictates our posture; so, too, does the format of electronic communication shape our voice.
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She says that the UN has established a "super-national entity that dictates to governments how to exercise their duties".
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It dictates limits on the amount of each country's debt and individual bonds the euro system central banks can hold.
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As conventional wisdom dictates, when you have an opportunity to poach Jeff Fisher's former staff, you have to do it!
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Warren has repeatedly apologized, saying the claim was based on "family lore," and she now understands tribal sovereignty dictates membership.
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And the corporation even dictates your social behavior of how you can interact with your new "friends" at the workplace.
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HB2 — known officially as the Public Facilities Privacy and Security Act — dictates which bathrooms transgender people are permitted to use.
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Neither objective policy analysis nor the dictates of public opinion appears to be tempering the instinct to smash and grab.
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And that then dictates how thin you can push it and how much battery you have to put in it.
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"My conscience is my boss, and my conscience dictates rules that are extremely, I'd say, grand — they're rough but beautiful."
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When you fire an employee for being gay, you are saying their sex dictates a particular object of romantic interest.
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The basic idea is an information ecosystem controlled by a central authority that dictates what the population sees and hears.
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Lauren Chassebi, a digital PR professional and freelance writer, agrees with Frank that gender dictates communication expectations in professional settings.
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Kendrick, however, is a chameleonic presence on the microphone who can cycle through all of these modes as necessity dictates.
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Hacking Capture is your top-priority aug, since it's the one that dictates which devices you can and can't hack.
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A city-wide ordinance for St. Petersburg dictates that plastic straws are only given to customers who specifically request them.
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It is the top man's elbow getting dragged underneath the rolling man which dictates whether or not he's going over.
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The player who controls and dictates the point, 75 to 80 percent of the time they will win the point.
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Conventional wisdom dictates a stock or sector should be no more than five to 543 percent of an individual's portfolio.
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That dictates a softly softly approach which leaves critics of Orban and Poland's dominant politician, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, less than satisfied.
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Lawmakers have been eyeing whether to reform Metro's "Compact," the founding document that dictates how it is structured and financed.
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The story's rigid logic dictates they'll end up together — maybe not happily ever after, but at least not alone anymore.
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The direction also dictates where it drives, and the rolling speed is at least somewhat affected by your hand's elevation.
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Graham has a massive catch radius and where he aligns in the formation dictates Fangio's options for contending with him.
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But the lawsuit argues the rule is unconstitutional because it dictates wages for state employees and would disrupt state budgets.
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When an employee doesn't work out or the budget dictates cuts, it's up to you to make that hard call.
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Origin stories are tricky, but local lore dictates the fried clam was invented in 1916 by Essex restaurateur Chubby Woodman.
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Whether comfort dictates, or a stylish design is what's important — one detail no bride overlooks is her wedding-day footwear.
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"So you're a scriptwriter?" the heir apparent said as Morgan stepped forward and, as protocol dictates, bowed from the neck.
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They are doing exactly what should do to maximize profit for their shareholders as our 'profit over people' system dictates.
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This mixing dictates how heat is delivered to the atmosphere according to Ben Webber from the University of East Anglia.
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The woman can ask Google Home for an update on her schedule and dictates a text message to a friend.
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Each determination to list, or delist, a species must be driven as the law dictates: using the best available science.
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They do so through the "once only" policy, which dictates that no single piece of information should be entered twice.
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Require the same level of ownership in Chinese companies doing business in the U.S. as China dictates to American businesses.
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Swalwell was armed with the rules governing the process, which dictates that lawmaker questions must be directed to the witnesses.
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There's no law of nature that dictates that it should be impossible to get deep work done at 11 a.m.
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This so-called gauge symmetry dictates that the fundamental forces of nature retain their basic structure through space and time.
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No, instead, common sense dictates that the longer a baseball game endures, the chances of something bizarre occurring naturally rise.
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He takes it as a victory when he does the opposite of what good behavior or polite society dictates. Facts?
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Repairing U.S. relations with Turkey is important, but it needs to be on our terms, not those that Erdoğan dictates.
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The Twitter account is run by Khamenei&aposs office and it&aposs not known if he dictates the tweets himself.
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As tradition dictates, it is in the kaja-kangin corner of the site: the northeast, which is the most auspicious.
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It dictates how much time a graffiti writer will spend painting a spot and forces writers to make stylistic choices.
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Such an eclectic approach dictates improvisation over purity, and Taino Smokehouse shows how rewardingly barbecue can subsume other culinary traditions.
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It's a belief that is hard-won from her repeat attempts — and failures — to adhere to the dictates of monogamy.
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Excluding that donation added $0.15 to its adjusted earnings per share, the figure that dictates most of Humana's executive bonuses.
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But faith dictates that no-deal will do no great harm to the economy, so no safety-net is required.
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Stories trend because consumers engage with them, clicking and sharing them, not because the news media dictates that they trend.
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Our allies in the Muslim world can now know that the dictates of political correctness will not determine battlefield strategy.
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Beijing policy dictates that China will refuse diplomatic relations with any country that recognizes the island as a sovereign state.
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This also dictates firms of significant size to overcome all today's criteria with respect to bringing new products to market.
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As the law of unintended consequences dictates, the values that would elevate Chelsea to the game's elite were very different.
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At the impeachment trial The Constitution specifically dictates that the chief justice presides over the impeachment trial of a president.
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What would the outcome have been if the Palestinian leadership had never complied with Israeli dictates — particularly around security coordination?
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Social expectation dictates that if someone adds you to their Close Friends list, it's just polite to add them back.
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In the East Room, unlike in the briefing room, the White House dictates the seating arrangement for the American press.
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"In the alternative, we seek that there be another election which complies with the dictates of the law," Mpofu said.
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Amazon dictates the rules for sellers, sometimes changing them with little warning, according to dozens of interviews by Ms. Weise.
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State law dictates that Minnesota's governor, Democrat Mark Dayton, must appoint a candidate who will serve until the 6900 elections.
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But far worse, if other nations are forced to follow America's dictates, many people will be denied life-saving medicine.
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Their willingness to act in accordance with the law and our tradition dictates how current and future leaders will act.
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And things only get worse when characters' actions and emotional logic are jerked around by the dictates of the plot.
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Moviegoing etiquette dictates that any cellphone use in a theater is bad form, but the film Late Shift challenges that dynamic.
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After all, the number of people paying the congestion price dictates how much money the measure will raise for the state.
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I noticed that all the pots I saw were made from newspaper, whereas tradition dictates they should be made of clay.
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The federal statutes that agencies administer are often not crystal clear, and Chevron dictates that close calls go to the government.
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Only then can you appreciate the wonder of the large flaming ball of gas that dictates the rhythm of our lives.
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The Google AdWords advertising policy, which dictates what ads go on YouTube videos, states that "adult content" is prohibited in advertisements.
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"Yeah, it's a primal fear for any child and it dictates a lot of how you deal with life," Williams revealed.
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The Secret Service dictates much of the design of the presidential limousine, such as a heavy-duty chassis and armored material.
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But tradition dictates that diggers are entitled to a dash, or stipend, from their financier when they make a significant find.
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As for the dictates of public conscience, research and history show that they are more flexible than a humanitarian would wish.
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Instead of making moment-to-moment decisions, you build, grow and tweak a set of orders that dictates movement and attacks.
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It dictates who you are, what you stand for, and also the fact that you are not conforming to their standards.
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However, Georgia law dictates that the court, not the State Bar, approve or deny an attorney's application to join a case.
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And that dictates the use of coal a lot of places, where if it was $2003, they'd be running natural gas.
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Even the ship's interior design— which dictates the amount of supplies, equipment, and people it could ferry to Mars — isn't settled.
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Instead of allowing companies and workers to negotiate the terms of their relationship, the test largely dictates the terms for them.
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The light frequency used dictates what nutrient mix the plant gets, said Milan Kluko, Green Spirit's co-founder and chief executive.
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If Kemp's vote percentage falls below 50 percent, Georgia law dictates the race would head to a runoff on Dec. 4.
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The statute dictates that the inspector general not release the name but is silent as to anyone else revealing the name.
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In other words, acquirers can arbitrarily decide to reserve more of the purchase price for management than the cap table dictates.
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While discrimination is contrary to American values and law, the nature of the threat dictates the social geography of intelligence collection.
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But the bigger problem is that Party members must follow the rules, dictates, and whims of the Party above anything else.
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The political calendar dictates a vote on Christmas if no agreement to form a government can be reached by Oct. 31.
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This year is different, conventional wisdom dictates, because voters are angry at their complacent political elites, at globalization and at immigrants.
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Islamic law bans the consumption of pork and alcohol, and it dictates how animals should be slaughtered before they are eaten.
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Doc Brown may have been played by a white man, but nothing about his character dictates he has to be white.
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Our strong democracy notwithstanding, prudence dictates that we do all we can to keep Donald Trump out of the White House.
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But following the principles of Reggio Emilia, a progressive educational approach founded in Italy, it never dictates what projects to make.
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The social giant now dictates, more fully and precisely than ever before, which ads we see and who sees which ads.
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Without Pierluisi's Senate confirmation, the job of governor would fall to Justice Secretary Wanda Vázquez, as the Puerto Rican constitution dictates.
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If Congress dictates how much out-of-network doctors should be paid, it will affect negotiations between doctors and insurance companies.
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On American campuses, the Chinese government was subsidizing a network of Confucius Institutes, where Beijing appoints teachers and dictates the curriculum.
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The history, the longing, dictates that they must deal with more than City, more than Tottenham — in the months to come.
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A nation scorched by climate change and ravaged by combat, it still retains the penchant for establishing bureaucracies and issuing dictates.
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The Police Department's Patrol Guide dictates that detectives must wear the vest when performing enforcement duty, such as making an arrest.
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For the uninitiated, commonly accepted Vegemite convention dictates only a small smear of the paste should be applied to buttered toast.
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The Getaway Conventional wisdom dictates that you have to book a round-trip itinerary in order to get a great airfare.
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But I've noticed that there is a strange hierarchy of handholding that dictates who gets to express physical affection without repercussions.
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Donald Trump appears to have personally violated nearly every one of its dictates, yet he was a warmly welcomed opening speaker.
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It does not dismantle Canada's "supply management system," which dictates how much Canadian farmers should produce so they can be profitable.
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It dictates the usual things, such as the length of skirts and shorts, but with hair, it goes a step further.
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The Weber-Fechner law dictates that the bats perceive increases in volume more acutely than they do increases in sugar concentration.
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DS: Yeah, the rhythm dictates a sense of humanity, which is a great example of the psychology of art and technologies.
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This, to me, is simply about the partisan reality of the mood of the country and the dictates of historical precedent.
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Tradition dictates that the oldest person at the table has first crack at the chewy rim of fat around the edge.
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Current law dictates that "only persons assigned the sex of male at birth are required to register," regardless of gender identity.
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Those issues are at the heart of the region's growing pains: Who dictates how countries should change, and at what speed?
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Even as the studios seek to distinguish their franchises from television, they have begun to shape them according to television's dictates.
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EASA dictates safety rules and certifies parts across Europe, helping to lower costs of certification and increase integration within the industry.
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Mercury and the Podesta Group had been registered for the Centre under the Lobbying Disclosure Act, which dictates domestic lobbying disclosure.
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Indeed, while criminal conduct can provide an especially powerful basis for impeachment, common sense dictates that it's not necessary for impeachment.
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Manafort's civil lawsuit relies in part on a law called the Administrative Procedure Act, which dictates how federal agencies write regulations.
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Tan said old-fashioned crime data analysis was still a crucial part of fighting crime because history often dictates future patterns.
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Law dictates that any military official must wait seven years from leaving the service before serving as defense secretary, a civilian position.
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According to TikTok's listing in the iOS App Store, some opaque mix of app engagementlikes, shares, and comments—dictates what users see.
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Article 13 dictates that online platforms install some sort of monitoring system that lets copyright holders upload their work for automatic detection.
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Canadian law dictates that companies have 30 days to respond—though that's not to say you'll get a timely or satisfying answer.
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John Hickenlooper on Friday signed a budget bill that dictates how money from the state's "Marijuana Tax Cash Fund" will be spent.
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Mr Zuma has also angered other ANC leaders over his failure to consult with them on the reshuffle, as party pratice dictates.
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Colombia's government says the Submerged Cultural Heritage Law, passed in 2013, dictates that the wreck and its treasure belong to the state.
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The infamous Godwin's Law dictates that the longer people talk about a topic, the more likely they'll make a comparison to Hitler.
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With these realities in mind, logic dictates that Russia and Iran should continue to expend precious resources propping up their Syrian ally.
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Because there are so many of us, the restaurant dictates that we have either five or seven courses of the chef's choice.
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It made me realize I wasn't identical to my ego and I didn't have to necessarily follow its dictates all the time.
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"At the end of the day, oil price is really what dictates the strategy and the planning in the boardrooms," he said.
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As much as your sign dictates aspects of your personality, so, too, can it affect how you prefer to spend your time.
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In the wake of Brazil's desertion, Chile stepped in to organise next year's summit, which convention dictates should happen in Latin America.
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VH1 dictates who is hot or not, what projects they work on, when those projects are released, and how they are promoted.
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This is a game after all, and if you're carrying around a laser gun then convention dictates you use the laser gun.
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The policy dictates that Washington recognizes Beijing as the only official government of China and will not establish formal relations with Taiwan.
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But, under this philosophy, the supremacy clause of the Constitution, which dictates that federal law takes precedence over state law, is irrelevant.
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Improved water markets, rather than political dictates, will reduce conflict while also freeing up water for California's growing population and changing climate.
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Planting pace is crucial every year because it dictates both planted area of each crop and the expected timeframe of yield formation.
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Nor has there been much opportunity or reason for Labour to intervene, given Britain's majoritarian system and the dictates of political strategy.
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The Constitution dictates what happens if a president too sick to perform their tasks (the Twenty-Fifth Amendment) or dies in office.
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To control the virtual landscape, the government dictates which devices, types of use, or even individual companies, can operate at which frequencies.
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This was—the narrative dictates—an area gripped by poverty and everything that comes with it; crime, violence, generational worklessness and despair.
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In refusing to obey orders because of his doubts as to their legality, LTC Lakin has acted exactly as proper training dictates.
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If we are to lead happy, fulfilled lives, we must submit to the truth that we are truly powerless before their dictates.
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Snap gave way to minimal, melodic Southern gangster music that still dictates the dominant sound in rap as a whole these days.
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Furman's ruling on the APA violation dictates that, for now, the citizenship question is barred from appearing on the 2020 census questionnaire.
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It decides what jobs they do, dictates where and what hours they work, and often decides if and when to fire them.
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Above all, he embodied the Yankees' organization-wide message to their players that the individual dictates what the team does with him.
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But Amazon, she said, is becoming "a world threat" as the company increasingly dictates the global supply chain and broadens into manufacturing.
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The Flores agreement was a 1997 court settlement that dictates how the federal government must care for migrant minors in its custody.
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A request for congressional funding to combat the pandemic, the timeline further dictates, should have taken place a month before it happened.
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Negotiations on the bill that dictates the United States' surveillance power unearthed voices of dissent from the far ends of both parties.
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As organisms scale up, physics dictates what's possible for any kind of movement and function, be it blood flow, digestion or locomotion.
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The European Union dictates when Britain departs from it, which means that Brexit will officially be in place as of 11 p.m.
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Trump must be held accountable not only because his corruption dictates it, but also because we must demonstrate that accountability is possible.
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"I think prudence dictates that we be very cautious about these talks," said Evans Revere, a former US diplomat in South Korea.
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E.U. law dictates that acts can be challenged directly before the E.U. courts in the first two months after they've been enacted.
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But some predict a more somber process when senators are sworn in and the weight of the historic moment dictates the tone.
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How we think about money — and more importantly, how we act with our money — dictates a large part of our financial outcomes.
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In her essay for the book, Faris explains that tradition in Kuwait dictates that children must live with their parents until marriage.
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I saw opportunities last week when I could have gotten the football, but sometimes the defense dictates where the ball is going.
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But the harsh logic of international affairs dictates that troops not be committed for political objectives that are unattainable from the outset.
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So, we cannot prove that deterrence will always work and why, but prudence dictates that we not ignore an enemy's stated intentions.
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But regardless of the circumstances of their personal relationship, their professional relationship dictates that they remain cordial as long as they can.
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Each state dictates how long a prescription lasts, and in most states, they expire after a year, with some stretching it to two.
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The Wi-Fi Alliance, the organization that dictates and advances Wi-Fi standards, has announced the latest iteration of its increasingly indispensable technology.
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Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads SHANGHAI — For Yu Hong, the absurdity of life dictates that there should be babies sleeping in hell.
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Verzua explained that cannabis plants have 1 to 3 percent terpenes, and this, coupled with cost of cannabis, dictates the final price tag.
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Rather, BOP policy dictates access to hygiene products at federal prisons, and without overarching legislation, it tends to vary from prison to prison.
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Since the Crew Dragon is meant to dock with the ISS, the station's position in orbit dictates when the Falcon 9 can launch.
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Crucially, the Elo equation includes a "sensitivity" weight, which varies between sports, but dictates how much the ratings should respond to recent results.
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For some hideous reason, modern-day wedding culture dictates that brides are supposed to look one hundred percent perfect walking down the aisle.
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The sign found in the ancient restorative spa town of Hamman al-Alil just south of Mosul dictates precise details of men's underwear.
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They're a tricky bunch to figure out — and every single Aquarius will be slightly different, as the rule of the human condition dictates.
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As the French government's spokesman remarked, protocol dictates that Mr Macron's interlocutor in Rome is their nominal boss, Giuseppe Conte, the prime minister.
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Australia's libel system, which dictates that accusers rather than people accused must prove their claims, is complicating Stone's situation, according to the Times.
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Important for investors is that when these two markets trade in the same direction, there ultimately is a breakout and one dictates direction.
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There isn't uniform agreement now, but you'll see the White House lay out priorities and a time table that dictates when agreement happens.
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The Prince That Was Promised, as legend dictates, will be "reborn amidst salt and smoke" and he will eventually wield a flaming sword.
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The conference was hosted by the Cybersecurity Administration of China (CAC), the government body that dictates the country's strict internet regulation and policy.
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A bullish stock market dictates a positive investment environment; as long as it rises, so too do the valuations of private tech companies.
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As formula dictates, they're a ragtag crew, but the Duplass brothers, who wrote the screenplay, have a dedication to verisimilitude that's ultimately satisfying.
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Common airplane etiquette dictates that the passenger stuck in the middle seat gets both armrests — but what about when you're traveling four across?
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" The woman in question remains anonymous, but the nature of the internet dictates that she will forever go down as the "almost-mermaid.
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Tradition dictates that Christmas festivities begin the day after Thanksgiving, not the day after Halloween, but traditions are more malleable than you'd think.
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And whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.
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As tradition dictates, Lindsay Hoyle was dragged to the speaker's chair in a ceremony designed to display his reluctance to assume the position.
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The Food and Drug Administration dictates that fish that is to be served raw must be frozen to kill potential parasites within it.
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My point is: I think Dany and Jon will care because the plot dictates it, and because there's something bigger at work here.
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"About four years ago, I found out I have something called a MTHFR gene mutation, which dictates how my body methylates," she revealed.
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This is the most frightening vestige of President Trump's TV career: in his world, reality doesn't dictate the script; the script dictates reality.
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Federal law dictates materials can be manufactured with asbestos as long as the mineral accounts for less than 1 percent of the product.
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For one, New Jersey law dictates that businesses with one liquor license revoked must also surrender any other liquor licenses for two years.
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He knows that the tribalism animating American politics today dictates that angering your opponents is, for many, a victory in its own right.
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The agency merely asserts that the unequivocal "dictates of science" and the social cost of carbon to legitimize new rules without further explanation.
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Hospitals, schools, hotels, apartment complexes, office buildings and small business would now be subject to the Clean Air Act's top-down, inflexible dictates.
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Procedures associated with the execution of nuclear operations are enshrined in an Operational Plan that dictates the how operations will be carried out.
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Regarding the dictates of her note, he said, he had checked her house from time to time and found everything in good order.
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Following the dictates of the genre, Detective Little does not believe Anna; his cursory investigation doesn't indicate that any crime has been committed.
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And Ms. Wasserman Schultz had announced that she would not, as tradition dictates, strike the gavel to open the convention later that day.
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His two-pizza rule dictates that he won't call a meeting, or even attend one, if two pizzas wouldn't feed the entire group.
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There's times when the game situation dictates you go out of the zone, but to be honest with you, it's just a reaction.
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After all, as those of us who already regularly check our horoscopes know, your zodiac sign dictates more than just your love life.
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Hardware dictates which interface allows the metaphors to make sense, and the interface metaphors dictate which tasks are easy or hard to perform.
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Unwritten protocol dictates that nominees do not speak publicly until their confirmation hearings, so Judge Sotomayor remained silent in the face of criticism.
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It requires baseline testing of players when they enter professional baseball and dictates what tests must be administered before a player can return.
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A Good Appetite Current dietary wisdom dictates that to mitigate all the indulgences of the holidays, January becomes the month of eating salad.
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The size of a rocket's fairing is also key because it dictates which kinds of satellites can fit on top of a rocket.
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The size of a rocket's fairing is also key because it dictates which kinds of satellites can fit on top of a rocket.
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Price, of course, dictates where developers shop, and because foreign markets often have lower-cost items, they have become a go-to source.
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Since mackerel eats a particular kind of tiny shrimp, for example, the best season for this shrimp dictates the best season for mackerel.
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Venezuela has become the Zimbabwe of the Americas, a shameless alliance of corrupt politicians and the military acquiescent to the dictates of Cuba.
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So depending on what type of mission you're going on is what dictates the kind of gear that you're gonna bring with you.
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Because the European Union dictates Britain's departure, Brexit will be official at the stroke of midnight, Brussels time, which is only 11 p.m.
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Instead, she says, you want to be the driver, the one who dictates the route and has control of his or her destiny.
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With his fluid framing — fitting anywhere from two to 24 panels to a page — he dictates information delivery, allowing the mind to breathe.
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It no longer dictates people's lives so crudely, but it is clearly worried about what will happen if they do not find work.
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The sausage-making process of legislating is often ridiculed, but it is far preferable to a system where one man dictates his will.
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The new regulation dictates that drivers must have certain insurance coverage and must be registered as individual contributors in the social security system.
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The Policy Act also dictates that the special privileges Hong Kong receives are predicated on the integrity of the city's autonomy and freedoms.
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The moral economy of "Hostiles" dictates that only those who have made war can participate in the regenerative violence that leads toward peace.
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But they are still important; the rules package passed at the beginning of every new session dictates how Congress should operate and function.
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That meeting typically concludes with a contract that dictates who's going to do what to make sure a kid can get to school.
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In a departure from every modern White House, Mr. Trump himself largely dictates whom to back and how to support his preferred candidates.
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There are theories out there about how race dictates the disparity in research funding and even quality of treatment for sickle cell disease.
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This sounds bizarre, but the Supreme Court has held that Congress has the authority to use its own police to enforce its dictates.
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It also dictates how $723bn in federal funds for services like education, road-building and disaster relief are divvied up among states and localities.
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Soccer is a pret-ty popular sport, you guys, and the sheer volume of games dictates that crazy shit will happen all the time.
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She's playing the "dream girl" by being exactly who she is, rather than what Hollywood dictates — isn't that what a dream girl is, anyways?
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Mexican law dictates that candidates and parties must cease their campaign activities three days before elections so that voters can reflect on their options.
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The new long weekend takes advantage of a Sunday night hotel stay, generally the lowest occupancy night of the week, which dictates lower rates.
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But that could be solved by Apple simply releasing a more powerful version of the Apple Watch, which logic dictates would likely happen eventually.
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"What dictates coverage is the money coming out of the state's general revenue," says Matt Salo, director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors.
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The question Lang and Pulitzer raise is whether it is possible to achieve freedom from the cycle of violence that dictates these characters' lives.
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It goes beyond who our ancestors were — it dictates how we live, how we raise our children, and who we are as a people.
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Its heroes cross boundaries: between myth and history; reason and magic; male and female (Jósef dictates his testimony to Aleta, a trans Ukrainian woman).
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Plus, vanity dictates that people will share where they get the most views, and many people have spent years longer building their Instagram audience.
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That profile dictates what a passenger would pay, with loyalty program members and those traveling for leisure rather than business potentially enjoying lower fares.
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U.S. law dictates that presidents can only impose tariffs of no more than 15 percent for a maximum of 150 days on all imports.
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We tend to think of "storytelling" in the context of fixed works like novels and TV shows, where a strong authorial voice dictates everything.
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"Previous administrations have wrongly forced states and schools to comply with federal whims and dictates for what our kids are taught," Trump said Wednesday.
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Otherwise, the order dictates Thicke, who is now dating model April Love Geary, must stay 100 yards away from Patton, Julian and Patton's mother.
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Being 16 is not—as pop culture often dictates—one long pastel-colored Sofia Coppola movie, where everything seems romantic and already perfectly formed.
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But one possible reason the White House didn't act was because of a norm that dictates that government agencies should not interfere in elections.
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So long as dangerous places exist, some internet rule dictates that people will go there, take photos, and post said photos to social media.
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The Foreign Agents Registration Act dictates that a "conspicuous statement" must be present on disseminated materials, disclosing the relationship between the firm and client.
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Though the doc also notes that Apple's "flatness specification," which dictates how much of a bend is acceptable, is smaller than it's ever been.
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She has yet to respond to the controversy, but it will be her response that dictates what this mistake actually says about her character.
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The tech titans who plan on meeting with the administration should highlight that current policy dictates that all qualified applicants go into a lottery.
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Human nature dictates that we tend to embrace the truth right up until the moment that it reflects poorly upon us or our cause.
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As a part-time member of the fellowship of political commentators, I am always drawn into whatever the latest cycle of opinion frenzy dictates.
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The truth is that a majority of Catholics in Europe and the United States have long since stopped listening to church dictates about sex.
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Honesty dictates that we acknowledge that there exist two dramatically different visions of what our nation stands for and how it should be governed.
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We brought them together for a chat to discuss how they're fundamentally changing the long-established dictates of fashion — for the best, we think.
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The tall center console retains space for batteries present and future, but a spare, elegantly trimmed dash still dictates the feel of the interior.
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More than 55% of Philippines domestic workers live in the Middle East where an infamous sponsorship system, known as Kefala, dictates their working conditions.
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The bill, long stalled by talks and disagreements between the House and Senate, overhauls the law that dictates how sexual harassment claims are overseen.
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Hawley calls those provisions "one-size-fits-all dictates from Washington" that drive up costs, saying the issue should be left to the states.
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" That, he continued, is exactly the problem with the provision of PAPSA that "unequivocally dictates what a state legislature may and may not do.
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More than 55% of Philippines domestic workers live in the Middle East, where an infamous sponsorship system, known as Kefala, dictates their working conditions.
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Even if you dress in jeggings and say your vows in Klingon, your anti-wedding is still a wedding: the shape dictates the content.
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Cuban law dictates that anyone born in Cuba may not travel to and around the country by sea, including via cruise ship or ferry.
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She's a single, independent female who prompts Fran and Charlene with ideas that maybe their thoughts and needs are more important than society dictates.
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But Boogie remains nimble enough to backpedal with speed demons while setting a tone that dictates what type of shot they have to take.
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Kaczyński is a Catholic fundamentalist whose vision of a clerical Poland -- possible, he'd argue, only under Law and Justice Party rule -- dictates his actions.
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That's not unprecedented in professional golf, where decorum dictates that players in the zone, like pitchers throwing a no-hitter, be given their space.
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The cafes are sanctuaries for women in an Islamic culture that still dictates how they should dress, behave in public and interact with men.
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A carefully timed choreography dictates the order in which ingredients are added to ensure no one has to eat raw potatoes or chewy shrimp.
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Mr. Mulvaney, a hypercompetitive golfer with an 8 handicap, is determined to prevail while maintaining he is strictly adhering to dictates of the law.
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Bad though a spouse may be who dictates the marital laws, equally awful is the passive partner who simply goes along for every ride.
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The details: Because the European Union dictates Britain's departure, Brexit will be official at the stroke of midnight in Brussels, which is 11 p.m.
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The Vienna Convention, which dictates how governments are supposed to treat foreign diplomats and embassies in their countries, broadly gives diplomats immunity from arrest.
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"A simple rule dictates my buying: Be fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful," Buffett wrote in the Times.
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However, if the board rejects her application, then your estate would likely sell the apartment and dispense with the proceeds as your will dictates.
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But the resent disclosure should give additional fuel to critics of Section 702, the controversial law that dictates the form of surveillance in question.
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It's the muck we swim in, the rot that conditions us, the frame that dictates the contours of many of our ideas and interactions.
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Royal protocol dictates that only spouses of royals can attend the queen's festivities at her private estate in Norfolk, according to INSIDER's Talia Lakritz.
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United States Supreme Court precedent dictates that punitive damages awards that are a double-digit multiplier of the compensatory award should be set aside.
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The schedule likely dictates that both goaltenders will see action as Minnesota plays four games in six nights and eight in the next 21.
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The loss of momentum dictates some near-term caution, she said, but the correction does not look like the beginnings of a bear market.
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If Moore does withdraw, Alabama state law dictates that his name would remain on the ballot because it is too close to the Dec.
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But therapists have insisted that their clinical judgments, not the dictates of employers, should determine who gets what kind of therapy, and how much.
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If Amazon demands to be loved less ambivalently, logic dictates that it will have to concede to a renegotiation of some of those terms.
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Bill Gaines's "usual gang of idiots" offered intellectual freedom from the confining dictates of the 1950s, and that freedom continues to inform my thinking.
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Bill Gaines's "usual gang of idiots" offered intellectual freedom from the confining dictates of the 1950s, and that freedom continues to inform my thinking.
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What if a spokesman calls you back and dictates a statement while you are driving a car or standing in a crowded subway car?
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Currently, immigration law dictates that only 7 percent of the green cards issued each year can be given to residents of any one country.
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The Weber Shandwick media teams are gathering intel and will continue to monitor the situation and share period updates as they shifting landscape dictates.
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As a result of his protest, XSEED policy dictates he won't have his name on any XSEED game he contributes to going forward—period.
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From a small desk in his second-floor study, Mr. Ghosh dictates letter after letter obsessively trying to punch holes in Ms. Banerjee's narrative.
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Logic dictates that Israel would have to offer them citizenship or a permanent residence status equal to that of Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem.
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During all of this, tradition dictates that their breeders watch, sit, eat some raclette (a Swiss cheese), and drink fendant—the local white wine.
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"You Eat It All, Everything, Have a Shirt or Hat On Me. No exceptions, Our Rules," the menu says… or should we say, dictates.
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Straining against the formal dictates of classicism's ideology of control and moderation, the Romantics became, in essence, the modern world's first true "countercultural" movement.
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He says he's willing to pay what the child support schedule dictates ... in his case up to $418 a month for his only child.
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The policy dictates that all cameras will be activated during "all enforcement and investigative encounters," and that officers must inform their subjects that they're recording.
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Human nature dictates that given a clean surface and enough people allowed to draw on it, inevitably a crude drawing of a dick will emerge.
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Unfortunately, in New York, the law dictates that any raccoon caught in the state needs to be humanely killed due to the threat of rabies.
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The simple fact is, the structure of everyday life in the United States practically dictates that many nonwhites must inhabit and socialize in white spaces.
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Best practice also dictates designation of a corporate officer and establishment a department or structural unit responsible for the prevention of corruption and related offenses.
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Chinese tradition dictates that it be kept from her until her final days, the idea being that the fear of dying hastens an individual's demise.
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Common physician staffing practice dictates that a patient in the intensive care unit has no control over which physician will care for him or her.
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This figure dictates the maximum amount of grants and some types of loans borrowers can receive, but has no impact on what families actually pay.
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This was a clear violation of FBI policy, which dictates that the bureau shouldn't make public comments about ongoing investigations, especially close to an election.
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Lexie — who displays paranoid tendencies — doesn't want to work within the system that Allie helped create, which dictates when people work, sleep, and have fun.
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But at the same time, of course, common sense dictates that you cannot have an exclusive right on a single word or a single letter.
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And since Congress ultimately approves NASA's budget and dictates how the agency can use federal funds, lawmakers could mandate that Orion stay on the SLS.
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Even if it were, there's no provision that dictates Mexico pay for the wall, and there are no new tariffs on Mexican goods, experts said.
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The film, like its source material, dictates that anyone with the magical notebook is granted the power to mete out justice as they see fit.
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Expectations will be high when the teams play each other, but the most interesting aspect should be which one dictates the pace of the game.
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As the law of 2018 viral moments dictates, such a good performance must be preserved via the artform of GIFs, and Lopez did not disappoint.
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The presence of the physical keyboard dictates the KeyOne's unique display: a 26.0-inch, 1620 x 1080 pixel touchscreen with a 3:2 aspect ratio.
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It's no secret that mental health dictates our lives, and depictions of what it's like when our health fails us often veer hilariously toward stock.
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State law dictates that if county election officials can't complete the tally of ballots on time, the state may only consider the previous, unofficial returns.
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After the socket look at the chipset, a set of circuitry usually designed for a specific processor, which dictates many of the board's performance limits.
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Polish government officials slammed the decision, offering to display the statue in their country to fend off the "dictates of political correctness," the Telegraph reported.
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Although government policy dictates that all agencies and departments consult the privacy commissioner regarding any new initiatives that have privacy implications, that doesn't always happen.
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"Tradition dictates that boys are supposed to start training aged six years, six months and six days but that's now considered too late," Ebizo explains.
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"Language dictates the way people respond, so we don't use words like 'criminal' or 'gang' or 'thug'—we talk about contagion, transmission, health," he says.
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The court ruled that it had "failed, neglected or refused to conduct the presidential election in a manner consistent with the dictates of the constitution".
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Mrs May was speaking at the launch of a consultation on reforming the Gender Recognition Act, which dictates how people can change their legal gender.
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The company launched a new service called Flexible Pay, which gives employees a way to get paid no matter when a company's pay schedule dictates.
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The weather dictates what you wear and, for the most part, an itty-bitty bikini and a pair of cut-offs can do the trick.
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The study cited above was using diving to test signaling theory, which dictates that the more common diving becomes, the less effective it will be.
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Isn't that Code of Conduct, and its associated Conflict Resolution Policy, supposed to be what dictates the rules of behavior and interaction in the community?
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Just as the second law of thermodynamics means that the universe trends toward disorder, so Godwin's law dictates that online discussions must trend toward Hitler.
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Logic dictates that investors will eventually revolt if Amazon refuses to raise profits, but this may come too late for competitors in the grocery segment.
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Tradition dictates that the Senate opposition can reject an ideologically extreme Supreme Court nominee but should offer a reasonable amount of deference to the president.
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First, simple math dictates that unless something changes quickly for Donald Trump, he won't secure enough delegates before arriving at the RNC convention this July.
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" APA member Dr. Claire Pouncey and her co-authors wrote that it's "not only unnecessary," it "detracts from the deeper dictates of ethics and professionalism.
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This amendment dictates a few rights for those accused of a crime, including that you can't be forced to serve as a witness against yourself.
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Often applied to new, emerging businesses, it dictates the forms and structures of those businesses before the market has determined the best way of operating.
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While that worked in several cases, state law dictates that even convicted felons like Ms. Mitchell and Mr. Palmer are entitled to their full pensions.
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Winging it and filling body bags as we sort out what works reminds us of themoral dictates and the cost of incompetence in our profession.
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Abandoning her training by Boas, and ignoring the dictates of both honesty and history, Hurston forsook the opportunity to record the story of another survivor.
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Federal law "dictates that this motion be granted, and that Clifford be compelled to arbitration, as she knowingly and voluntarily agreed to do," Blakely wrote.
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Happy hour regulars tend to order a beer, then small plates, working up progressively, when appetite dictates, to more elaborate appetizers or a rice bowl.
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Strict protocol also dictates that she should walk backwards from the queen in her presence, although Harrold says you would not see this in public.
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Making sure the intention and the action line up nicely with what I'm thinking and feeling and the dictates of my damned artistic soul [laughs].
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But this rare misstep is also a fascinating look at how criticism and comic books collide, and how that dictates the future of superhero storytelling.
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Worse, while making it all but impossible for Congressional revocation of a IPAB ruling, Democrats barred IPAB's dictates from even being subject to judicial review.
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For Lenin, "morality was not to be based on 'idealistic' standards of inner feelings, but on the ever-changing dictates of revolutionary expediency," Billington writes.
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Aaron's imagination is so vivid that he seems to always know what he wants but never dictates the way you are to make it fit.
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They are more likely to agree on ending large-lot single-family zoning, which dictates the (large) minimum size of land each house must occupy.
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There's no question that on the debate stage decorum dictates that most participants will play it safe in the classic suit and tie (if relevant).
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Labels have always told us that "boy bands" and "girl bands" are at opposite ends of a spectrum, and that their gender dictates their output.
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"It's a shame that lack of preparation leads you to a point where crisis dictates how you have to vote," said Ted Yoho of Florida.
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In hilarious and all-too-believable fashion, Silk gets devoured for failing to show remorse after running afoul of the dictates of contemporary P.C. orthodoxy.
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You could say that the text determines the music, or that each note dictates the syllable that will convey it: Both statements are equally true.
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The Royal Rota system typically dictates how official royal events are covered, Kristin Contino, chief reporter at Royal Central, wrote to me in an email.
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You should also know that your state dictates whether other factors, such as your age, smoking status and residential area, will affect your Medigap premiums.
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Beyond scholarly productivity, simple human compassion dictates that they should be able to visit family and friends without fear of being detained on their return.
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"We have respect for the sincere convictions of an enlightened conscience, even when its dictates do not coincide with our own," he wrote on Sept.
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Finer points: Because the European Union dictates Britain's departure, Brexit will be official at the stroke of midnight, Brussels time, which is only 11 p.m.
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Of the three branches of the federal government, only one is explicitly insulated from the dictates of democratic representation and political accountability: the judicial branch.
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In the face of a potentially very angry fanbase, Lindelof is dedicated to updating Watchmen to be as inclusive as what current superhero culture dictates.
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Also, the law as set down by no less an authority than Shakespeare dictates that the guy who tries to kill the king must perish.
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The settlement, established in 1997, blocks the federal government from detaining immigrant children for more than 20 days and dictates the treatment of the children.
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Stoners rejoice: the two things that stereotype dictates that you love literally most in the whole word—after weed, and presumably, your mothers—have coalesced.
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Senate rules dictates the tax bill can only increase the deficit by $1.5 trillion in the first 10 years and cannot affect it after that.
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Common sense dictates that it may be natural for the beginning of an asteroid-cataloguing program to amass a great number of previously ignored NEOs.
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Hawking and Milner think it's possible to design such tiny spaceships because of Moore's law, which dictates microchips will keep getting smaller and more powerful.
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She's a delegate on the powerful 112-member Rules Committee of the Republican National Convention that dictates how delegates choose the GOP nominee at the convention.
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A world run solely by the dictates of power or Although both arguments are functional, which narrative represents the world the United States wants to see?
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"If you repeal this mandate, but leave in place dictates as to whom may purchase insurance, you create a business model doomed to fail," he wrote.
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It dictates that hair must be mid-length or shorter, clothing must be modest and loose-fitting, and any foreign trend or style is strictly forbidden.
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Insurance policies and qualified retirement plans, among other assets, pass automatically to the named beneficiary on that account, regardless of what your will dictates, said Lehmann.
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Chicago Lawyer: Turning a highway into a payday State law dictates how the money should be split, with the arresting agency getting the lion's share, 212.5%.
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Varna religious tradition dictates that the dirtiest and most difficult work in Hindu society is relegated to "untouchables"—making many Indians even today vulnerable to slavery.
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The guy's personality is borderline-domineering (in a good way?); he effortlessly dictates the tempo that nine other players will experience whenever he's on the court.
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My teaching dictates my practice, more than I would like to admit … I want to lead by example, though I never show my students my work.
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But that result masks a deeply polarized electorate whose party affiliation and level of support, or disapproval, of Trump increasingly dictates their view of the media.
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Conventional wisdom dictates that the first — and smartest — thing to do is meet with financial and legal experts to sort out all your newfound money issues.
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Now that Musgraves has two fairly popular LPs in the bag, industry etiquette dictates it's time for her to get that rite out of the way.
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"Civility dictates equal dignity," he said, one of a few times it felt like he was really talking about a certain political figure without naming names.
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According to McKnight, a right tilt shows sentimentality, a left slant suggests "me-oriented" traits and no slant at all reveals that pragmatism and logic dictates.
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State law dictates that the Senate must approve or reject a governor's decision to remove a constitutional officer, like the sheriff, who is voted into office.
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"Freedom of Worship" depicts eight believers of different faiths in prayer, "each according to the dictates of his own conscience," as the painting's caption puts it.
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The institution that dictates the country's policies on defence, foreign affairs and, to a large extent, internal security is not used to awaiting decisions by politicians.
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It would be misleading to say, as minimum wage opponents sometimes do, that some iron law of supply and demand dictates a cutback on field staff.
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Conventional wisdom dictates that Apple and its expensive devices perform best in Western markets, where operator-subsidized contracts are commonplace and consumer spending power is greater.
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The census dictates how the 435 seats in the House of Representatives are allocated, and thus how many electoral-college votes should go to each state.
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And it's not just because she personally fancies it — protocol reportedly dictates only natural-looking nail shades can be worn by royals while on official business.
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"When you're writing a story and there's a really solid character that's been around for a long time, the character dictates what happens next," he explains.
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Exposing ankles and behind in a manner that forces you to stand up straighter, a Thom Browne suit dictates that its wearer make certain postural adjustments.
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Here is the tricky part: City law dictates that any captured raccoon must be killed in a humane fashion, because raccoons are known to carry rabies.
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"Common sense dictates that we should have this information because these are decisions about public lands, or lands that belong to the American people," she said.
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Lesson learned: In architecture there's a classic principle that dictates form should follow function, meaning a physical structure should be designed based on its intended purpose.
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But while conventional wisdom dictates that either of the Democratic candidates would beat Trump in November, there's another candidate whom many Democrats would rather face: Sen.
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But federal bankruptcy law also dictates that no state can pass local debt-restructuring laws, and in one provision Puerto Rico is defined as a state.
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Clothing in Bhutan is actually relegated by the Driglam Namzha, or official dress code of the country, which dictates what all citizens are allowed to wear.
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Whatever sign the Moon is in dictates your mood, Cancer, and today it's in Sagittarius—you're in a fiery, busy mood, ready to get shit done.
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One setting you can't change yet on most smartphones is aperture, the size of the lens opening that dictates how much light gets into the lens.
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"The market dictates that interests between our two countries are structured so that you will always have me and I will always have you," Lu said.
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Just as a fluctuating market dictates the inventory available and asking prices, the needs and preferences of wealthy buyers can change as quickly as the tides.
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You can outfit them with whatever weapons you want, but the specialist you choose dictates what kind of grenade and "super" ability you bring into combat.
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But he was also linking the conversation to broader political conditions—the context that dictates what's possible to achieve as well as what's prudent to say.
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Stanford economist John Taylor is known for his Taylor Rule, an economic gauge that dictates where the Fed's benchmark funds rate should be, given prevailing conditions.
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Logic dictates that Brexit means either some border adjustments, or it is left wide open and border controls are implemented at mainland UK ports and airports.
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Analysts believe this is because of the EPA's proposed changes to the New Source Review (NSR) program, which dictates how coal companies must upgrade their plants.
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The Marvel Cinematic Universe has swallowed up the movie theaters the same way that a cupboard full of instant mac and cheese dictates what's for dinner.
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Speier told CNN's "New Day" earlier Tuesday that current policy dictates that individuals coming forward with harassment complaints have to go through a three-month process.
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While popular rhetoric dictates that refugees translate into an economic burden, Turkey's economy has grown since the influx of Syrians began more than four years ago.
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It seems as if, despite the lack of evidence, there's still a social norm in the United States that dictates how often you ought to bathe.
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And so they were the special chosen ones, and their role is to make everything that the Fox God tells them or dictates should actually happen.
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They noted the ECB is already deviating from the key, for example by buying fewer Portuguese and Estonian bonds than the rule dictates in recent months.
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Sergei struck me as a Tolstoy figure, the sort of person who gives up everything to wander the earth and follow the dictates of his conscience.
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The type of diploma that students receive overwhelmingly dictates whether they enroll in two- or four-year colleges, or move on to higher education at all.
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One of his most talented forwards struggled under the dictates, transferred to Colorado State and became player of the year in the rival Western Athletic Conference.
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In fact, imperial law dictates that when princesses choose to marry a "commoner," as Princess Mako decided to this year, they automatically lose their royal status.
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Adeline Gray, however, wants to take an antiquated and sexist complex and flip it around, to be part of a movement that dictates their own terms.
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English law dictates that the author of a letter owns its content, no matter who has it, giving the duchess a strong case, legal experts said.
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And is black skin a mask that dictates behavior or does the mask free one to engage with the minstrelsy at the heart of American blackness?
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Do you see the snowball effect when presidential electoral math dictates trade policy that is detrimental to the business community and the country as a whole?
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It's vital to both the region's and nation's economy—but it will last only another decade before safety dictates it will need to be fully replaced.
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Now both authoritarian adversaries seek to displace America and its allies from their respective geographic peripheries and to re-order the world according to their dictates.
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This delay can be justified by pointing to mitigation efforts; common sense dictates that prepping for future disasters upfront can save money over the long-term.
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Resolution 2231 provides Iran with a loophole big enough to develop medium- and long-range missiles without the risk of running afoul of Security Council dictates.
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But the custom dictates something else as well: Relatives of the deceased may also claim the land where the remains are reburied and build homes nearby.
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But the custom dictates something else as well: Relatives of the deceased may also claim the land where the remains are reburied and build homes nearby.
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"The question is whether European wants its companies to follow European laws or American ones, or whether it will submit to the American dictates," Zarif said.
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She echoed the sentiment shared on Reddit, that consumption divorced from what typically dictates it — not just price, but need and desire — can have surprising effects.
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Working as a black designer in a largely white industry "definitely dictates my approach to design," Mr. Casely-Hayford told The New York Times in 2014.
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Simple realism dictates that no legislation to grant citizenship to the millions of undocumented Americans who deserve it will be passed until the Republicans are defeated.
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Under President Donald Trump, the administration has slowly chipped away at the refugee cap, which dictates how many refugees may be admitted to the United States.
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There may be no bigger date on the calendar for college football teams than signing day, since personnel overwhelmingly dictates a team's ultimate success or failure.
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It has a president who leads the entire organization, a Congress that passes dictates for the game, and even committees that provide strategic guidance and oversight.
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Hawking and Milner think it's possible to design such tiny spaceships because of Moore's law, which dictates that microchips will keep getting smaller and more powerful.
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Procedure dictates that an animal should be guided through a plant in a calm state and be completely knocked out by electrical shock before being slaughtered.
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The concept of herd immunity dictates that a certain number of people in a population must be immunized in order to eliminate the spread of disease.
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No size or age dictates the rate at which we learn to turn away from our old mistakes, and clean ourselves up before making new ones.
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It dictates the atmosphere, too—The Bangles' "Walk Like an Egyptian" encompasses the frivolity of the 80s where the couple meet and return to at the end.
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There's no hard and fast rule that dictates when you need to say goodbye to your trusty old device and replace it with something shiny and new.
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Finally, it dictates that prosecutors must confer with sex offenders' victims to determine, and subsequently notify the court, whether the victim is happy with any plea agreement.
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Federal law dictates what types of ingredients can be used in compounded drugs, but nobody is required to test whether the end product is safe and effective.
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Custom dictates that Mr Mattarella should consult his predecessors, the speakers of both houses, and the leaders of Italy's parliamentary groups to decide what to do next.
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China maintains a so-called command economy — or a centrally planned economy, where its central bank dictates where interest rates for bank loans and deposits should be.
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It's that fantasy that dictates the story of the video for "Use Me," which shows Future alone in a run-down diner, seemingly grappling with his demons.
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Lek also noted in the talk that a contemporary artist's first audience is often the algorithm, which dictates whether online media will reach a wider human audience.
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Efficiency dictates the buildings be wide enough for "double-loaded" corridors, with apartments on both sides, but not so wide that the apartments are narrow and dark.
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There are so many counties in America that statistical chance alone dictates that there should have been 41 counties with at least a 12-election winning streak.
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The standard explanation for why private equity might be expected to outperform the market is that it can ignore the dictates of "quarterly capitalism"—meaning impatient investors.
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Do you subscribe to the sex, drugs, and sausage rolls festival-osophy that dictates everything you eat must be deep-fried and served on a polystyrene trays?
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But Buffett's reputation and following is such that his signifying he'll vote one way, or another, could have a ripple effect far greater than his position dictates.
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And a 2007 deposition suggests that Trump doesn't use a computer or carry a smartphone during the daytime hours, and often dictates daytime tweets to his assistants.
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And, all too often, when those people have complained about that, they've been ignored, dismissed, or slammed with even more autocratic dictates than they suffered with before.
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The 20-20-20 rule also exists, which dictates that after 20 minutes of screen staring, you should stare at something 20 feet away for 20 seconds.
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Concealed carry was legalized the year I moved back and it dictates every move I make, quite literally as I don't go into establishments that allow it.
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The Spanish tradition dictates that eating 12 grapes at the stroke of midnight — one each time the bell tolls — will lock down 12 months of good fortune.
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This dictates how the core of the Earth formed, how we acquired our ocean and atmosphere, and maybe how our planetary companion, the Moon, came into being.
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When it comes to something so important as states holding elections, that Constitutional design shouldn't be scrapped so the federal government dictates more rules to the states.
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Standards must be upheld and an FBI Director needs to investigate, not inject issues into a presidential election when no investigation dictates action or basis for action.
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Nevada and 20 other states, which filed the original lawsuit, claim the rule is unconstitutional because it dictates how much states must pay employees for government work.
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Julia's just as relieved as David to hold evidence of Tessa's immoral character, as if something a person did at 14 dictates who she is at 35.
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Or does it cement the fact that he is someone who beats to his own drum and just kind of dictates the terms of this nomination process?
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Basic physics dictates that a warmer atmosphere holds more water, meaning that heavy downpours are becoming all the more common and intense as the world heats up.
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Sound public policy dictates that we should not disincentivize the very behavior that will keep families together and, in turn, reduce future crime and save taxpayers money.
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The separation-of-powers established in the U.S. Constitution, a concept that dictates how the federal government operates, is even more important when it concerns national security.
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It's a system that demands physical perfection and purity but dictates strict rules about how to obtain that perfection, and harshly punishes any deviations from those rules.
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"If the market dictates a need for debates, there will be debates, regardless of what people in a smoke-filled room want or desire," Weaver told CNN.
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Here are 11 planning documents to consider implementing, in addition to a will: This document dictates what medical treatments you do and don't want in different circumstances.
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Because information is so tightly controlled, generations of Chinese have been dreamwalking through life without realizing it, becoming zombies primed to live in accordance with state dictates.
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This may be a modern version of the old-style Saudi society — that the father, grandfather or senior male in the family dictates how its members behave.
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Federal law dictates that unaccompanied children in government custody are required to be released from Border Patrol custody to the Office of Refugee Resettlement within 72 hours.
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In the description of this cringeworthy photo, Gavins says that the restaurant's dress-code policy dictates that all female staffers must wear high heels unless medically restricted.
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At one point during the solo, Daltrey actually rolls his eyes—ironically, probably, in keeping with all the Morning Zoo Hits the TGIFriday's shenanigans the video dictates.
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"The First Amendment dictates that any inquiry by Congress should not begin by issuing requests to journalists for documents pertaining to its news gathering," Pollack told Politico.
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Under questioning Tuesday, Trainor said, as a commissioner, he would "follow the dictates" of the courts, which have generally ruled in favor of disclosing political donors' identities.
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Six panels, now transformed into six artworks, hung unlit and unlabeled, asserting their presence with a slow reticence completely at odds with the dictates of contemporary display.
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Comic book logic dictates that a high dose of radiation will turn you in the Hulk, Godzilla, Radioactive Man, or any number of other radiation-induced superbeings.
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Time dictates its own tyranny: it slowly consumes bodies with diseases and old age, it silently dims faces and events that were once vivid in our minds.
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It may sound grandiose to suggest that fox hunting gear is a forerunner of contemporary sportswear or even the concept of clothing whose function entirely dictates form.
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But her regimented style in a freewheeling and often dysfunctional West Wing frustrated some senior officials and people close to the president, who chafed under her dictates.
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Convention dictates that Conte talk about "taking it game by game," demanding that his players should not get ahead of themselves, but these are just platitudes now.
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So in some ways, porn is this hyperbolic metaphor for what happens anytime the audience dictates terms and the storyteller is not left to their own devices.
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This fiscal year, the administration set a cap, which dictates how many refugees may be admitted to the US, of 18,000, down from 30,000 the previous year.
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Winging it and filling body bags as we sort out what works reminds us of the moral dictates and the cost of in competence in our profession.
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The Serbian held his line, and was rarely pushed back deep into the court by the Spaniard's heavy spin, a position from which Nadal usually dictates terms.
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The refugee cap, which dictates how many refugees may be admitted to the US, is discussed among several departments and agencies, and eventually approved by the President.
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This report basically dictates astronomy's near-term trajectory: Agencies like NASA and the National Science Foundation proactively use the committee's recommendations to decide which projects to fund.
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The policy effectively dictates that countries either recognize diplomatically the People's Republic of China, on the mainland, or the Republic of China, on Taiwan, but not both.
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A time when how good a scientist you were was not all that mattered — what was important was how well you fit into political and ideological dictates.
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A cogent strategic analysis dictates that we think seriously as to how we may reverse those years of neglect and give the Caucasus the attention it deserves.
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Federal law dictates that any child under the age of 18 who has been bought or sold for sex is a sex-trafficking victim, regardless of circumstance.
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The state of Texas, on the other hand, says that where there is medical and scientific "uncertainty," precedent dictates that states have wide discretion in regulating abortions.
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While governments may very well enact laws that are consistent with religious teaching, governments do not pass laws to be consistent with what any particular religion dictates.
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The boy's grandfather, John Miles, told reporters that the family is hurt by the decision to pursue misdemeanor counts, but he understands the law dictates the charges.
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Simple math dictates that to get much of anything done, Democrats will need to look across the aisle, particularly since the Senate remains narrowly in Republican control.
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This is a pretty genius idea, although, it requires very careful preparation and extra attention to timing, as Adams dictates you poach the eggs in a microwave.
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But both connect to the reality that many Jews want to practice their religion, and live their lives, in ways that conflict with the ultra-Orthodox's dictates.
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"Universities and cultural institutions like the Whitney claim to be devoted to ideals of education, creativity, and dissent beyond the dictates of the market," the letter states.
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Bitcoin's code dictates that miners will eventually earn more from transaction fees than they do from the regular creation of new bitcoins (supply is capped at 21M BTC).
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Photo: APPresident Donald J. Trump has decided to advance his bogus ban on trans individuals openly serving in the US military beyond tweeting vague dictates on the matter.
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Nearly all states have a "winner-take-all" system, which dictates that all electoral votes be awarded to the candidate who won the popular vote within the state.
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Operating margins jumped from 18 percent to 26 percent, thanks to their zero-based budgeting, which dictates that managers must meticulously justify all expenses, from pencils to forklifts.
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" The FTC dictates that for apparel, manufacturers must "provide complete instructions about regular care for the garment, or provide warnings if the garment cannot be cleaned without harm.
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"There is long-standing ICE policy which dictates how a reunification may occur for an individual that is being detained and going through an immigration process," Albence said.
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As culture dictates that married women move to their husband's home village, they often become socially isolated and face hostility from in-laws after he dies, he said.
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This phase dictates that it's no longer in our best interest to hesitate or guard our hearts, especially if someone has been waiting for us to open up.
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"Given enough time" between the speech and the event, she says, "the audience's good sense" may be restored and listeners might reconsider acting on the rabble-rouser's dictates.
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In Congress, House Democrats have demanded access to Trump's tax documents under a 1924 law that dictates that the Treasury secretary "shall furnish" them if requested by lawmakers.
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If females stay out of women's spaces because privacy or their faith dictates it, their loss of freedom and comfort will not show up in any statistics either.
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Today logic dictates whether Sino-Russian projects happen because relations are more normal, he suggests: build a fast train to sparsely peopled Siberia and who would take it?
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Then the box office dictates a certain other reality, and then life takes over, you meet people, and you get a sense of what is real and not.
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The constitution was just another archaic part of public life to modernise according to the dehistoricised dictates of the age—or to mess with for short-term advantage.
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But this is what Timothy tragically missed: Wild creatures, like bears, accept us only according to their own dictates, and they're truly impervious to human agendas and expectations.
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Industry fragmentation, vicious competition for contracts and low profit margins mean that most building firms have little money to invest in greener construction methods beyond what regulation dictates.
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The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) is the federal regulation that dictates what employers can and cannot know about potential employees, and many states have adopted additional rules.
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If Congress were to establish a law clarifying that, however, it would remove the Commission's freedom in this matter and constrict it to operating as the law dictates.
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This is a comic book movie, and Marvel's films operate by comic book logic that dictates no death lasts forever, except formative ones like Spider-Man's Uncle Ben.
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When women are attracted to both men and women, heteronormativity dictates that their sexual feelings and experiences with women are recreational distractions from more serious endeavors with men.
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And since good etiquette dictates never demanding something, either as the host or guest, you can't berate your host for failing to provide the right kinds of food.
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It's not just etiquette dictates that you can't just go around selling any old cheap bubbles labeled as "Champagne"—it's actually mandated in trade agreements and international laws.
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However, the size of China's economy dictates developed market treatment, where it is more important to maintain credibility in the currency rather than focus on interest rates alone.
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The Democratic Party is essentially a legal money-laundering entity for individual and corporate donors, especially in presidential years when the party's nominee dictates the flow of money.
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Criticizing the law's vague and broad dictates, some tech companies now storing data in the country say they may soon have one foot out the door of Australia.
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It would be fascinating to know, for example, whether the dictates of the grammar checkers built into modern word processors have had a measurable impact on literary prose.
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