Discriminated Sentence Examples

discriminated
  • He claimed that he had been racially discriminated against between July 1999 and September 2002.

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  • No fewer than five species have been discriminated from various parts of Asia, extending to Japan; but only one of them, the P. leucoptera of Turkestan and Tibet, has of late been admitted as valid.

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  • There was an intermediate stage which has not always been sufficiently discriminated from slavery.

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  • And here at least four principal ranges or groups of ranges admit of being discriminated, namely the Astin-tagh, the Chimen-tagh, the Kalta-alaghan and the Arka-tagh, all belonging to the mountainous country which borders on the north the actual plateau region of Tibet.

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  • Parmenides sought to reduce the variety of nature to a single material element; but he strictly discriminated the inconstant 7retOri from the constant oboia, and, understanding by " existence " universal, invariable, immutable being, refused to attribute to the IraO'q anything more than the semblance of existence.

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  • Having thus discriminated between the permanent unity of nature and its superficial plurality, Parmenides proceeded to the separate investigation of the Ent and the Nonent.

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  • Much evidence has been produced to show that gild and borough, gildsmen and burgesses, were originally distinct conceptions, and that they continued to be discriminated in most towns throughout the middle ages.

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  • Gradually the Kabuki developed the features of a genuine theatre; the actor and the playwright were discriminated, and, the performances taking the form of domestic drama (Wagoto and Sewamono) or historical drama (Aragoto or Jidaimono), actors of perpetual fame sprang up, as Sakata TOjOrO and Ichikawa DanjinrO (1660-1704).

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  • Among them (29) the two contiguous groups can be discriminated by the 129 being multiplied by 30 and 60, while the 67 or 134 is differently x 25, 40, 50 and l00.

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  • He is at the same time the only Greek philosopher who clearly discriminated discovery and disputation, science and dialectic, the knowledge of a definite subject from its appropriate principles and the discussion of anything whatever from opinions and authority.

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  • With regard, then, to the first problem, the formal element in knowledge, Hume has to consider several questions, distinct in nature and hardly discriminated by him with sufficient precision.

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  • Some think that existing users on the yearly rate would feel unfairly discriminated against.

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  • Another family decided against court action in spite of being blatantly discriminated against in relation to enrollment in the local high school.

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  • Residual cancer could not reliably be predicted or discriminated from necrosis or mature teratoma by the prognostic criteria.

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  • Others again have not yet been discriminated from the Wigeons (q.v.), the Pintail-Ducks, Dafila, or even from the typical form of Anas (see DUCK), into each of which genera the Teals seem to pass without any great break.

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  • Experiment 2 removed this cue, and participants no longer discriminated between grammatical and ungrammatical sequences in the novel domain.

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  • Teri of Sunrise, Florida explains how she was discriminated against because her and her husband filed for bankruptcy over seven years ago.

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  • Some customers report having issues with customer service, others with accessing website features, and others feeling like they were discriminated against or overcharged.

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  • If you feel a company discriminated against you due to one of these factors, contact the FTC to learn more about your rights.

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  • If you believe that you have been discriminated against by a Fresno mortgage lender, contact the Federal Trade Commission.

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  • Option One specifically targeted elderly and ill customers and discriminated against minorities.

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  • Sometimes women are afraid to seek pregnancy disability payments because they're afraid they'll be fired or otherwise discriminated against.

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  • Larger women of course, those who are tired of feeling left out or discriminated against on other websites.

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  • Women with these tattoos sometimes complain of enduring crude comments from forward men, and often feel they are discriminated against based upon their tattoo choice.

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  • All conceptions which do not possess these two attributes - of being vivid in themselves and discriminated from all others - cannot be true.

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  • Three separate capitals must be discriminated Pavia, the seat of the new Lombard kingdom; Ravenna, the garrison city of the Byzantine emperor; and Rome, the rallying point of the old nation, where the successor of St Peter was already beginning to assume that national protectorate which proved so influential in the future.

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  • In certain cases, however, the law has discriminated between the contending claims of landlord and tenant.

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  • As alum and green vitriol were applied to a variety of substances in common, and as both are distinguished by a sweetish and astringent taste, writers, even after the discovery of alum, do not seem to have discriminated the two salts accurately from each other.

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  • His characters are finely delineated and discriminated rather than, like those of Plautus, boldly conceived.

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  • Goethe has here taken a simple story of village life, mirrored in it the most pregnant ideas of his time, and presented it with a skill which may well be called Homeric; but he has discriminated with the insight of genius between the Homeric method of reproducing the heroic life of primitive Greece and the same method as adapted to the commonplace happenings of 18th-century Germany.

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  • National budgets are to be discriminated (r) as budgets passing under parliamentary scrutiny and debate from year to year, and (2) budgets emitted on executive authority.

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  • Now when Speusippus (1) discriminated the One, the Good.

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