Judged Sentence Examples

judged
  • She hadn't judged him or restrained him.

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  • Wolsey must be judged by his deeds and not by doubtful intentions.

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  • The policy of fusing Greeks and Orientals again is diversely judged.

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  • By these plays and by Rioja and Consuelo he is entitled to be judged.

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  • But Hyrcanus " was judged worthy of the three great privileges, the rule of the nation, the high-priestly dignity, and prophecy."

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  • They are a safe, caring and supportive environment where I have opened up and shared, without feeling judged.

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  • The whole family, whom he had formerly judged severely, now seemed to him to consist of excellent, simple, and kindly people.

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  • The success of the method cannot yet be judged, but the experiment is one which deserves very full trial.

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  • Its importance at Rome may be judged from the abundance of monumental remains - more than 75 pieces of sculpture, loo inscriptions, and ruins of temples and chapels in all parts of the city and suburbs.

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  • Natives, however, are not justiceable under the RomanDutch law, but by virtue of letters patent passed in 1848 they are judged by native laws and customs, except so far as these may be repugnant to natural equity.

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  • But the Platonically conceived proof of the being of God contained in the Monologion shows that Anselm's doctrine of the universals as substances in things (universalia in re) was closely connected in his mind with the thought of the universalia ante rem, the exemplars of perfect goodness and truth and justice, by participation in which all earthly things are judged to possess these qualities.

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  • The Syriac text is rendered from a Greek original of unknown age, which from its complete correspondence with the Key of Truth may be judged to have been a Paulician writing.

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  • His merits as an author are often judged solely by his Constitutional History.

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  • The relative stability is then judged by the amount of nitrogen gas collected in a certain time.

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  • Thus does Arabian medicine appear as judged from a modern standpoint; but to medieval Europe, when little but a tradition remained of the great ancient schools, it was invested with a far higher degree of originality and importance.

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  • But above all else he was a great ecclesiastic. He paid less attention to secular politics than Archbishop Tait; but if a man is to be judged by the effect of his work, it is Benson and not Tait who should be described as a great statesman.

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  • The original churches appear to have been very small, as may be judged from their number.

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  • But Sir Ian Hamilton judged it to be inexpedient to initiate land operations at once.

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  • Raumer's style is direct, lucid and vigorous, and in his day he was a popular historian, but judged by strictly scientific standards he does not rank among the first men of his time.

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  • He had been disappointed that the command of the large contingent of the nizam was given to Colonel Arthur Wellesley; and when after the capture of the fortress the same officer obtained the governorship, Baird judged himself to have been treated with injustice and disrespect.

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  • Syrian monuments, holding these of too late a date (judged by their Assyrian analogies) for the flourishing period of the Kheta-Khatti, as known from Egyptian and Assyrian records.

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  • But another route, the importance of which in antiquity may be judged of from Isa.

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  • The Florentines must either silence the man themselves, or send him to be judged by a Roman tribunal.

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  • The Comtist replies that the task is philosophic, and is not to be judged by the minute accuracies of science.

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  • The part she played has been variously judged, and is not yet completely elucidated.

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  • His words show that he judged himself and read the future accurately.

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  • This book has been variously judged.

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  • In all these biographies there is internal evidence of confusion; many of the incidents related are elsewhere told of other persons, and certain of them are quite irreconcilable with his character, so far as it can be judged of from his writings and from the opinions expressed of him by his contemporaries; we may safely reject, for instance, the legends that he set fire to the library of the Temple of Health at Cnidos, in order to destroy the evidence of plagiarism, and that he refused to visit Persia at the request of Artaxerxes Longimanus, during a pestilential epidemic, on the ground that he would in so doing be assisting an enemy.

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  • He was one of those who took a middle course in the non-intrusion controversy, holding that the fitness of those who were presented to parishes should be judged by the presbyteries - the principle of Lord Aberdeen's Bill.

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  • There the more liberal theology rapidly made way among a people who judged it more by its fruits than its arguments, and Macleod won many adherents by his practical schemes for the social improvement of the people.

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  • The importance of the fur of this animal as an article of commerce may be judged of from the fact that 15,000 skins were sold in one year by the Hudson's Bay Company as long ago as 1743.

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  • It is necessary to remember this when the somewhat erratic and irregular character of the operations which followed is judged.

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  • A careful, calculating dynastic policy, which aimed at the establishment of an equilibrium by means of prudent compromises and defensive alliances, was, he rightly judged, the best guarantee for the future safety and glory of Poland.

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  • Though they already had Francesco Vettori at his court, Soderini judged it advisable to send Machiavelli thither in December.

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  • Machiavelli judged the case of Italy so desperate that salvation could only be expected from the intervention of a powerful despot.

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  • He was by no means indifferent to private virtue, which indeed he judged the basis of all healthy national existence; but in the realm of politics he postponed morals to political expediency.

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  • The time of touching bottom i studied by the Norwegian expedition on board the " VOringen " was judged by timing each loo-fathom mark and noting the in 1876-1878, and the north polar basin by Nansen and Sverdrup sudden increase in the time interval when the shot reached the in the " Fram " in 1893-1896, the Mediterranean by the Italians bottom.

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  • How great was the popularity and diffusion of this letter may be judged in some degree from the fact that Zarncke in his treatise on Prester John gives a list of close on 100 MSS.

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  • With the gas in excess a heavy lurid flame emitting dense volumes of smoke results, whilst if it be driven out in a sufficiently thin sheet, it burns with a flame of intense brilliancy and almost perfect whiteness, by the light of which colours can be judged as well as they can by daylight.

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  • But a dispute with Francis, more than usually embittered, led in August 1780 to a minute being delivered to the council board by Hastings, in which he stated that "he judged of the public conduct of Mr Francis by his experience of his private, which he had found to be void of truth and honour."

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  • A petition for a divorce may be presented after a residence within the state of one year immediately preceding, and a decree may be granted against the defendant if judged guilty of adultery, desertion for two years without reasonable cause, habitual drunkenness, such inhuman treatment as to endanger the life of the plaintiff, or if convicted of felony after marriage.

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  • Judged as literature, the first place belongs to his Autobiography, which unquestionably ranks among the few great autobiographies ever written.

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  • The bishop of Rome, who enjoys a unique title, that of " pope," may annul the decrees of all other powers, since he judges all but is judged by none.

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  • Forms and ceremonies should only be judged as they promoted the great object of life, a clean heart and a right spirit, love to God and one's neighbour.

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  • In literature the second half of the 17th century is a sterile waste of forbidding theology; and its life, judged by the present day, singularly sombre.

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  • In the exercise of its duty as the protector of the laws it must have had power to inhibit in the Four Hundred, or in the Ecclesia, a measure which it judged unconstitutional or in any way prejudicial to the state, and in the levy of fines for violation of law or moral usage it remained irresponsible.

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  • The popular opinion of a census, at least in the United States, depends largely upon the degree to which its figures for the population of the country, of states, and especially of cities, meet or fail to meet the expectations of the interested public. Judged by this standard, the census of 1890 was less favourably received than that of 1880.

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  • Judged by European standards the cost of the American census is very great.

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  • They judged, further, that should their attempt by any chance miscarry, the Great Powers, more particularly Russia, protector of the Slav peoples, would not allow them to be crushed, or their present territories to be diminished.

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  • It must be judged not only by theoretical but by practical arguments, in its relations either to the individual or to a society.

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  • In the Book of Wisdom, again, the composition of an Egyptian Hellenist, who from internal evidence is judged to have lived somewhat earlier than Philo, Solomon is introduced uttering words of admonition, imbued with the spirit of Greek philosophers, to heathen sovereigns.

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  • The opposition, which was led by one Eusebius, a "scholasticus" or pleader who afterwards became bishop of Dorylaeum, chose to construe this utterance as a denial of the divinity of Christ, and so violent did the dispute upon it become that Nestorius judged it necessary to silence the remonstrants by force.

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  • His statesmanship, as judged from his acts, was all but flawless, and he was certainly one of the greatest of the medieval diplomatists.

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  • The apostle Paul, after being apprehended in Jerusalem, was sent to be judged before Felix at Caesarea, and kept in custody for two years (Acts xxiv.).

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  • Judged by the florists' rules, they are either good or bad in form, and pure or stained (white or yellow) at the base; the badly formed and stained flowers are thrown away, while the good and pure are grown on, these being known as "breeder" tulips.

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  • But the limitations of Hobbes' literary criticism judged from our present standpoint are great.

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  • Luther, like his countrymen of to-day, judged the contents of the New Testament by the light of his leading convictions; and in his German translation, which occupies the same place in Germany as the Authorized Version of 1611 does in English-speaking lands, he even placed four of the books (Hebrews, James, Jude, Apocalypse) in an appendix at the end, with prefaces explanatory of this drastic act of criticism.

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  • Like many less ancient discourses, the Midrashim are apt to suffer when read in cold print, and they are sometimes judged from a standpoint which would be prejudicial to the Old Testament itself.

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  • Judged from the standpoint of empirical science, philosophy passed its meridian in Plato and Aristotle, declined in the post-Aristotelian systems, and set in the darkness of Neoplatonism.

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  • Calvin came to see this, and in 1542, after his experience in Strassburg, drafted a new one which was much more suitable for teaching purposes, though, judged by modern standards, still far beyond the theological range of childhood.

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  • All these efforts at reconciliation show how clearly the problem of evil was realized in these Gnostic and half-Gnostic sects, and how deeply they meditated on the subject; it was not altogether without reason that in the ranks of its opponents Gnosticism was judged to have arisen out of the question, 7r60ev TO KaK6P; This dualism had not its origin in Hellenic soil, neither is it related to that dualism which to a certain extent existed also in late Greek religion.

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  • The superior courts of law formed part of the palace, and there were tribunals in the principal cities, over each of which presided a supreme judge or cihuacoatl, who was irremovable, and whose criminal decisions not even the king might reverse; he appointed the lower judges and heard appeals from them; it is doubtful whether he judged in civil cases, but both kinds of suits were heard in the court below, by the tlacatecatl and his two associates, below whom were the ward-magistrates.

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  • Some years later the bishop of Puebla, Juan de Palafox y Mendoza, transferred many native congregations from the friars to secular priests, and subsequently, in 1647, came into conflict with the Jesuits, whom he excommunicated, but who eventually triumphed with the aid of the Dominicans and the archbishop. The power of the church may be judged from the petition of the Ayuntamiento of Mexico to Philip IV.

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  • The question has been very differently judged.

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  • The degree of originality of the Conics can best be judged from Apollonius' own prefaces.

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  • Judged by modern standards, his description of the direction of rivers and mountain-chains seems defective, but allowance must be made for difficulties in procuring information, and for want of accurate instruments.

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  • The fidelity of a scribe has to be judged chiefly by internal tests, and these are best applied to his work in passages where there is no reasonable doubt of the correctness of the transmitted text.

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  • Now, as in all eight passages Aristotle speaks, somewhat disparagingly, of " even (Kai) extraneous discourses," and as these include his own early dialogues, they must be taken to mean that though he might quote them, he no longer wished to be judged by his early views, and therefore drew a strong line of demarcation between his early dialogues and the mature treatises of his later philosophical system.

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  • The part which Alvaro de Luna played has been diversely judged.

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  • As a literary critic the shortcomings of Servius, judged by a modern standard, are great, but he shines in comparison with his contemporaries.

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  • It is a lofty chalk headland, and the resistance it offers to the action of the waves may be well judged by contrast with the low coast of Holderness to the south.

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  • Lifting up his voice against the preacher's doctine, he declared that it is not by the Scripture alone, but by the divine light by which the Scriptures were given, that doctrines ought to be judged.

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  • The home government judged otherwise.

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  • In practice, appeals to the pope, when they involved the annulling of a judgment, were judged by the pope in person.

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  • According to its author, " they (the popes) are above all the laws of the Church, and can use them according to their wish; they alone judge and cannot be judged."

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  • Thus Boniface IX., as a secular prince, occupies an important position; but as pope his activity must be unfavourably judged.

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  • This congregation was very much occupied, being empowered to deal with all disciplinary matters concerning both the secular and regular clergy, whether in the form of consultations or of contentious suits; it had further the exclusive right to regulate the discipline of the religious orders and congregations bound by the simple vows, the statutes of which it examined, corrected and approved; finally it judged disputes and controversies between the secular and regular clergy.

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  • Cases are judged by three auditors, who succeed each other periodically (per turnum) according to the order in which the cases are entered, and in exceptional cases by all the auditors (videntibus omnibus).

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  • Little is known of the condition of the subject populations of the peninsula during the Arab occupation; but we are informed that the Christians were, sometimes at least, judged according to their own laws in separate tribunals presided over by Christian judges; 2 and the mere fact of the preservation of the name alcalde, an official whose functions corresponded so closely to those of the judex or defensor civitatis, is fitted to suggest that the old municipal fora, if much impaired, were not even then in all cases wholly destroyed.

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  • All three sons married, and two of them had only normal children, judged of course by somatic characters.

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  • Charles seems to have been a prince of education and letters, a friend of the church, and conscious of the support he could find in the episcopate against his unruly nobles, for he chose his councillors for preference from among the higher clergy, as in the case of Guenelon of Sens, who betrayed him, or of Hincmar of Reims. But his character and his reign have been judged very variously.

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  • Much more important were the papers entitled Rettungen, in which he undertook to vindicate the character of various writers - Horace and writers of the Reformation period, such as Cochlaeus and Cardanus - who had been misunderstood or falsely judged by preceding generations.

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  • He and his brother Joel judged at Beersheba.

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  • So little doubt left he on the subject that his friends judged it prudent for him to leave Basel at once, as it had been resolved to punish him for the attack on the authorities of which he had been guilty.

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  • The word "species" now signifies a grade or rank in classification assigned by systematists to an assemblage of organic forms which they judge to be more closely interrelated by common descent than they are related to forms judged to be outside the species, and of which the known individuals, if they differ amongst themselves, differ less markedly than they do from those outside the species, or, if differing markedly, are linked by intermediate forms. It is to be noted that the individuals may themselves be judged to fall into groups of minor rank, known as sub-species or local varieties, but such subordinate assemblages are elevated to specific rank, if they appear not to intergrade so as to form a linked.

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  • This may be judged from the fact that in the year named there were only 137,772 voters out of a population of 6z millions.

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  • In general form, so far as can be judged from the disarticulated skeleton, the okapi was more like an antelope than a giraffe, the fore and hind cannon-bones, and consequently the entire limbs, being of approximately equal length.

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  • The spirit in which he acted may be judged of from The Reformed Pastor, a book published in relation to the general ministerial efforts he promoted.

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  • The older Protestantism uncompromisingly judged the monastic ideal and life to be both unchristian and unnatural, an absolute perversion deserving nothing but condemnation.

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  • In both, the price fluctuations and fiscal changes are shown that their effect upon consumption may be judged.

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  • He appears, as far as can be judged from the fragments of,his Pensees, to have seized firmly and fully the central idea of the difference between reason and religion.

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  • In these circumstances it was judged advisable to place the territories of the Royal Niger Company, to which the general name of Nigeria had been given, under the direct control of the crown.

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  • The latter, judged as literature, is intolerably dull; but the former is valuable, throwing as it does considerable light on his personal sympathies as well as on the motives of important epochs in his career.

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  • The size of the task may be judged from the fact that 30,000 to 50,000 telegrams passed through the hands of the censors in the United Kingdom every twenty-four hours.

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  • Fate is the Stoic term for God; and these forerunners of the Pharisees judged that the time had come for them to take action rather than to wait passively on God.

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  • While in gaol at Rochester he published the Caroline Almanac, the tone of which may be judged from its references to "Victoria Guelph, the bloody queen of England," and by the title given to the British cabinet of "Victoria Melbourne's bloody divan."

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  • The result was that Carlyle was too often judged by his defects, and regarded as a selfish and eccentric misanthrope with flashes of genius, rather than as a man with many of the highest qualities of mind and character clouded by constitutional infirmities.

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  • Judged by the combined value of their imports and exports the chief ports are as shown in the first section of Table XVII.

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  • He was held personally responsible for the loss of a large sum of money during his administration of the state department, and after years of litigation was judged by an arbitrator to be indebted to the government for more than $49,000, which he paid at great sacrifice to himself.

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  • Be merciful, as your Father is merciful; and judge not, and ye shall not be judged."

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  • Monumental works, such as his statue of Queen Victoria at Winchester and his work at Windsor, may be handed down as his greatest achievements, but judged as art metal-work, his smaller productions, such as the centrepiece presented by the army and navy to Queen Victoria on her Jubilee, have been more important.

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  • Maximinus has a bad name in Christian annals, as having renewed persecution after the publication of the toleration edict of Galerius, but it is probable that he has been judged too harshly.

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  • It is, however, unquestionably true, that as a startling protest against measures" to silence,"in Jefferson's words," by force and not by reason the complaints or criticisms, just or unjust, of our citizens against the conduct of our agents,"they served, in this respect, a useful purpose; and as a counterblast against Hamiltonian principles of centralization they were probably, at that moment, very salutary; while even as pieces of constitutional interpretation it is to be remembered that they did not contemplate nullification by any single state, and, moreover, are not to be judged by constitutional principles established later by courts and war.

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  • The progress in the acquisition of occupancy rights by tenants may be judged from the fact that, whereas in 1877 it was stated of the Champaran district that the cultivator had hardly acquired any permanent interest in the soil, the settlement officer in 1900 reported that 87% of the occupied area was in the possession of tenants with occupancy rights or holding at fixed rates.

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  • For this reason the interest on capital expended on all the lines cannot be judged by a purely commercial standard.

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  • It may be added here that judged by later experience the Irish system had no transcendent merits, and it is now extinct.

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  • In the year 129 he judged that the time for open manifestation had arrived.

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  • Lastly, all the authors of the above-quoted theories err in supposing that all judgment requires conception; for even Mill thinks a combination of ideas necessary, and Brentano, who comes still nearer to the nature of sensory judgment when he says, " Every perception counts for a judgment," yet thinks that an idea is necessary at the same time in order to understand the thing judged.

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  • If judged by what he denies, viz.

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  • If judged by his positive contribution to the theory of method he may claim to find a more than negative justification for his teaching in its success.

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  • If theosophy were to be judged solely by the published revelations of this "Secret Doctrine" it would hardly be deserving of serious consideration; for, as suggested in the separate article on Madame Blavatsky, the revelations themselves appear to have been no more than a crude compilation of vague, contradictory and garbled extracts from various periodicals, books and translations.

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  • He did not employ the Old Testament as now reconstructed by scholarship or judged by criticism, but in its simple and obvious and traditional sense.

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  • In these too Jesus participated in the views of his own time; even his teaching of God and of the future life is not lacking in Jewish elements, yet none the less he is the essential element in Christianity, and to his life-purpose must all that claims to be Christianity be brought to be judged.

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  • The heroes of the Reformation, judged by modern standards, were reactionaries.

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  • Its success or failure in this respect can only be judged a postenon, by comparison of the results to which it leads with the facts.

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  • It is a matter of ordinary observation that different bodies acted on by the same force, or what is judged to be the same force, undergo different changes of velocity in equal times.

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  • This dew he judged to be pure water.

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  • Nevertheless, the climate of Colorado is not to be judged severe, and that of the plains region is in many ways ideal.

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  • He therefore addressed an eloquent and imploring letter to the earl, pointing out the dangers of his position and urging upon him what he judged to be the only safe course of action, to seek and secure the favour of the queen alone; above all things dissuading him from the appearance of military popularity.

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  • In searching his house for certain papers, the officers came upon some loose sheets stitched together in the form of a sermon, the contents Of which were of such a nature that it was judged right to lay them before the council.

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  • It must be confessed that, judged by Western standards, the poems of Ephraim are prolix and wearisome in the extreme, and are distinguished by few striking poetic beauties.

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  • The career on which Colbert now entered must not be judged without constant remembrance of the utter rottenness of the previous financial administration.

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  • In any case, the Talmud must be judged, like other authoritative religious literature, by its place in history and by its survival.

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  • Modern distinctions of moral and ceremonial being unknown, ancient systems must be judged in the light of those modes of thought which could not view religion apart from life.

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  • For this reason anonymous writings were attributed to famous names, and traditions were judged (as in Islam), not so much upon their merits, as by the chain of authorities which traced them back to their sources.

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  • The characters by which qualities of jute are judged are colour, lustre, softness, strength, length, firmness, uniformity and absence of roots.

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  • So far as can be judged from the human remains found the population in general in both the Stone and Bronze Ages seems to have been similar in type to that of the present day, and there is no clear evidence for the advent of a new race.

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  • How wholly he and his surroundings were untouched by the Arian conflict may be judged from the 17th homily - "that Christ is the Son of God."

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  • Marc. 2-4) removed what he judged to be some interpolations, but van Manen's attempt to prove that Marcion's text is more original than the canonical (Theolog.

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  • Suits, civil and criminal, between foreign subjects are altogether out of Persian jurisdiction, and are judged by the representatives of the foreign powers accredited to Persia.

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  • Judged by the diameter of the drums, the columns of the Croesus temple were not two-thirds of the height of those of the Hellenistic temple.

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  • In the case of imprisonment on accusation of crime the writ issued from the court of king's bench (or from the chancery), and on its return the court judged of the legality of the imprisonment, and discharged the prisoner or admitted him to bail or remanded him to his former custody according to the result of the examination.

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  • To Butler the Christian religion, and by that he meant the orthodox Church of England system, was a moral scheme revealed by a special act of the divine providence, the truth of which was to be judged by the ordinary canons of evidence.

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  • C. Scaliger ought to be judged.

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  • Such Cynic crudity Chrysippus rightly judged to be out of keeping with the requirements of a great dogmatic school, and he laboured on all sides after thoroughness, erudition and scientific completeness.

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  • The leaders in the movement were Anthero de Quental and Dr Theophilo Braga, the first a student of German philosophy and poetry, the second a disciple of Comte and author of an epic of humanity, Visao dos tempos, whose immense work in the spheres of poetry, criticism and literary history, marred by contradictions, but abounding in life, cannot be judged at present.

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  • Nevertheless when a suit was brought before the king he judged it with the assistance of his prelates and vassals assembled around him, who formed his council.

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  • But although in strict logic the feudal causes concerning them should have been judged by them alone, they could not maintain this right in the curia regis; the other persons sitting in it could also take part in judging causes which concerned the peers.

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  • In suits brought against them personally or involving the rights of their peerage they had the right of being judged by the Parlement, the other peers being present, or having been duly summoned.

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  • If the road system was judged by the staffs sufficient to permit of the augmentation of the left wing, this was to be made up of 2 Serbian and 3 Bulgarian divisions - a force equivalent to to Turkish divisions, while the other 5 Serbian divisions (equal to about 8 Turkish) descended from Vranya upon Kumanovo.

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  • But judged relatively there are several, we shall not say excuses, but explanations of them.

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  • When transferred to the buyer's warehouses the bags are opened and each piece is examined by a public inspector in the presence of both buyer and seller, the quality of the opium being judged by appearance, odour, colour and weight.

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  • Owing to his early death, Professor Clifford's abilities and achievements cannot be fairly judged without reference to the opinion formed of him by his contemporaries.

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  • The chief manufacturing centres in ($ 1 05, as judged by the value of their products, were Newark 1 5 0, 0 55, 2 77), Jersey City ($75,740,934), Bayonne ($60,633,761), Paterson ($54,673,083), Perth Amboy ($34,800,402), Camden ($33,5 8 7, 2 73), and Trenton ($32,719,945).

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  • The Murray has a very tortuous course, as may be judged from the fact that the measurement along the joint boundary of New South Wales and Victoria is only 460 m.

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  • The counties in which the greatest proportion of the land is devoted to permanent pasture may be judged roughly from the list of " ` grass counties " already given.

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  • The distinction does not seem to lie principally in the range and delicacy of direct sensation, as may be judged from such well-known facts as man's inferiority to the eagle in sight, or to the dog in scent.

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  • Indeed, it was not till the 9th century, when Cousin in 1836 issued the collection entitled Ouvrages inedits d'Abelard, that his philosophical performance could be judged at first hand; of his strictly philosophical works only one, the ethical treatise Scito to ipsum, having been published earlier, namely, in 1721.

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  • Social institutions and customs and the different forms of state-organization are judged according to the degree in which they promote the realization of the human ideal.

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  • Marriage was out of the question with him, and, judged in the light of Stella's dignity and womanliness, this ardent and unreasoning display of passion was beyond comprehension.

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  • Judged by some passages of his life he would appear a heartless egotist, and yet he was capable of the sincerest friendship and could never dispense with human sympathy.

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  • She was still, however, the prisoner of the English, and, having been induced by those who had her in charge to resume her male clothes, she was on this account judged to have relapsed, was sentenced to death, and burned at the stake on the streets of Rouen on the 30th of May 1431.

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  • For a poet is to be judged by his best things, and the best things of Corneille are second to none.

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  • The result of using properly treated natural limes is not to be judged from the careless manner in which such limes have often been used in the past.

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  • Though cunning, he was destitute alike of foresight and of self-control; he could never discern the way in which his conduct would be judged by other men, because he lacked even the rudiments of a conscience.

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  • They appealed for aid to Philip of France, who judged it opportune to intervene once more.

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  • But his conduct seemed dictated by absolute infatuation; he might have fought, or he might have fled to his father-in-law in France, if he judged his troops untrustworthy.

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  • He was no friend of arbitrary government; but he judged it better that oppressed nationalities and persecuted Liberals should suffer than that Europe should be again plunged into war.

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  • Having made these remarks, however, he judged it wise to refrain from giving any formal reply to Count Walewskis despatch, and contented himself with privately communicating to the British ambassador in Paris the difficulties of the British government.

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  • The same disgust for abstractions and naked doctrines of right that had stirred him against the pretensions of the British parliament in 1774 and 1776, was revived in as lively a degree by political conceptions which he judged to be identical in the French assembly of 1789.

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  • He claimed the right to be judged by his fellow-bishops alone; this claim being rejected he appealed to the see of Rome.

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  • In disputes with one another, they are judged before their own courts of justice.

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  • It follows that there is an absolute standard of the beautiful by which all objects can be judged.

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  • But " even for those books which have the attestation of miracles to confirm their being from God, the miracles," he says, " are to be judged by the doctrine, and not the doctrine by the miracles."

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  • We observe that men are classified according to their functions; all kinds of man, and indeed all organs of man, have their special functions, and are judged as functionaries and organs according as they perform their functions well or ill.

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  • In this way all or most of the things commonly judged to be " goods " - health, strength, wealth, fame,' &c., - are brought within the sphere of the sage's choice, though his real good is solely in the wisdom of the choice, and not in the thing chosen.

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  • It might either fall back on the moral principles commonly accepted, and, affirming their objective validity, endeavour to exhibit them as a coherent and complete set of ultimate ethical truths; or it might take the utility or conduciveness to pleasure, to which Hume had referred for the origin of most sentiments, as an ultimate end and standard by which these sentiments might be judged and corrected.

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  • And supposing it to be replied that the motive is really the moral uneasiness involved in choosing the selfish alternative, Godwin answers that this uneasiness, though a " constant step " in the process of volition, is a merely " accidental " step - " I feel pain in the neglect of an act of benevolence, because benevolence is judged by me to be conduct which it becomes me to adopt."

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  • On his arrival at Madrid he found the princesse des Ursins all but omnipotent with the king, and for a time he judged it expedient to use her influence in carrying out his plans.

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  • The degree to which political enmity was exasperated by the Euboean War may be judged from the incident of Midias, an adherent of Eubulus, and a type of opulent rowdyism.

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  • Treated leniently, but grievously pressed for money, he tried to escape, and, the attempt being judged treasonable, he was persuaded to surrender his estates - to receive them back or 1574.

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  • Richelieus death (December 4, 1642) prevented him from seeing the triumph of his policy, but it can be judged by its results; in 1624 the kingdom had in the east only the frontier of the Meuse to defend it from invasion; in 1642 the whole of Alsace, except Strassburg, was occupied and the Rhine guarded by the army of Gubriant.

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  • Luther judged of it as unfavourably as he judged of I Macc. favourably, and even " wished it had never existed."

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  • He constantly harps upon accusations brought against bishops and the way they were judged; his wish is to prevent them from being unjustly accused, deposed or deprived of their sees; to this end he multiplies the safeguards of procedure, and secures the right of appeal to the pope and the possibility of restoring bishops to their sees.

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  • There were requests that the bishops should be judged according to the rules, protests against the interlopers, demands for the restoration of the bishops to their sees.

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  • The magnitude of the bee industry in the United States may be judged from the fact of a single bee-farmer located in California having harvested from 150,000 lb of honey in one year from 2000 stocks of bees, and, as an instance of the enormous weight of honey obtainable from good hives in that favoured region, the same farmer secured 60,000 lb of comb-honey in one season from his best 300 colonies.

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  • Both men and angels will be judged at the end of the world, when the good will receive again the immortality which was lost through sin, and the wicked will receive death through punishment with.

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  • The remarkable services of Frederick William to his country can best be judged by comparing its condition in 1640 with that in 1688.

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  • The Government, however, judged otherwise; and after the first part of his book, On Religion within the Limits of Reason alone, had appeared in the Berlin Journal, the publication of the remainder, which treats in a more rationalizing style of the peculiarities of Christianity, was forbidden.

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  • The empirical details of nature, which are not determined by the categories of understanding, are judged as being arranged or ordered by intelligence, for in no other fashion could nature, in its particular, contingent aspect, be thought as forming a complete, consistent, intelligible whole.

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  • Judged by the value of products, regardless of cost of materials used, the flour and grist mill industry ranked first in 1905 ($ 2 5,35 0, 75 8).

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  • The delicate bas-reliefs of botany and medicine, history and astronomy, have been judged by some writers to be Grecian, on account of the ancient appearance of their marble, their inscriptions in Greek and Latin, and others that have never been deciphered.

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  • But he felt they had to show more guile in Europe, and ultimately that is where he wants his formation to be judged.

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  • Applications for this award are very competitive, and are judged on one criterion; the candidate's outstanding academic ability and research potential.

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  • Unfortunately I also judged that AC Milan would win - on the basis that they were favorites and therefore got the ascendant.

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  • As judged by bootstrap proportions, decay indices, and leaf stabilities, well-supported relationships of the Indian caecilians are recovered from the alignment.

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  • For example, further exemplification to ensure a Level 4 judgment at KS2 would also be judged a Level 4 at KS3.

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  • One would hope to be judged on the quality of one's work, not one's ability to wear impractical fancy dress.

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  • Collaborators were judged to be traitors to France rather than French fascists.

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  • The organizers will select 10 finalists, which will be judged by a panel of seven industry experts.

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  • Seem to have fallen fowl of " Judge not, lest ye be judged " there haven't we Christopher?

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  • Sometimes my visions of my future seemed grandiose, and therefore I judged them to be ridiculous.

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  • Judged on his results, however, he is also utterly ineffectual.

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  • The Car of the Year award is an international award judged by a senior panel of motoring journalists from across Europe.

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  • Cats with buttons and/or lockets shall be judged as their basic color with no penalty for such locket and/or button.

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  • Happily, George judged things correctly and regained some forward momentum before stepping back too far.

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  • Entries will be judged by a panel appointed by Samaritans.

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  • We may forgive posterity for the paucity of information left to us, but we ourselves shall not be judged so lightly by posterity.

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  • The Pythian priestess eventually directed him to Athens where his case was judged by Athene and the Areopagus.

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  • The whole project of ordered rationality, so prized by the Enlightenment, was judged and found wanting.

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  • At the start of the century such demands would have been judged proper solely to the closeted capacities of millwrights and turners.

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  • The event was judged by Professor Steve Beaumont and Professor Robin Leake, and the prize was an engraved silver quaich.

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  • All articles have been judged by at least two peer reviewers.

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  • Fish too is carefully procured and steamed sea bass with crab, rocket and a chili salsa was judged a beautifully balanced combination.

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  • Road schemes which had been judged essential were only at the early planning stages, with no identified routes.

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  • Was he judged, condemned, and executed in thy stead, and now will he himself condemn thee?

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  • The sausage & mash being judged " like English Sausage & mash but with more pizazz " whilst the breaded trotter was truly succulent.

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  • If the template and the target belong to different families within the Membrane all-alpha superfamily, the model is judged as ' false ' .

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  • The infirmarer judged when it was necessary to administer unction, after which the community departed, leaving the monk to die alone.

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  • The United States has never, therefore, judged that the Protocol would produce what is to us an effectively verifiable BWC.

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  • Here we would observe an oral tradition community as it enters new material into its oral store of recollections judged worthy of preservation.

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  • In Afghanistan, Nato does indeed appear to be failing, judged by the most obvious yardsticks.

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  • He is judged harshly by contemporary writers, as simplex and insufficiens; but Dodu (in his Histoire des institutions du royaume de Jerusalem) suggests that Guy was depreciated because the kingdom had been lost in his reign, in much the same way as Godfrey of Bouillon was exalted because Jerusalem had just been won at his accession.

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  • In early inquiries a great point was made of the prevention of putrefaction, and work was done in the way of finding how much of an agent must be added to a given solution, in order that the bacteria accidentally present might not develop. But for various reasons this was an inexact method, and to-day an antiseptic is judged by its effects on pure cultures of definite pathogenic microbes, and on their vegetative and spore forms. Their standardization has been effected in many instances, and a water solution of carbolic acid of a certain fixed 'strength is now taken as the standard with which other antiseptics are compared.

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  • The tendency to give pre-eminence to Rome appears again in an imperial letter to St Flavian, who, in the judgment of the East, was bishop of Antioch, but who was rejected by the West and Egypt, summoning him to Rome to be there judged by the bishops of the imperial city - a summons which St Flavian did not obey (Tillemont, Ecc.).

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  • In both cases, apparently, an oecumenical synod ignored the Roman deposition and judged the alleged offences of the respective patriarchs in first and last instance.

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  • But the synod alone judged and pronounced sentence.

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  • The criterion by which Gibbon judged civilization and progress was the measure in which the happiness of men is secured, and of that happiness he considered political freedom an essential condition.

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  • Some vague recollection of known historical events (§ 3 end) might be claimed among the traditions ascribed to the closing centuries of the second millennium, but the view that the prelude to the monarchy was an era when individual leaders " judged " all Israel finds no support in the older narratives, where the heroes of the age (whose correct sequence is uncertain) enjoy only a local fame.

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  • Precisely what form his worship took is a matter of conjecture; but it is possible that the religion must not be judged too strictly from the standpoint of the late compiler, and that Manasseh merely assimilated the older Yahwehworship to new Assyrian forms. 2 Politics and religion, however, were inseparable, and the supremacy of Assyria meant the supremacy of the Assyrian pantheon.

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  • His dismissal from the service was an inevitable consequence; it must be stated, however, that the view taken of the circumstances by good authorities was that Baker's conduct, when judged by conventional standards, admitted of considerable extenuation.

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  • The French emperor wanted a war for dynastic reasons, the tsar because he conceived his honour to be involved, and because he judged the moment opportune for expelling the infidel from Europe.

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  • His course in the Senate was not altogether consistent, though in this respect he is not to be judged more harshly than some of his associates.

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  • The great numerical superiority of the Federals enabled Sherman to press back the Confederates without a pitched battle, but the severity of the skirmishing may be judged from the casualties of the two armies (Sherman's about 26,000 men, Johnston's over io,000), and the obstinate steadiness of Johnston by the fact that his opponent hardly progressed more than one mile a day.

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  • The general French verdict on his work is in the main well summed by Morillot, when he says that, judged by the usual tests of the Romantic movement of the 'twenties (love for strange literatures of the North, medievalism, novelties and experiments), Chenier would inevitably have been excluded from the cenacle of 1827.

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  • Truth is the unity and substance which underlies all things; Prudence or Providence is the regulating power of truth, and comprehends both liberty and necessity; Wisdom is providence itself in its supersensible aspect - in man it is reason which grasps the truth of things; Law results from wisdom, for no good law is irrational, and its sole end and aim is the good of mankind; Universal Judgment is the principle whereby men are judged according to their deeds, and not according to their belief in this or that catechism.

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  • Scepticism is deprived of its persistent argument if it is seen that, while our individual experiences are to be judged by their coherence with the context of experience in general, experience as a whole does not admit of being judged by reference to anything beyond itself.

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  • His personality, on account of the sharp religious antagonisms with which his name is inevitably associated, has rarely been judged with impartiality.

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  • In each of these provincial fora the Roman magistrate, as is well known, was accustomed to pay all possible deference to the previously established common law of the district; and it was the privilege of every free subject to demand that he should be judged in accordance with the customs and usages of his proper forum.

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  • Between 1300 and 1500, however, it is supposed that the Kjaempeviser, or Danish ballads, a large collection of about Soo epical and lyrical poems, were originally composed, and these form the most precious legacy of the Denmark of the middle ages, whether judged historically or poetically.

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  • This supposition is rendered probable by the fact that the opiums most prized by smokers are not those containing most morphine, and that the quality is judged by the amount of soluble matter in the opium, by its tenacity or " touch," and by peculiarities of aroma - the Indian opium, especially the Patna kind, bearing much the same relation to the Chinese and Persian drug that champagne does to y in ordinaire.

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  • Without considering the impossibility of restoring the majesty of ancient Rome, or the absurdity of dignifying the medieval Roman rabble by the name of Populus Romanus, he threw himself with passion into the republican movement, and sacrificed his old friends of the Colonna family to what he judged a patriotic duty.

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  • Similarly, seed makers are judged by the crops the seeds grow into—specifically, the yield and how long it takes to get it.

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  • From habit she scrutinized the ladies' dresses, condemned the bearing of a lady standing close by who was not crossing herself properly but in a cramped manner, and again she thought with vexation that she was herself being judged and was judging others, and suddenly, at the sound of the service, she felt horrified at her own vileness, horrified that the former purity of her soul was again lost to her.

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  • At Smolensk too he judged correctly that the French might outflank us, as they had larger forces.

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  • He could not have said by what standard he judged what he should or should not do, but the standard was quite firm and definite in his own mind.

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  • True, Caesar himself had judged res publica to be ' a mere title, without form or substance '.

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  • Every request has to be judged carefully, and that we are doing with scrupulous fairness.

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  • Each candidate is judged against the criteria for appointment at each stage of the selection procedure.

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  • If the template and the target belong to different families within the Membrane all-alpha superfamily, the model is judged as ' false '.

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  • He might have judged it an uninteresting subject; indeed, there might be nothing to tell.

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  • Remember, it is not only your artwork that will be judged, but also the manner in which you store, carry and display it.

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  • Just as clay litter has been scrutinized for its potentially detrimental health effect, silica has been judged in an equally severe manner.

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  • Temple's room was judged to lack personality, and Tym's room was considered a little cold - Vern Yip called it a "nice dorm room or prison room."

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  • Once the burp is completed, it is judged by Donkey and Puss in Boots, although you never see them in the game.

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  • Then you sit back and allow your opponent, the computer, to take a turn and be judged.

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  • Remember to enjoy your art and not to take being judged too seriously.

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  • They are also judged on their technical skills, including knife cuts.

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  • Participants may dislike the classroom environment because they don't want to share their stories with others; they may be afraid of being judged.

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  • You should be able to feel free to be who you are and not feel judged by your friends.

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  • While the coconut palm tree grows in tropical regions in the United States like Florida, they are judged more for their beauty, not for their commercial value.

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  • You will never be forced to speak during an AA meeting, nor will you be harshly judged in any way for words spoken or unspoken.

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  • They are judged by a panel of experts and the television audience.

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  • The celebrities competing are already known singers - they will, however, learn the country music genre and be judged on their talent as country crooners.

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  • Candidates are judged by an expert panel of judges along with at home viewers and are voted off and eliminated each and every week until a winner takes the prized title.

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  • When you have your face on movie screens, you're judged for your looks just as much as anything else.

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  • With so many areas in which to be judged, contestants often bring along a full wardrobe of outfits suitable for every occasion.

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  • These species are of secondary importance in the flower garden, and like many other annuals, they suffer through being judged by spring-sown plants of short-lived bloom.

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  • Let's take a closer look at how each pearl is judged.

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  • Although most individuals understand that a person's inner character should be how they are judged, the truth is that in the business world, people are judged by their appearance as well as their work ethic.

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  • They are then judged according to the program criteria.

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  • If you never thought it could be done, and even I was skeptical, you can now perform Karaoke on your PS2 and Xbox…and be judged.

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  • You might hear about a new game from a friend, but mostly you just saw the newest game and judged it when it hit the arcades.

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  • When wine is judged, the wine judge does not have any information about the wine except for what the varietal is and maybe the cost (called blind tasting)-and that's it.

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  • Best of Show Kit/Concentrate - Wines made from kits or concentrates are judged separately than those made from fresh grapes.

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  • Scroll down further on that page to find a more in-depth review of the phone with detailed comments in each of the major categories in which the phones were judged.

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  • People with social phobia have deep fears of being watched or judged by others and being embarrassed in public.

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  • In some cases, neither parent is judged fit to retain custody, usually due to substance abuse problems, mental health issues, or prolonged absence or incarceration.

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  • Anxiety is still the root cause of the mutism, and it is theorized that these language difficulties may make the child more self-conscious about his or her speaking skills and thus may increase the fear of being judged by others.

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  • Despite continued claims to the contrary by a very few researchers, this procedure is widely judged a failure.

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  • There may be a concern about being judged or blamed by others.

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  • The student controls the assessment samples, helping to reinforce the idea that he or she is responsible for learning and should have a role in choosing the data upon which he or she is judged.

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  • People with social phobia have deep fears of being watched or judged by others and of being embarrassed in public.

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  • The severity of the burn is also judged by the amount of body surface area (BSA) involved.

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  • Here, several couples were invited to compete and be judged by an official Dancing with the Stars Tour judge before the start of the show.

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  • International competitions are judged and attract championship crews from all over the world.

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  • At a step dance competition, groups will perform small sections of these dances and be judged by more experienced dancers and teachers.

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  • Over the years disco dance steps have gone from being simple improvised moves on a club dance floor to highly competitive, judged performances for world dance titles.

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  • Set in an arena with 10,500 spectator seats (the Fort Worth, Texas, Convention Center), this competition is judged professionally and the number of entering dance teams and groups is high, as is the general level of dance technique.

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  • Judged on choreography, showmanship, precision, technique and overall merit, entrants to the Prestige Dance Competition will enjoy watching the other groups and soloists as much as competing themselves.

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  • The object itself can be judged beautiful by applying the ratio principles.

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  • In fact, individuals who wear emo hair styles cannot be judged by the way their hair looks any better than they can be judged by the type of music they listen to or the clothes they wear.

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  • She believes that pregnancy is the one time in anyone's life that they shouldn't be judged on their weight.

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  • There are several different areas that pregnant women in bikinis are typically judged on for these contests.

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  • The team explicitly states that you will not be judged on looks; this photo is simply used for identification purposes.

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  • Contestants are judged on SI's criteria of personality, beauty and athleticism, as they participate in various photo shoots designed to put them through the paces.

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  • The Jam is basically a judged reality photo shoot that spans six days and five nights in exotic locations like Sitges, Spain.

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  • The best pool toys range from simple to sophisticated and are commonly judged by the amount of enjoyment they provide for the longest time period.

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  • Ask people to donate baked goods that will be judged at the competition.

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  • It's awful, but just as books get judged by their covers, many people discount personal ads by photos alone.

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  • Living in a place where your relationship is not judged by your neighbors will feel very refreshing.

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  • Candor, on the other hand, is when you reveal deeply personal information without fear of being judged or feeling overexposed and vulnerable.

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  • Candor on the other hand, is when deeply personal information is shared without fear of being judged or feeling overexposed and vulnerable.

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  • Thanks to dating sites like MPwH and PositiveSingles, the fear of being judged for a disease they have no control over can disappear and they can get on with finding love like everyone else.

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  • All diamonds, regardless of their specific color, are judged by their carat weight, cut proportions, purity of clarity, and overall color.

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  • Just as each individual diamond is judged by different characteristics to determine its quality and value, so to are fancy colored diamonds subjected to different criteria.

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  • Although they are not judged the same way as diamonds, aquamarines should be clear and relatively free of inclusions.

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  • Diamonds are judged based on their cut, clarity, color, and carat.

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  • Sapphires are also judged for their clarity and price based on their cut, color, and carat.

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  • Leo is always performing and is constantly mindful that he's being watched, studied and judged.

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  • Virgo knows he can at long last open up and share his innermost thoughts and secrets without any fear of being judged.

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  • The success or failure of a relationship, when judged from an astrological perspective, relies on the harmony or dissonance of fundamental energies.

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  • If the science fair is going to be judged, make sure that you know the rules so that you don't get disqualified on a technicality.

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  • We also wanted to help parents relax and not feel judged or talked down to as many parent "advice" books can do.

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  • It’s highly helpful for an empath to have a confidant she can confide in and never worry about being judged.

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  • Those performers or shows which are nominated are judged on performances that aired during the calendar year.

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  • The group has grown and Tremayne has found that her students benefit from a communal experience of "being themselves without being judged."

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  • Candidates are usually judged by professional coaches or other members of the UCA or other cheer organizations.

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  • It's not only their own prowess they'll be judged on.

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  • Cheerleaders are judged on everything from appearance, to timing to skill and originality.

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  • Gender Bender Idol - Have a talent competition (hopefully judged by gender-bending teachers) in the form of the popular TV show Americian Idol.

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  • If a teen feels ridiculed, belittled, judged, or pressured into dealing with a problem, his or her most likely reaction will be rejection, anger, and avoidance of the problem.

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  • Though a legally binding release form may be in force, it does not prevent you from suing if a situation can be judged as extreme.

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  • The mentor helps them develop their performances each week, and then each contestant is judged on that performance by the other mentor/judges.

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  • The game can be played with one less bag than the number of players, or it can be judged based on which player is last to get into a sleeping bag.

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  • If everyone completed the first stunt, then contestants were judged based on some predetermined factor, like speed or endurance.

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  • The contestants were judged based on a predetermined factor, such as time or endurance, much like the first challenge.

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  • They are not told that they're also being judged on their character, or inner beauty.

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  • In this Motown-inspired singing challenge the girls are judged on singing ability, choreography, style and overall performance.

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  • There is often a theme for these challenges and contestants are judged on technical aspects including their walk and overall performance.

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  • Usually in these competitions, the final product of the food is the sole thing that the contestants are judged on.

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  • RuPaul, Merle Ginsberg and Santino Rice judged each competition, but a celebrity judge was also thrown in to the mix each week.

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  • Shannel kept right on lip synching through the wig disaster, which won her lots of respect and eventually convinced the judged to keep her around.

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  • Each week, after a series of complicated and stressful cooking tasks, the contestants are judged by panel of experts who are also known as the selection committee.

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  • The contestants are judged by a taste test where the judges use a classic five-star rating system.

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  • The Elimination challenges are judged by a panel that includes the regular judges as well as guest judges or groups.

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  • The twenty are quickly whittled down to ten finalists after challenges designed to test their strength, poise, personalities, and abilities are judged.

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  • Carrie Ann Inaba is a dancer, choreographer and singer who has judged the dancing since the first season.

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  • The clothing was judged on how well it met the theme or guidelines for the challenge and how well it fit with the overall aesthetic and identity of the clothing line the contestant hoped to launch.

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  • The girls are judged by John Homa (who stayed on from the first season of the show), James Gunn and Tim Sullivan himself.

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  • Each week aspiring Food Network personalities compete in challenges and tasks, and their kitchen creations are judged.

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  • After the challenges have been judged, contestants are eliminated based on their work.

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  • In each episode their work is judged by a panel of expert judges, who eliminate contestants one by one.

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  • Whether or not these really work will have to be judged on an individual basis, as with any procedure or anti aging technique.

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  • Drills are judged on precision and symmetry.

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  • Anyone can submit their site to be judged as worthy of a Golden Web Award.

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  • Rated on a scale of one to ten, the site is judged by up to three members of the IAWMD on a voluntary basis.

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  • I re played the recording of our aborted final session and had judged it incorrectly when I first listened.

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  • While Dean was fully exonerated from any wrongdoing in the unfortunate affair, either Fitzgerald failed to agree with the determination or simply despised being judged wrong.

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  • His anger surprised her with its intensity, and she judged from Ully's reaction that seeing the lord and master pissed was not something the good-natured mad scientist wanted anything to do with.

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  • He stared at her with his head cocked, and she judged the words had not translated.

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  • By the level of activity and sophistication, he judged this place had been used for longer than the past few weeks.

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  • He judged she was ready to tell him he was on his own.

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  • Judged by the objects for which it was summoned the Westminster Assembly was a failure, a remarkable failure.

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  • Judged in other ways, however, the influence of the assembly's labours has been very great.

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  • With these names must clearly be judged the forms Tusci and Etrusci, although these forms must not be regarded as anything but the names given to the Etruscans by the folk among whom they settled.

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  • His conduct, judged not by a modern standard, but by the ideas of his age, will be found compatible with the highest Christian charity, as that of the duke with sound political prudence.

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  • There is hardly one of Wagner's orchestral innovations which is not inseparably connected with his adaptation of music to the re q uirements of drama; and modern conductors, in treating Wagner's orchestration, as the normal standard by which all previous and contemporary music must be judged, are doing their best to found a tradition which in another fifty years will be exploded as thoroughly as the tradition of symphonic additional accompaniments is now exploded in the performances of Bach and Handel.

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  • In the next year Matteo, being judged incompetent to rule, was assassinated by order of his brothers, who made an equal partition of their subject citiesBernab residing in Milan, Galeazzo in Pavia.

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  • In consequence of the occupants of the thrones of Constantinople and Alexandria falling successively into opposite heresies, the question arose how " patriarchs " were to be judged.

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  • What were called " privileged delicts" were judged in the case of the clergy conjointly by the spiritual judge and the king's judge.

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  • So far as can be judged, Ayala had no strong political views, and drifted with the current of the moment.

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  • His unexpected recovery revived his father's hopes for his education, hitherto so much neglected if judged by ordinary standards; and accordingly in January 1752 he was placed at Esher, Surrey, under the care of Dr Francis, the well-known translator of Horace.

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  • The inhabitants of Sepphoris - whom Josephus had judged to be so eager for the war that he left them to build their wall for themselves - received a Roman garrison at their own request.

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  • David's character must be judged partly in the light of the times in which he lived and partly in connexion with the great truths which he represents, truths whose value is not impaired should they prove to be the convictions of later ages.

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  • Accordingly, David is not to be condemned for failing to subdue the sensuality which is the chief stain on his character, but should rather be judged by his habitual recognition of a generous standard of conduct, by the undoubted purity and lofty justice of an administration which was never stained by selfish considerations or motives of personal rancour, 5 and finally by the calm 3 See Hebrew Religion, Messiah, Prophet.

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  • Perhaps the most remarkable discovery of modern chemistry is the existence of compounds, which, whilst possessing an identical composition, are absolutely different bodies, judged of by their properties.

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  • To be judged fairly, Bentham must be judged as a teacher of the principles of legislation.

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  • The live animals are judged and subsequently the carcases, and, though the results sometimes agree, more often they do not.

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  • This cession was based on political motives, which Bonaparte judged to be of overwhelming force; and he now decided to support the Directors and overthrow the moderates.

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  • In the spring of 1798 he had judged the pear to be not ripe; in Brumaire 1799 it came off almost at a touch.

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  • The first governor of the island, General Wilks, was soon superseded, it being judged that he was too amenable to influence from Napoleon; his successor was Sir Hudson Lowe.

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  • The richness of the Aegean capitals and columns may be judged by those from the "Treasury of Atreus" now set up in the British Museum; and of the friezes we have examples in Mycenaean and Cnossian fragments, and Cnossian paintings.

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  • Yet judged by modern standards he had an inadequate conception of the meaning of ordered research.

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  • The "spot" market might be judged generally as too high, in view of crops and the probable normal demand of the year, but it might not therefore drop immediately, owing partly to the pressure of demand that must be satisfied instantaneously.

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  • The provinces were unsettled, the barbarians on the borders restless and menacing, and Hadrian wisely judged that the old limits of Augustus afforded the most defensible frontier.

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  • The signing of the peace of Teschen, which averted a great war with Prussia, on the 13th of May 1779, was the last great act of her reign, and so Maria Theresa judged it to be in a letter to Prince Kaunitz; she said that she had now finished her life's journey and could sing a for she had secured the repose of her people at whatever cost to herself.

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  • He calls himself most frequently manthran (" prophet"), ratu (" spiritual authority"), and saoshyant ("` the coming helper" - that is to say, when men come to be judged according to their deeds).

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  • Specimens may be judged to be dry when they no longer cause a cold sensation when applied to the cheek, or assume a rigidity not evident in the earlier stages of preparation.

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  • Judged by its influence on Bosnian politics, the Orthodox community was relatively unimportant at the Turkish conquest; and its subsequent growth is perhaps due to the official recognition of the Greek Church, as the representative of Christianity in Turkey.

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  • The theory brought forward has not yet found a place in any systematic treatise in any language, so that it has been judged proper to give a fairly complete account of it.'

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  • The scale of the operations may be judged from the fact that the total number of troops mobilized up to the beginning of July 1905 amounted to 126 battalions, 8 squadrons and 15 batteries; the rebel leader Mahommed Yahiya had at this time a following of 50,000.

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  • These songs, which fired the poet's comrades to deeds of heroism in 1813, bear eloquent testimony to the intensity of the national feeling against Napoleon, but judged as literature they contain more bombast than poetry.

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  • But what's right and what's good must be judged by one who knows all, but not by us.

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  • She'd judged right; he'd do whatever it took to survive.

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  • I was much surprised to hear all this; for I judged from your letters that Katie was a very precocious girl....

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  • The event showed that he judged the situation rightly - the religious scheme announced by him, though not accepted in all its details, became the dominant policy of the later time, and he has been justly called ' The stricter marriage law is formulated in Lev.

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