Come-under Sentence Examples

come-under
  • Meanwhile, the affairs of the East India Company had come under the consideration of parliament.

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  • The whole of the colonies have therefore now come under the direct administration of the empire.

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  • If you come under attack, you'll need an alternate identity... something similar to witness protection.

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  • In 1886 he became proprietor of the San Francisco Examiner, the first of a long chain of papers to come under his control.

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  • It is now known, however, that they were true Arabs - as the proper names on their inscriptions show - who had come under Aramaic influence.

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  • The lamp c illuminates the drum-head and also, by reflection, the portions of the position-circle which come under the microscopes d and e.

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  • In 1896 McCormick Theological Seminary (which in 1858 as New Albany Theological Seminary had come under the control of the assembly) and Auburn Seminary refused to make the changes desired by the General Assembly; a satisfactory arrangement with McCormick was made.

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  • The routes nationales and the routes dpartementales come under the category of la grande voirie and are under the supervision of the Ministry of Public Works.

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  • It has been decided in the law courts that a limited liability company is not a person in the eye of the law, and therefore does not come under the operation of the act of 1868.

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  • Outflows of resinResinosisalro come under this general heading; but although some resin-fluxes are traced to the destructive action of Agaricus melleus in Conifers, others, as well as certain forms of Gummosis, are still in need of explanation.

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  • No sharp line can be drawn between these diseases and some of the preceding, inasmuch as it often depends on the external conditions whether necrosis is a dry-rot, in the sense I employ the term here, or a wet-rot, when it would come under the preceding category.

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  • Thus, in a phanerogam, the sepals, petals, stamens and foliage-leaves all come under the category leaf, though some are parts of the perianth, others are spore-bearing organs (sporophylls), and others carry on nutritive processes.

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  • The synagogue had become a firmly established institution, and the personal and social life of the masses had come under the control of communal law.

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  • The depression westward of the Caspian and Aral basins, and the original connexion of these seas, have also come under the close investigation of Russian scientists, with the result that the theory of an ancient connexion between the Oxus and the Caspian has been displaced by the more recent hypothesis of an extension of the Caspian Sea eastwards into Trans-Caspian territory within the postPleiocene age.

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  • He was not himself a Goth, belonging to a confederation of Germanic tribes, embracing Alans and Scyrians, which had come under the influence of the Ostrogoths settled on the lower Danube; and his own sympathies are those of a member of this confederation.

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  • He had come under the influence of the Cambridge reformers, and after Anne Boleyn's recognition as queen he was made her chaplain.

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  • There can be little doubt that a strong power was now fixed in one Aegean centre, and that all the area had come under its political, social and artistic influence.

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  • Though the three works last mentioned fairly come under the same category as the Planches enluminees and the Planches coloriees, no one of them can be properly deemed their rightful Des Murs.

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  • The county of Tripoli, the second of these principalities, had also come under the aegis of Jerusalem at an early date.

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  • At an early date therefore the county of Tripoli had already come under the influence of the kingdom.

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  • We Su have seen that the science took its origin in the arts practised by the Egyptians, and, having come under the influence of philosophers, it chose for its purpose the isolation of the quinta essentia, and subsequently the " art of making gold and silver."

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  • He was one of the first of his countrymen to recognize and come under the influence of German thought and speculation, and, amidst an exaggerated alarm of German heresy, did much to vindicate the authority of the sounder German critics.

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  • The rock-hewn tombs of Etruria scarcely come under the category of catacombs, in the usual sense, being rather independent family burial-places, grouped together in a necropolis.

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  • His early military education was the best and most practical then attainable, primarily because he had the good fortune to come under the influence of men of exceptional ability - Baron du Keile, Bois Roger and others.

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  • His work consisted largely in organizing the Christian societies which he found in existence on his arrival, and in planting the faith in regions such as the extreme west of Connaught which had not yet come under the sway of the gospel.

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  • Since the electric forces are active throughout the whole solution, all the ions must come under its influence and therefore move, but their separation from the electrodes is determined by the electromotive force needed to liberate them.

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  • It is true indeed that in zoological nomenclature some of these are distinguished as "voles," but this is not in accord with popular usage, where such creatures - come under the designation either of water-rats or field-mice.

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  • Willibrord, almost as soon as he was weaned, was sent to be brought up at Ripon, where he must doubtless have come under the influence of Wilfrid.

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  • In any case the classification must be to some extent provisional, since scholars are still divided as to the original language, date and place of composition of some of the books which must come under our classification.'

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  • But these Indians by reindenturing might come under the operation of the repatriation proposal.

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  • In his studies he had come under the influence of Schleiermacher, Hegel and Franz Baader; but he was a man of independent mind, and developed a peculiar speculative theology which showed a disposition towards mysticism and theosophy.

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  • The numerous enactments of councils to ensure the proper care of church property, prohibiting the use of churches for secular purposes, for the storing of grain or valuables, for dances and merry-making, do not technically come under the head of legislation against sacrilege.

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  • The Bovidae comprise a great number of genera and species, and include the oxen, sheep, goats, antelopes and certain other kinds which come under neither of these designations.

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  • We may say, however, that they fall into two classes, general and specific. The general included all that might come under the idea of loyalty, seeking the lord's interests, keeping his secrets, betraying the plans of his enemies, protecting his family, &c. The specific services are capable of more definite statement, and they usually received exact definition in custom and sometimes in written documents.

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  • The union of merchants abroad was beginning to come under the control of the partial union of towns at home.

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  • Soon, as the natural consequence of these proceedings, a variety of cases had come under his notice.

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  • Canon Caruana and other leaders of the Maltese aspired to obtain for Malta the freedom of the Roman Catholic religion guaranteed by England in Canada and other dependencies, and promoted a petition in order that Malta should come under the strong power of England rather than revert to the kingdom of the two Sicilies.

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  • John Knox, who, after a chequered career, had come under the influence of Calvin at Geneva, returned to Scotland for a few months in 1 555, and shortly after (1557) that part of the Scottish nobility which had been won over to the new faith formed their first " covenant " for mutual protection.

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  • The line of metal does not come under the definition of sights given above.

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  • In confirmation of this view, it may be noted that the authority of Herodotus for the circumstances of the great Persian war, and for all local and other details which come under his immediate notice, is accepted by even the most sceptical of modern historians, and forms the basis of their narratives.

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  • Some, for instance, may consider that the chamois and the so-called white goat of the Rocky Mountains are entitled to be included in the group; but this is not the view held by the authors of the Book of Antelopes referred to below; and, as a matter of fact, the term is only a vague designation for a number of more or less distinct groups of hollow-horned ruminants which do not come under the designation of cattle, sheep or goats; and in reality there ought to be a distinct English groupname for each subfamily into which "antelopes" are subdivided.

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  • In 1881 Mr Reitz had, in conjunction with Mr Steyn, come under the influence of a clever German named Borckenhagen, the editor of the Bloemfontein Express.

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  • Many of the latter had already come under the influence of Judaism, and were more or less completely in sympathy with Jewish religious principles.

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  • During the Lombard invasions in 592 Fundi was temporarily abandoned, but it seems to have come under the rule of the papacy by A.D.

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  • Such tables can scarcely be said to come under the head of logarithmic tables.

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  • The government of each town consists of magistrates, senate and assembly, and is entirely independent of the Roman government except in certain cases of higher civil jurisdiction, which come under the direct cognisance of the praetor urbanus at Rome.

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  • Generally, it is that part of archaeology which has to do with inscriptions engraved on stone, metal or other permanent material (not, however, coins, which come under the heading Numismatics) .

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  • With the reservation of those questions, especially of a dogmatic character, which belong to the Holy Office, and of purely ritual questions, which come under the Congregation of Rites, this Congregation brings under one authority all disciplinary questions concerning the sacraments, which were formerly distributed among several Congregations and offices.

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  • The "Intrepid" astern had come under heavy shrapnel fire from the guns as she approached the mole, but after rounding it escaped their attention.

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  • The inquest system of Henry II., the law of wreck, and the institution of coroners, measures of Richard and his ministers, come under review as well as the Provisions of Oxford and the Statute of Marlborough."

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  • Then Pascal the elder was confined to the house by the consequences of an accident on the ice, and was visited by certain gentlemen of the neighbourhood who had come under the influence of Saint-Cyran and the Jansenists.

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  • In those parts of Germany which come under the influence of French legislation, the constitution of the towns and that of the rural communes (the so-called Bitrgermeistereiverfassung) is identical, in that the members of the communal executive body are, in the same way as those of the communal assembly, elected to office immediafely by the whole body of municipal electors.

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  • During this reign under the lead of Otto, bishop of Bamberg (c. 1063-1139), Pomerania began to come under the influence of Germany and of Christianity.

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  • Being a keen judge of character, he filled the public offices with faithful, capable, energetic men, who were kept up to a high standard of duty by the consciousness that their work might at any time come under his strict supervision.

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  • The production of the larger household accessories, such as bedsteads, fenders, gas and electric fittings, clocks, &c., has hardly as yet come under the influence of the art movement.

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  • When, a few years after his appointment at Blaubeuren, he published his first important work, Symbolik and Mythologie oder die Naturreligion des Alterturns (1824-1825), it became evident that he had made a deeper study of philosophy, and had come under the influence of Schelling and more particularly of Friedrich Schleiermacher.

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  • In the Benares division, which was the first portion to come under British administration, the land revenue was permanently fixed in 1795, on the same principles that had been previously adopted in Bengal; and there a special class of tenants, as well as the landlords, enjoy a privileged status.

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  • During the last ten years practically all unclaimed Arctic lands have come under the sovereignty of one or other State.

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  • The vertical oscifiations of a weight which hangs from a fixed point by a spiral spring come under this case.

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  • The small oscillations of a simple pendulum in a vertical plane also come under equation (5).

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  • The phenomenon is known as the Eulerian nutalion, since it is supposed to come under the free rotations first discussed by Euler.

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  • Indeed its founder, Ramananda, who probably flourished in the latter part of the 14th century, according to the traditional account, was originally a SriVaishnava monk, and, having come under the suspicion of laxity in observing the strict rules of food during his peregrinations, and been ordered by his superior (Mahant) to take his meals apart from his brethren, left the monastery in a huff and set up a schismatic math of his own at Benares.

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  • The town of Illorin was founded, towards the close of the 18th century, by Yoruba, and rose to be the capital of one of the Yoruba kingdoms. About 1825 the kingdom, which had come under Mahommedan influence, ceased its connexion with the Yoruba states and became an emirate of the Sokoto empire.

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  • The first examples to come under consideration are the few surviving MSS.

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  • The cultivation of the plant and the preparation of the fibre have therefore, even at the present day, not come under the influence (except in certain favoured localities) of scientific knowledge and experience.

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  • Save where the tribes have come under Arab or European influence, the clothing is extremely scanty, but absolute nudity is not known.

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  • A crane machine of peculiar construction, well adapted for weigh - ing heavy loads, and extremely simple and compact, which does not properly come under any of the heads under which the machines have been classified, is the hydrostatic weighing machine.

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  • Minors inheriting socage come under the guardianship not of the lord but of the nearest male relative not entitled to succession.

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  • For elementary work the multiplicand may come immediately after the multiplier, as in D; the last figure of each partial product then comes immediately under the corre up to the multiplication of decimals and of approximate values of numbers, is to place the first figure of the multiplier under the first figure of the multiplicand, as in E; the first figure of each partial product will then come under the corresponding figure of the multiplier.

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  • A simple class of cases is that which deals with equivalence of sums of money in different currencies; these cases really come under § 120.

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  • Probably this was due entirely to the fact that he had come under the influence of two able men who had won his confidence and had promised him revenge for the murdered Gaveston.

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  • All matters concerning the streets, the markets, the bazaars, the street-porters (hamals), public weighers, baths and hospitals come under his jurisdiction.

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  • The Norse rulers were bound to come under the influence of Christianity at an early date.

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  • Wadai was the last state of the Sudan to come under European influence, its conquest being effected in 1909.

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  • Born at Germanicia in Syria, and, before he mounted the throne, captain-general of the Anatolian theme, he had come under the influence of the anti-idolatrous sects, such as the Jews, Montanists, Paulicians and Manicheans, which abounded in Asia Minor, but of which he was otherwise no friend.

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  • The following are the most important questions which come under consideration.

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  • While in the alimentary canal they are subjected to the action of the digestive fluids and the varied contents of the stomach and intestines, and after absorption they come under the influence of the constituents of the blood and lymph, and of the chemical action of the tissue cells.

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  • It is convenient to divide drugs and other substances used in medicine into groups according to the part of the system on which they chiefly act, though, as stated above, many drugs act in more than one manner and could come under several groups.

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  • Because Freud deliberately refrains from both these popular options, he has always come under fire from both sides of the equation.

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  • Thus borrowing whole scenes would come under this heading, and could be classed as an actionable breach of copyright.

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  • Labor will come under pressure on these issues during the election campaign.

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  • In terms of the 1998 Act, such information does not come under the devolved competence.

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  • Mr Sabri, Iraqi foreign minister, insists that Mr Blix has come under US pressure not to agree to any compromise with Baghdad.

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  • As corporate profits come under increasing pressure from the developing crisis, US capitalists are likely to hit back hard.

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  • Their profit margins are likely to come under intense pressure leading to the possible closure of smaller chemists in rural areas.

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  • The majority of upland peat is grazed, and as such come under the land that could be used to meet reduction targets.

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  • He also rebutted the notion that existing policies relating to terror alerts ought to come under review.

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  • The role of the regulatory agency should also come under careful scrutiny.

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  • They can go slack then come under tension without warning.

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  • But this has come under fire from many who see it as an example of 'Internet vigilantism ' that could destabilize internet trading.

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  • The Board may reject the order if it thinks the scheme to be of such magnitude or importance that it ought to come under the direct consideration of parliament, or it may modify it in certain respects, or it may remit it to the commissioners for further inquiry.

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  • It is true indeed that in zoological nomenclature some of these are distinguished as "voles" (see VOLE), but this is not in accord with popular usage, where such creatures - come under the designation either of water-rats or field-mice.

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  • In a wider sense the name includes all the numerous allied species which do not come under the designation of rabbits (see Rabbit).

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  • While expressing admiration for the signs which had come under its notice of the advance of civilization in the Congo State, the commission confirmed the reports of the existence of grave abuses in the upper Congo, and recommended a series of measures which would in its opinion suffice to ameliorate the evil.

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  • As they come under one horizon, they shout their warning to get off the track to the other, heard sometimes through the circles of two towns.

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  • But this has come under fire from many who see it as an example of 'internet vigilantism ' that could destabilize internet trading.

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  • Emissions - Fossil fuels have come under fire for the harmful carbon-based emissions they produce when burned.

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  • Mangosteen juice, often sold under the brand name XanGo, has recently come under fire for its claims of curing everything from eczema to cancer.

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  • Based in Utah, XanGo has come under fire from the FDA, the Center for Science in the Public Interest, Skeptical Inquirer magazine,and Quack Watch.

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  • Paintings from the Renaissance artist Leonardo Da Vinci have come under recent scrutiny through the popularity of the novel The DaVinci Code, which speculates that the art contains hidden messages about Christianity.

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  • Former "America's Sweetheart" Melanie Griffith has come under fire for her presumably large medical bills.

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  • Cruise has come under scrutiny for his devotion to Scientology, a controversial religion that attracts numerous Hollywood stars.

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  • While they often come under fire for using a great deal of fuel to allow them these luxuries, it's easy to see why a private jet would be appealing.

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  • Even if her acting chops come under fire, her celebrity body usually comes out on top.

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  • Indeed, celebrities have come under fire for setting bad examples for younger fans.

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  • This was her mother's decision, and Whitestone has come under fire for her dislike of sign language.

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  • These artists can also come under the mentorship of museum and gallery staff, curators, and more.

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  • Some vets also feel it is necessary to administer follow up boosters once a year to keep immunity levels high, but this practice has come under considerable debate over the last decade.

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  • If you're looking for an alternative to the standard commercial mixes that have come under so much fire recently, then you should learn more about this brand.

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  • I. lurida and its varieties also come under this group.

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  • While the corporation as a whole has come under fire for various reasons, the theme parks remain wholesome and entertaining for the whole family.

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  • In recent years, Nintendo has come under scrutiny from gamers.

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  • In recent years, Nintendo has come under heavy attack from veteran gamers for being "too kiddy", "not serious about video games", or "ignorant of their customers' desires".

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  • Kohlberg's and Piaget's theories have come under fire.

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  • The practice of relying on parents to report results of the skin testing has also come under criticism from some members of the medical community.

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  • For family historians, the more popular holdings come under several main categories.

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  • While older sibling Brit has come under fire recently for her lack of parenting skills and odd behaviors, Jamie Lynn was hailed as the good girl who starred on Nickelodeon's Zoey 101.

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  • Even though his swimsuits all come under the Reaction label, Kenneth Cole does offer very distinctive looks.

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  • Fair or not, First Ladies come under intense scrutiny for their fashion choices, well before they make it to the White House.

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  • Often both parties in an "age-gap" relationship can come under criticism from family and friends.

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  • Scenes showing supposed spirit possession have come under the most fire, especially since many viewers have noted the supposed "facts" reported in these scenes, researched them, and found them to be incorrect.

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  • The Ghost Hunters show has come under fire from many areas.

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  • The baby yoga training hours would come under the "specialist" qualification hours within the 200- or 500-hour yoga teacher certification.

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  • This corporate veil protects an incorporated businesses' officers or shareholders from personal accountability should the corporation come under attack through a lawsuit for whatever reason.

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  • It may be clear to see why the pyramid has come under much scrutiny and question since its inception.

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  • However, for a small number of people, food allergies have come under consideration as a trigger for the onset of an asthma attack.

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  • However, especially in recent years, the Atkins diet has come under fire from doctors and other medical professionals.

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  • At this time, the genre started to come under fire for violence and sexual violence.

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  • While Bear Grylls is certainly capable of surviving under almost any conditions, the show has come under fire repeatedly for misleading viewers.

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  • Sometimes, however, the only explanation they can think of is a haunting.Ghost Hunters has come under scrutiny from a variety of sources, criticized for a lack of scientific reasoning and examination of the evidence.

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  • The Biggest Loser has come under fire for giving overweight people unrealistic expectations since most folks don't have time to devote entire weeks to self-improvement.

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