Those policies are anathema to the slot scammer, so most will not go the route of getting the okay for taking credit cards. |
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Unfortunately for its maker and devotees, the arpeggione was anathema before it was even built. |
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Sausages have traditionally been regarded as anathema to slimmers because they often include a lot of bread and rusk. |
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It is an anathema to me to suggest that someone in their 60s is past their sell-by date. |
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The pictorialist landscapes expressed the value of formal qualities that were anathema to establishment photographers. |
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Being such a private man I think this was anathema to him, to be exposed, you know, publicly in this way. |
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This position was anathema to traditional republicans, since it postulated that reform of the State was possible. |
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Such knee-jerk flag-waving is anathema to Banville, a writer who despises nationalism in all forms. |
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The idea of the state snooping into the affairs of private citizens is anathema in a country which takes individual liberties seriously. |
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Even though it is anathema to spec builders and many engineers, a big part of the strategy is to reduce the fudge factor for extra capacity. |
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These are marketing decisions and I would not presume to know which concepts sell and which are an anathema. |
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For most American slaves, forced relocation south was anathema and often the first impetus for their flight to Canada. |
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It conjures up images of upper class society, a world of fancy dress balls and rules for deportment that are anathema to my very soul. |
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Such interest is anathema to Sun Wen, a quietly spoken intellectual who enjoys writing poetry in seclusion. |
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The smell of the crowd and the roar of the greasepaint is anathema to wanting to sit in a room alone and write. |
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Superstition, cruelty, religious fanaticism, prejudice and medieval dogmatism were all anathema to a wit like Voltaire. |
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The idea that simply being out on the water on a nice day somehow makes up for not catching anything is anathema to genuine fishos. |
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If the Democrats were in the majority, they'd find the Republicans holding up nominations to the courts to be anathema. |
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His attacks on elite perquisites, and his imperious treatment of subordinates, made him anathema to the powerful party machine. |
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The libertarian minimalists will likely find my outlook to be anathema to their own. |
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It's no wonder then, that Paul calls down God's curse, God's anathema, His ban on those behind their potential defection from Christ. |
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The idea that one would voluntarily inject poison into one's body was anathema to me. |
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On most of the cases that count, she has proved to be anathema to their narrow-minded view of the world and Constitution. |
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The idea of embarking upon yet more revolutionary upheaval seemed anathema. |
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Anything that smacked of luxury or superfluity was anathema to him. |
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For a bank, pension fund or other institutional investor, any risk in this regard is anathema. |
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Hare coursing is a complete anathema in a civilised society. |
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What is it about a crash helmet that is such an anathema to motorcyclists? |
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It seems anathema to most gardeners to go against their natural instincts to prune, train, stake, deadhead, divide and generally fuss on the plants in their gardens. |
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For a man who was more at home in the worlds of music, antiques and the decorative arts, a naval career, which his father insisted he should follow, was anathema. |
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The idea of counter-cyclical policy was anathema to the Victorians. |
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The infirmities, the senility, the decrepitude that often inflicted the bodies of the elderly were an anathema to the pursuit of beauty. |
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He immediately began sniping at Santorum, portraying him as Washington insider, anathema to conservatives. |
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Torture should remain anathema to a liberal democracy and should never be regulated, countenanced, or covertly accepted in a war on terror. |
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As chairman of the Committee on Budgets I find that to be an anathema to everything we have fought for. |
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This is not necessarily anathema to business, whatever the sterile mantra of free trade might argue. |
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That fanatic outlook is anathema to the principles of peace and human dignity and all that the United Nations stands for. |
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Another Amerindian practice that was anathema to Europeans was cannibalism. |
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Pollution of our seas and destructive fishing practices are anathema to that. |
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The thought of paying more than a few pennies for the vaccine is anathema to many health officials. |
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Dominance and unilateralism are anathema to Europe, and it cannot accept such attitudes either in its midst or on the international stage. |
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Crime, and crimes against tourists in particular, are anathema to the industry. |
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Such an undemocratic handover should be anathema to all countries governed by the rule of law. |
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After a few experiments I learned that I could skip those movies, and Tyler Perry was anathema in my book. |
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The occasional yellow or red was acceptable, but the suggestion of a blue dress was met with distress, and brown was anathema. |
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The conception that a Marxist party has to swim against the stream and to fight against the prevailing forms of consciousness is entirely anathema to them. |
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To them, I will only say that regardless of whether it is big or small, supporting evil is anathema to any man who seeks the good, the right and the true. |
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Contraception and abortion were, of course, anathema to Mother Teresa. |
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There are many others who are directly or indirectly associated with the process of finding a solution to this problem that serves as an anathema to this unique city. |
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Facing persecution in idolatrous Mecca, in AD 622 the Prophet Muhammad pronounced an anathema on the city's leaders and took his followers to Medina. |
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In the legend, the burden of hierarchical corruption is carried by the anathema hurled by the wives immolating themselves, and it culminates in a fatal robe of honour. |
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Such a thought would be anathema to most clinical trialists. |
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For it appears his red-headed anathema really could be coming back into the royal fold. |
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I have been doing this for a long time, and when I first started producing films, the notion of actually playing a Canadian film in Canadian theatres was anathema. |
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Needless to say, the convulsive, anoxic, and psychosurgical methods were anathema to him. |
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Even three years ago, the thought of spending two hours, let alone a whole day, without my mobile would have been anathema. |
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But for this government to load up funding to the wealthiest schools in this country is anathema to the great Aussie notion of a fair go for all. |
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The idea of two worlds of science is an anathema to the scientific spirit but we must acknowledge, with deep concern and regret, that these divisions are growing rather than narrowing. |
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The idea of allowing a Kurdish statelet to evolve, perhaps eventually joining with Iraqi Kurdistan, is anathema to the Turks. |
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We pointed out that the WFSW with André had always refused the anathema as well as the enrolment, had refused to paint reality with good and bad and had rejected any form of orbiting. |
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What is less clear is how far this genuinely reflects good management and how far it is a matter of putting one's head in the sand because conflict is an anathema to the British psyche. |
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Bangladesh believes that terrorism and extremism are anathema to the enjoyment of human rights and that terrorism is the worst form of human rights violation. |
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To impose countervailing duties on an industry where disparity alone is demonstrated, but no evidence is produced indicating that the benefit was industry specific, is anathema to the purpose of the countervailing duty laws. |
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If anyone says that the baptism which is given by heretics in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, with the intention of doing what the Church does, is not a true baptism, let him be anathema. |
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They drink, for one thing, sweet ports as preprandials, anathema to most English, who consider them digestifs, or after-dinner company. |
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In 1624, the then five existing Baptist churches of London issued an anathema against the Anabaptists. |
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Such a renouncement is anathema to convinced federalists. |
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American politics with its razzmatazz and movie stars were an anathema. |
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But Black could obtain counterplay by advancing the e-pawn to e5 and exchanging it on d4 a surrender of the centre that had been anathema to Tarrasch. |
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Government regulations were not anathema to the market but requisite. |
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The most evident concepts of economic science must be considered as anathema if the autarchic policy, trade balances and other old chestnuts of mercantilism can be presented as extraordinary discoveries of our times. |
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And it has major consequences: pPluralism and all that follows from it – the idea of a legitimate opposition, checks and balances, reasonable compromise – is anathema to them. |
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That would mean prior restraint, a concept that is anathema in America and other parts of the world, in which the state can effectively prevent a publisher from publishing, and I didn't want to get into that position. |
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It may seem anathema in fashion, but Bailey is betting on inclusivity. |
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In the early 1980s, he recalls, the thought that America might embrace regionalism, previously anathema in Washington, shocked the EU into GATT talks. |
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Otherwise, it would risk alienating a considerable number of its churchgoing voters by voluntarily offering fundamental recognition to a segment of society whose lifestyle is anathema to them. |
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And the idea that you bow to someone, to me, is anathema. |
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Some state the concept of missionary conversion, either way, is anathema to the precepts of Hinduism. |
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Legal compliance should not be seen as anathema to the business community. |
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It is therefore imperative that the nations of the world come together to tackle the menace of terrorism and extremism, which are anathema to modern societies. |
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And therefore, in the defence and security field, a central one on the political front, the idea of a more active and responsive security system is anathema at the present time. |
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But conciliation is constitutionally anathema to such fanatics. |
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The policy of privatisation, while anathema to many on the left, has become synonymous with Thatcherism and was also followed by Tony Blair's government. |
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If any one saith that matrimony contracted but not consummated is not dissolved by the solemn profession of religion of one of the parties, let him be anathema. |
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Since the time of the apostles, the term anathema has come to mean a form of extreme religious sanction beyond excommunication, known as major excommunication. |
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Antifeminism has been a credible cover and an effective vehicle because the hatred of women is not politically anathema on either the Right or the Left. |
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At first, his Commentaries were hotly contested, some seeing in them an evil or covert attempt to reduce or codify the common law which was anathema to common law purists. |
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There's a heaviness to the Klezmatics that's anathema to ordinary klezmer music, which by its very nature and function is escapist, even as it celebrates cultural cohesion. |
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His lack of social grace made him anathema at dinner parties. |
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