How public was the juvenile's arrest, apprehension, or the incident that landed the juvenile in the public eye? |
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Although I feel a slight tinge of anxiety and apprehension in the air that surrounds you, it's greatly masked by the strength of your confidence. |
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But there is still a mood of becalmed apprehension in many sectors of the economy. |
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This sequence had me taut with apprehension, and I jumped at the sudden dominance of bass and screeching treble. |
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Managing a nervous smile, Alicia wished him good night, mounted her bicycle and rode home, her mind a muddle of happiness and apprehension. |
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There was little apprehension among the ship's crew as they sailed clear of the harbor, bound for the open sea. |
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All I could offer him was a blank stare, emerald eyes clouded with confusion and apprehension. |
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Mitre Peak magnetises photographers, and the fiord's sheer cliffs excite both admiration and apprehension. |
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The noise of a dentist's drill might awaken feelings of apprehension and nervousness. |
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At the time of apprehension S.H.S.P. used little language other than baby talk, which was difficult to understand. |
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There is widespread apprehension that the price of textbooks will go up this time. |
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Pain or apprehension about the feeling of impending subluxation or dislocation indicates anterior glenohumeral instability. |
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The judge studied the probation report, noted no mention of her children, and issued a bench warrant for her apprehension. |
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An unpleasant emotional and physical state of overwhelming apprehension and fear. anxiety disorders. |
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His glassy eyes turned to stone and she felt a sudden chill of apprehension. |
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If nothing else, the souring climate is feeding the market's sense of apprehension about the mismatch between valuations and earnings. |
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At that point, the plaintiff moved that I declare a mistrial based on a reasonable apprehension that I am biased in favour of the defendant. |
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Its presence set a shiver of apprehension down the warrior's spine, and cold fear bubbling in his stomach. |
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The smooth, clean stroke is there, along with her glistening apprehension of sun and weather. |
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I nonchalantly leave Adrian in the living room and enter the kitchen, although my stomach is clenching with anxiety and apprehension. |
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As she points out in her excellent introduction, here we are hearing an implicit, unvoiced apprehension about her background. |
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The application of American sanctions, in particular the embargo on oil exports to Japan on 1 August 1941, justified this apprehension. |
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Some students were able to process their feelings of discomfort and apprehension during their presentations. |
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Unconsciously she shivered from a combination of the nipping wind that breathed against her skin and the gust of apprehension escaping her lips. |
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It's at this point that we come to the dismal apprehension of why attention waned in the first place. |
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Each was a spiritualist, and each comprehended meanings in realms of apprehension different from the physical world. |
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I fully understand your apprehension, but please take a moment to consider how unique a film about a supervillain could be. |
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Although Plato describes the Forms as ineffable, dialectical language enables their apprehension. |
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The Paulinian mirror is itself a figure for our inherently figural, mediated apprehension of God, the ultimate Truth. |
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In Cornwall at least, Franco-Ontarians call it franglais and consider it a common practice of switching codes without apprehension. |
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The coach, if not his players, can be excused for experiencing a pang of apprehension. |
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In the middle of the night she woke, chilled, full of nameless apprehension. |
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By 1931 the uneasiness had extended to many conservative bourgeois who viewed the radicalism of the new movement with apprehension. |
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Words had yet to be spoken, and Katherine found her apprehension returning in the silence. |
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Perhaps their apprehension comes from a lingering inferiority complex which has not yet matured beyond its second-class status. |
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Through this isolation, people have become unsocial and full of apprehension about trusting or opening up to each other. |
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Consciousness requires the simultaneous apprehension in one's mind of multiple sensory features pertaining to a single scene or object. |
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The goal of science is the effective human apprehension and comprehension of nature. |
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The knowledge, then, is transformed either through intention or extension and grasped either by comprehension or apprehension. |
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The new cinema recognizes that any apprehension of the present is predicated upon an understanding of the past. |
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This attitude, understandable though it is, hinders our apprehension of reality. |
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The bridge between the disparate realms of knowledge and faith was an intuitive mode of perception or apprehension called Ahnung. |
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One is through sense perception and the other through a direct sort of apprehension of existence. |
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For her, the aim of painting is toward the sensate apprehension of exuberant experience. |
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The latter requires some sort of acquaintance with, or apprehension of, objects like numbers. |
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The former is an immanent unity consisting of sensations and the perceptual apprehension. |
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In no-mind the world simply is, in it's purest state of pre-linguistic apprehension. |
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No amount of scientific progress, moreover, has separated the world from our apprehension of its innate destiny. |
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A protection finding is based upon the situation that existed at the time of apprehension and not at any later date. |
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Such apprehension occurred under escort of four police officers and at which time D.C. made threats to the workers. |
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Now, we say, your Honour, against us there is a frozen case based on the circumstances at apprehension. |
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He should have been serving a sentence now and he has avoided apprehension. |
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The protection finding is based upon the situation that existed at the time of apprehension and not the date of trial. |
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Section 18 requires an intention to do grievous bodily harm or an intent to resist or prevent the lawful apprehension or detainer or any person. |
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When he felt no rush of apprehension, he pulled his blanket over her shoulders and settled her into a comfortable position. |
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All her nervousness and apprehension died away and she took another sip of her drink. |
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The authors confuse their contempt of the opposition with an accurate apprehension of the opposition. |
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Quickly and mercifully, the initial apprehension disappears as the book turns into an intense and absorbing read. |
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At the same time, the economic processes at work in society arouse feelings of anxiety and apprehension among servicemen. |
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Her long, slender fingers gripped a pair of posts with apprehension, though her weather-worn, freckled face held no sign of tension. |
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We only have about 5 weeks now until you come home and already I am racked with both apprehension and happiness. |
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The pigs' apprehension about being eaten results in tough meat, which is why pork no longer tastes good. |
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Almost immediately, he felt a jolt of apprehension and anger rush through him. |
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The world, once more, is filled with dreadful apprehension and a sense of foreboding for the future. |
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Her glance matched mine with apprehension, I dreaded what would come from her lips. |
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Almost two years of apprehension, vague dread, and sheer frustration may be what ultimately gets the ball rolling again. |
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I made a cup of coffee instead and quietly surfed through my daily blogs until that feeling of dread and apprehension began to fade. |
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There were a few uneasy seconds of awkward silence, everyone looking at Christine with apprehension. |
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The disagreements between scientists created apprehension among the public. |
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You are able to drop old fears and apprehension about material and emotional security. |
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Approaching without undue apprehension therefore, we pulled up into a scenario of barely containable triumph. |
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She closed the folder and licked her carmine lips in a rare gesture of apprehension. |
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She ignored his apprehension and broke into their conversation boldly. |
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His grin widened, but it was adulterated with some apprehension. |
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Visibly thrilled over his visit, he says that contrary to apprehension that he would be cold and remote, the Prince came across as a very amenable and caring person. |
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In the case of police dogs that propensity is put to a socially useful purpose, the apprehension of persons reasonably suspected of having committed arrestable offences. |
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Visibly thrilled over his visit, Sreejaya says that contrary to apprehension that he would be cold and remote, the Prince came across as a very amenable and caring person. |
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If this Court accepts that section 38 is applicable, then it is not a reasonable suspicion or reasonable grounds of apprehension giving rise to the arrest. |
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Ransome-Kuti's sense of social responsibility overrode his apprehension of the social stigma and opprobrium that might affect his extended family. |
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It is at this point that the requirement of substantial grounds for a disqualifying apprehension of bias and the strong presumption of judicial impartiality are applicable. |
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Trrol saw as much apprehension as determination in their grim visages, and he read clearly, too, that they possessed little in the way of fencing skills. |
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Existential crisis in this reading is not an apprehension of reality, but a symptom of its avoidance. |
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Omitted was any indication of her feelings about leaving, any apprehension or excitement about homesteading, or, other than not sleeping, how she withstood the trip. |
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Many of his poems are on one level paeans to the existence of colour, the apprehension of which often provides the substance and the occasion of poetry. |
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She was filled with apprehension, dreading the near vertical drop. |
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I had a great deal of apprehension getting on the plane to fly to Japan. |
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Peter knew many weren't happy with the decision, and he watched with apprehension as one of the most elderly men in the village tottered up to the platform to speak. |
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It is a kind of gnosis, or direct apprehension of truth, which deepens over time and eventually reaches full maturity in the complete awakening experienced by the Buddha. |
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But if that apprehension is so severe it inhibits you, forget about it. |
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Saturday morning came with a sense of apprehension and excitement with the thought that I was so near and yet so far from reaching Mecca, so to speak. |
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The rapid inrush and outflow of air inflated and deflated the interior, giving rise to apprehension that the craft might disintegrate at any moment. |
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With the coup enacted, though, the response even among the toughs, at Rabaa at least, seemed one of apprehension. |
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Because interpretation is as much grounded in emotional apprehension as it is in cognitive reflection, we interpret by default as well as by design. |
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Soon Arab-American and Muslim-American groups joined in expressing their apprehension. |
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Of course, there is plenty to celebrate, but there is an unmistakable sense of apprehension hanging over the anniversary. |
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My patrol had been pleasantly productive this evening, resulting in the apprehension of four baddies and being checked out by no less than two women. |
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But the perceptions of the senses are a low form of apprehension. |
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The range of reasonable apprehension is at times a question for the court, and at times, if varying inferences are possible a question for the jury. |
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She deprives language of its mimetic function, confining it to the site of its utterance and apprehension rather than using it as a tool to comprehend the world. |
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Anticipation is intuitively, ironically proleptic in that it both foresees things in their absence and, in the very act of apprehension, presents them unwittingly into being. |
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Experiences are grasped through either apprehension or comprehension. |
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As a child, for example, George admitted that he and fellow newsboy pickpocketed with impunity and without interruption for two years before his first apprehension. |
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There is no doubt that ultimately that may include the issue of warrants for their physical apprehension which will be executed by officers of the South Australian executive. |
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This results in understandable apprehension from the uninformed masses. |
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Our measures confirm that they selected their verbal response on the basis of an apprehension of approximate number rather than on an exact count. |
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Instead, he combines an astute perspective on earlier historical and sociological research with a sophisticated apprehension of the discursive dynamics of literary texts. |
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A mixed flash of anger and fear and apprehension clouded his face. |
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There is apprehension that the numbers of medical students fell since 2010 despite patient numbers increasing. |
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An assault is the immediate intentional creation of apprehension of another without consent or privilege. |
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Even though the country denied that it was renegotiating the terms, investor apprehension pushed Greece's borrowing costs to a record euro high. |
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Did you have any apprehension as far as playing Nancy again? |
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Adulticide applications, particularly aerial applications and thermal fogging, are quite visible and contribute to public apprehension. |
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The victim must be placed in apprehension or fear that force would be used immediately before or at the time of the taking of the property. |
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The wing would have been a severe obstruction to apprehension of an object on the ground. |
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For many girls menarche, the onset of menstruation, is a time fraught with apprehension. |
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We think we get a kind of vague apprehension of what London means from the top of a 'bus better than anywhere else. |
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Strangers of limited information and dull apprehension were sometimes observed not to know what a Powler was. |
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Its conception is entirely independent of the moral sense of the concipient, and may be said to be the objective apprehension. |
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Both readily admit that occasionally an initial apprehension among the companies' sales force occurs. |
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His influence over the king had evidently inspired resentment or apprehension in many of his peers. |
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Ambhi hastened to relieve Alexander of his apprehension and met him with valuable presents, placing himself and all his forces at his disposal. |
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Communicable diseases for which apprehension, detention, or conditional release of persons are authorized must be specified in Executive Orders of the President. |
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The state of apprehension already mentioned as the only conscious feeling of intensity may exceptionally lead to impulsive acts or to a paraphobia. |
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He seems in them to attain to heights of concentration and elimination of all that is not pure plastic idea, which still outrange our pictorial apprehension. |
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And yet his people report mat the apprehension of your Lordship's discourtesies and misrespect hastened his end, whereof my Lord his son seems very sensible. |
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Some have even expressed the apprehension about job-hopping becoming rampant after staff get armed with a certificate of expertise from the ministry of labour. |
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The warrant had been issued for his apprehension on the charge of rioting. |
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It is probable to my apprehension, that many of those quotations were intended by the writers of the New Testament as nothing more than accommodations. |
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He drew up a placard, offering Twenty Pounds reward for the apprehension of Stephen Blackpool, suspected of complicity in the robbery of Coketown Bank. |
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But, if a mixture of natural apprehension and hearty laughter made the experience fun for our youngest daughter Madison, it also put the little bleater off. |
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