Suddenly, he was the fount of all knowledge about the New Zealand economy and New Zealand society. |
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Older people may be a fount of knowledge with regard to local customs as many have only died out recently as homogenous society spread. |
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And, to add to my fount of knowledge, I found out who Marie of Romania was. |
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This person has maps on the brain and can be a fount of obscure geographical and cultural knowledge. |
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I am pleased to be able to share with them the fount of knowledge I have on this particular issue. |
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The new edition of the book contains a short foreword by D. Simberloff, a fount of encyclopedic knowledge on biological invasions. |
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Once a university lecturer, now a tour operator of international repute, Chris is a fount of all knowledge. |
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A complete set of letters and other sorts, uniform in size and style, constitutes a fount of type. |
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Republicans treat government as the source of most collective ills, Democrats as the fount of most collective benefits. |
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The Vatican Bank, a fount of scandal for 40 years, is being investigated for money laundering. |
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The University of Phoenix's curriculum is built around peer-based learning groups where the instructor isn't exactly viewed as a fount of knowledge. |
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You see, since so many other sources of inspiration turned into blind alleys, I consulted that fount of ancient wisdom, the most-quoted tome of all time, the Good Book itself. |
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Mr. Ballard, a fount of knowledge about the town, first took me by the chapel. |
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Ian was a fount of knowledge about the town's history, and he seemed to know everybody we passed. |
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Thankfully, the world wide web now gives us access to a previously untapped fount of knowledge: the Random Nameless Stranger. |
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Helen is a fount of knowledge, having been in the art world at least 20-odd years longer than me. |
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There's also the worry that your fount of knowledge will run dry in the heat of Barcelona, Berlin or Birmingham on a sunny Saturday. |
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And second, I would like to accompany you to learn as much as I can from your fount of knowledge. |
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As the fount of all knowledge, the pastor's job is to overflow with spiritual truth each week while the congregation sits and absorbs this wisdom. |
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A fount of knowledge, great expertise, and KHS technology are behind this success story. |
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While the internet is indeed a fount of knowledge, and might well be able to assist you in your quest, certain refinements to your terms are needed. |
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ReprintsMr Aquino considers Mrs Arroyo the fount of all corruption for her ten years as president. |
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Imbued with Zen philosophy, the work reveals a view of existence restored to the bosom of Nature, the fount of all our being. |
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In addition to the material benefits there must however, be a fount of spiritual values in our free societies. |
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I am now a fount of knowledge about this wondrous organisation. |
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As the king was also the fount of justice that assistance evolved, inter alia, into a judicial role. |
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She brought to the Board a steady fount of specialized knowledge and strategic wisdom that guided our work. |
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By bringing together all of the partners who share an interest in the future of the Mediterranean, CMI is a fount of innovation, forging synergies from the public policies of individual countries. |
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By sharing data, corpus linguists are able to treat the corpus as a locus of linguistic debate, rather than as an exhaustive fount of knowledge. |
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The Crown, as fount of honour, has the undoubted right to create peerages, whether hereditary or for life. |
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The Aonian fount stood at the foot of Mount Helicon, not far from Thebes, and was sacred to the Muses. |
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It flees, in spite of the fact that I, dying, draw close to this fount. |
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Gifted children have a remarkable ability to retain information and are also a veritable fount of knowledge on certain subjects that they are passionate about. |
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In parallel, they are changing the role of the teacher, from that of an exclusive fount of knowledge to a guide helping students navigate through new information, inquire, make choices and solve problems. |
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But it does need to be said that Roger was, and is, one of journalism's forces of nature: a fount of talent, professionalism, intuition – and fun. |
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It is generally accepted that small and medium-sized businesses are a fount of new talent and innovative ideas, trial goods and services and a spirit of independent creation. |
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It would be a fount of great determination and confidence on the part of all Member States, and it would be a first step towards completing the reform of the United Nations. |
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Especially in film and foil printing, however, the use of isopropanol has proved to be the better choice, with reduced surface tension of the fount solution for optimal printing and a good ink-water balance. |
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The transfer of ink and fount solution always takes place in identical conditions, irrespective of whether the press is started up from cold or restarted while warm. |
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While great and small courts were building imitations of Versailles and adopting the language and style of the Sun King, intellectuals and avant-garde artists were thronging to Paris, which had become the fount of culture. |
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The site includes an e-commerce section where consumers can make on-line purchases and access a fount of information on DIY, construction, renovation and gardening. |
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This problem is complicated by difficulties of a constitutional nature peculiar to those States where the Convention does not, in itself, constitute a fount of municipal law. |
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Though she takes little direct part in government, the Crown remains the fount in which ultimate executive power over government lies. |
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Theoretically, the Crown, as fount of honour, is entitled to decide all questions relating to peerage disputes. |
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The fount of social problems, he argues, is that human morality grew out of the natural principles of tit-for-tat and mutual backscratching. |
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Also, though the fount of power might be the chief, he or she is typically not free to wield power without the consent of a council of elders of some kind. |
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Slightly off-centre, a constant whirlpool swirls and churns turbulently, sometimes spitting up a boiling fount. |
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