For the Actionists, as for the artists cited above, there is no notion of sacrilege or blasphemy. |
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This noble, chivalrous gesture must have seemed like sacrilege or blasphemy to them, and they were probably afraid of the spirits of the dead. |
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Intervention by authority was necessary for very serious sins such as adultery, murder, and sacrilege. |
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A beard and a mustache have been added to the face of the devil in the picture, so that the killer is guilty of sacrilege no less than murder. |
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He also stated that to mix the psalms and uninspired hymns together is sacrilege. |
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The four knights tried to drag him outside, to avoid aggravating their sacrilege by defiling the sanctuary. |
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It is a sacrilege to his fawning American fans to think that he can do any wrong. |
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Some might consider this sacrilege, but the contrast with Shakespeare's play, Othello, is striking. |
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She could tell he considered such sacrilege a bad omen for their expedition inland. |
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He was even prepared to utter what would once have been considered sacrilege. |
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That we can still think of wringing out a song from all this is worse than heresy, blasphemy, sacrilege. |
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In Hinduism, then, the wanton destruction of forests is not just something merely inexpedient, it is a sacrilege. |
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If not, come to gawk at a level of sacrilege no other religious culture would even dream of condoning. |
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On paper, it does sound like sacrilege for this screen goddess to wear a silly hat, get drunk, and make a public scene. |
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At the synod a catalogue of John's crimes was presented, ranging from rape to sacrilege. |
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It would be sacrilege not to visit the famous Minoan palace at Knossos, which is within an easy drive of Fodele. |
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At the grave risk of committing sacrilege, let's tread some dangerous ground infested with landmines. |
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Their performances invariably involve roughly equal measures of cruelty, obscenity, sacrilege, diabolism, and Norse paganism. |
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He figures this 'mangia cake' won't understand the sacrilege of beer and pasta. |
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In the ensuing panic Alcibiades was accused of being the originator of the sacrilege as well as of having profaned the Eleusinian Mysteries. |
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In a world where PACA is one of the main regions in aeronautics, it would have been a sacrilege not to be represented here. |
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He was drawn for treason, hanged for homicide, disemboweled for sacrilege, and beheaded and quartered for plotting the king's death. |
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The worst sacrilege of all was to defile the Host of the Eucharist, an act generally punishable by torture and death. |
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But that is not the only sacrilege, if I may use that term, that we can see in the electoral map of the riding of Portneuf. |
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Both blasphemy and sacrilege have been used in a more general sense, referring to almost any religious insult or violation of the sacred. |
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The illicit appropriation of and traffic in cultural property are a sacrilege against history and civilization. |
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Recently there had been various incidents of sacrilege in Fiji, especially on Hindu temples. |
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They speculated that God took no pleasure in their sacrifices and so allowed this sacrilege to occur. |
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They are superb places to visit and I agree with everyone who has said that removing some such monuments would be historical sacrilege. |
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Furthermore, there are several specific concepts, such as blasphemy and sacrilege with distinct meanings. |
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Both of these observations were seen as sacrilege by the Church because they went against accepted dogma. |
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Till this day the passing of this exam corresponds to an ensemble of rituals and traditions that would be sacrilege to modify. |
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In this respect, sacrilege as it may seem, Netanyahu may actually most closely resemble Yitzhak Rabin. |
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His gesture is so bold it has a whiff of sacrilege, not just of art-world rebellion. |
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It is heresy, sacrilege, a pockmark upon the face of our National Pastime! |
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Likening him to Mahatma Gandhi and Nelson Mandela is sacrilege. |
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Rejecting a person begging for protection counted as sacrilege. |
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But the stilted dialogue and bizarre narrative conceits pale in comparison with some of the sacrilege being committed here. |
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Clodius was a bitter opponent of Cicero because Cicero had testified against him in a sacrilege case. |
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Heading to the Grand Canyon State knowing that I wasn't visiting its main attraction felt like sacrilege. |
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I suspect it's bordering on sacrilege but there has been the odd occasion when I've crawled underneath the cromlech's large capstone when caught out in a shower. |
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The Pope's desire was so far as possible to please, but he could not be expected to grant what an inquiry had shown could not be granted without sacrilege. |
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In my view it would be a sacrilege and an outrage for anyone to wear such a medal, relative or not, other than the person who won such a high honour. |
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Import of silk to make... Qobbyâ meant sacrilege, a mess anyway. |
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For de La Salle, physical violence was a kind of sacrilege. |
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This sacrilege of handing over Jesus to His enemies, through Holy Communion, is no less a crime today than when it was first perpetrated by Pilate 2000 years ago. |
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Most of the offenders of sacrilege break into temples and places of worship not because of hatred of religion but with the intent to steal money and other valuables. |
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I know that the idea of developing a European army or European defence is likely to be perceived by some Atlanticists as a sacrilege or as a denial of our transatlantic obligations. |
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The paper points out that governments which punish sacrilege are giving representatives of the state, from bureaucrats to judges to village elders, a kind of arbitrary power. |
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At noon, a rocket slammed into an unfinished mosque there, sending clouds of dust over dozens of worshipers and incensing fighters who condemned it as a sacrilege. |
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Mannyng deals in turn with the Ten Commandments, the seven deadly sins and the sin of sacrilege, the seven sacraments, the 12 requisites of confession, and the 12 graces of confession. |
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Is it sacrilege to alter a hot-cross bun – to change it into a scone? |
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Meanwhile, the city of Amphissa began to work lands that were sacred to Apollo near Delphi, a sacrilege that gave Philip the opportunity to further intervene in Greek affairs. |
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When Caligula wanted to place a golden statue of his deified self in the Temple in Jerusalem, the potential sacrilege and likely war were prevented only by his timely death. |
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The Sun God insisted that Zeus punish the men for this sacrilege. |
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The wine was destined for a monastery and the church cried sacrilege. |
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