The right to own land and other property is taken for granted in many countries. |
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The technique of auscultatory blood pressure measurement is a complicated one that is often taken for granted. |
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It's sad and depressing, and I don't want it to become merely taken for granted and unremarked. |
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Real friendship is a rare and precious gift, strong, stable, yet fragile, and never to be taken for granted. |
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They do at least imply a stable society in which marriage is indissoluble and family loyalty taken for granted. |
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Howth pier and fish shops have several modern cold storage units and ice plants, which are mostly taken for granted in this day and age. |
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On a broader level, the book also illustrates the way the trajectories of technological change cannot be taken for granted. |
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The work carried out by crossing patrols is often taken for granted but it is integral to the community. |
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No area can be taken for granted or written off as a lost cause, and there are incentives to build further support to win more seats. |
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Though it is taken for granted in the developed world, mass education is a relatively recent phenomenon. |
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By Edwards's time, it's taken for granted that the bishop of Rome is the Antichrist. |
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The reign of Alexander III did a great deal to extend the power of the tsar at the expense of liberties taken for granted in Western Europe. |
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Divorce often results when a partner has had enough of being put upon and taken for granted. |
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There was a time when William's importance, even greatness, was taken for granted. |
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The fact that it eventually settled for patriotic loyalism could not be taken for granted. |
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It was taken for granted that children would accompany their parents to church and sit quietly through a sermon lasting forty to fifty minutes. |
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They are often taken for granted as the wound innately granulates, contracts, and epithclializes under optimal conditions. |
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Though they have slipped back in recent years the girls from Model County are far from pushovers and should not be taken for granted. |
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Hard men sometimes have soft centres and there's nothing more hurtful than to be taken for granted. |
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These days, with central heating, the electric blanket and the hot water bottle, a warm bed is rather taken for granted. |
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Labour is a trade union party so it was taken for granted it would fully implement the social chapter of the Maastricht Treaty. |
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I suspect that I am not alone in having the feeling of being taken for granted by politicians at all levels and of all shades and hues. |
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Arthur Miller's drama has so long been accorded canonical status that it can easily be taken for granted. |
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It can be taken for granted that reasons abound for self-pity, anger, fear, ill will, surliness and general unhappiness. |
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In turn, architects are learning about essential aspects of habitability that are often taken for granted. |
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Dr Masters said that these principles were at one time taken for granted by Nonconformist preachers. |
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The family operates as a cognitive schema, which is mostly doxic, that is, invisible, naturalised and taken for granted. |
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To the organisers of these events, it brings days and nights of unpaid work that is often taken for granted by those competing. |
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But over time and aided by unidirectional modernism the communal aspects have not only been taken for granted but also alienated. |
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They want to be treated with respect, not taken for granted as low paid skivvies. |
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Mirroring the philosophy of the eponymous hero, cast members refused to be taken for granted when the theatre talked of extending their run. |
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I have learned to live for the moment from all this and I have learned that nothing is trivial, nothing should be taken for granted. |
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It also seemed to have been taken for granted that it was the source of the evil smell that lingered in the room. |
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The conclusions of the Qur'an are not taken for granted but verified through observation of the world. |
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The average citizen fails to appreciate civil liberties precisely because in this country they can be taken for granted. |
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The problem with being an All-Star is that good performances are taken for granted and people expect more. |
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Whatever happens, there are also many reasons to be pessimistic, since nothing can be taken for granted. |
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Standardization is invisible and standards that work are taken for granted. |
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His achievement, though easily taken for granted, was the work of an analytical mind of the first order, and he deserves much more honor than he has so far received. |
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Because a number of the mechanical conveniences taken for granted in the West are not widely affordable, most women work harder at home than American women do. |
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The boxes also contain everyday items taken for granted in much of the world, things like toothpaste, toothbrush, flannels, soap, gloves and scarves. |
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Today, having such information at one's fingertips is easily taken for granted. |
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By playing hard ball the Kazakh government is making it clear that it can no longer be taken for granted. |
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Ladies and gentlemen, the ability to speak openly is not something to be taken for granted. |
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However, sometimes these liberties and rights that our foremothers struggled to win are taken for granted. |
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A seat with minimalistic and pure lines where soft close is taken for granted. |
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In fact, wailing babies are taken for granted on a bus trip. |
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Findings of this type confirm that the basic receptiveness of Francophone and Acadian communities cannot be taken for granted. |
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In relation to civil and political rights, it is generally taken for granted that judicial remedies for violations are essential. |
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Because they had sworn an oath to their lord, it was taken for granted that they had sworn a similar oath to the duke, earl or baron who owned that lord's property. |
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Its continued existence should not be taken for granted either by the government or by Canadians themselves. |
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In addition, even the core functions associated with any provident or pension fund are often taken for granted and poorly performed. |
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Research has determined, for example, that as patterns of work become established and taken for granted, they become highly resistant to change. |
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He said that it was taken for granted that whoever resisted them must be bad. |
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In both cases it was more or less taken for granted that the definition adopted in 1969 would be used again. |
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Fifty years ago, it was taken for granted that every government body had its responsibilities and handled them as well as it could. |
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Whilst this may be acceptable to you in the short term, over time you may be taken for granted and could start to feel resentful. |
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Salvation should be taken for granted by those who believe in the fatherhood of God. |
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A number of policy-makers indicated at the time that these trends and low volatility could not be taken for granted. |
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Many of these systems, normally taken for granted, are virtually defenseless against determined hackers. |
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Dravid's batsmanship has often been taken for granted because it is so firmly rooted in orthodoxy, because it is so utterly comprehensible and so utterly lacking in mystique. |
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From now on the definitive positioning of the object will be taken for granted and thus not mentioned again. |
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Its fierce determination in deconstructing the sexual politics that are so often taken for granted in this sort of film provide more thrills than the average Bond outing. |
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The aid is purely budgetary, and it is not therefore necessary to highlight a point that we feel should be taken for granted. |
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As with all our strengths, our peace, safety and security should not be taken for granted. |
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This cannot be taken for granted, since even the body of institutional shareholders can change quite dramatically within a short period of time. |
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It respects the scope, budget and timetable of the projects, something rarely taken for granted in this sector. |
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For Canadians with respiratory disease, breathing is not something to be taken for granted! |
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Most persons have difficulty acknowledging this type of privilege because these privileges are taken for granted. |
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Of course, the legitimacy of non-functionalist paradigms is not assured today, and should not be taken for granted. |
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In most countries, the role of the national media in reflecting the national culture is taken for granted. |
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Coming of age just after the Second World War, he was too old to be a child of the 1960s, but too young to accept the pieties his parents might have taken for granted. |
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Overall, European acquiescence in the campaign can be taken for granted. |
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Given the extent to which it is taken for granted today, it can be difficult to fully appreciate the truly innovative and radical approach Frege took to logic. |
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Yet public opinion had been captured, and it was taken for granted that lynching was a just response to the barbarous sexual crimes against white womanhood. |
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The thought woke me up to re-examine what I had taken for granted. |
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Landowners feel they are being taken for granted and nobody has the manners or the courtesy to ask permission to pass through their private lands. |
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The strings of a four-string cello are usually tuned in fifths, but scordatura tunings were used in the baroque era, and so tuning in fifths cannot be taken for granted. |
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The danger here, however, is when the reasons for coining a term are forgotten, and repeated usage hardens it into something taken for granted and unexamined. |
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And this idea has been peddled by the intellectual elite in Britain for many years, more assiduously than anywhere else, to the extent that it is now taken for granted. |
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I know that over time these exemptions can be taken for granted sometimes. |
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When I joined the paper in 1993, the brief was to make visible and discussable something that was intangible, taken for granted, and, for better or worse, affected us all. |
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The way food is purchased, handled, cooked and stored at home is often taken for granted by children, but home is the place where most of us learn the habits we exhibit throughout our lives. |
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Whether Japan actually might nuclearize because of a North Korean threat is also taken for granted but deserves more close attention. |
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Never, however, has abundance been taken for granted as the norm to such an extent, and the lack of financial means has not excluded people from as many opportunities as it does today. |
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In a stable society, these processes are taken for granted. |
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The internal market is taken for granted in the EU, but this is not the case in China for example, where there is no open market between the provinces. |
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While the international community has always managed to resolve such crises, they highlighted the potential vulnerabilities of the global economy, the resilience of which cannot be taken for granted. |
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His independence should be therefore taken for granted. |
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Indeed, it is being erroneously taken for granted that this Suffrage foolery is a kind of game between the police and the fooligans. |
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It has long been taken for granted in many households that the bathroom heating comes on automatically in the morning before the alarm clock goes off, so that people can take a shower in the warm. |
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The importance of something so completely taken for granted today cannot be underestimated in a context where men could go for days on end without even taking their boots off. |
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Fundamentally, what we're trying to do is something that hasn't been seriously undertaken before: to radically reduce energy consumption-and in a culture where the profligate use of energy is just taken for granted. |
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They need, accordingly, to be adept and persuasive in advocacy, often working from first principles because the legitimacy and importance of their needs may not be taken for granted. |
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If we fail to deal with them effectively, the achievements of decades of increasing integration and shared sovereignty in postwar Europe may no longer be taken for granted. |
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The idea of human rights may have achieved near-universal endorsement, but it cannot be taken for granted that their primacy and legitimacy will always be recognized. |
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As a result, vital public services that people have taken for granted for the past 50 years will either disappear or exist only in a skeletal form, and probably run by profiteering private companies. |
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The weight of elderdom in our family was like a drapery to be taken for granted. In which anyone could at times gratefully hide. |
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The practice spread, and it seems to be taken for granted by King Clovis I at the very beginning of the Merovingian dynasty. |
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In many societies where kinship connections are important, there are rules, though they may be expressed or be taken for granted. |
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An important early example of something now taken for granted was the standardization of screw fasteners such as nuts and bolts. |
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They write the checks and they feel like they have been taken for granted by the past master franchisers. |
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But a conceptual crisis has arisen in modern medicine and biology, a crisis that stems precisely from the realization that the definition of death taken for granted for millennia requires reexamination. |
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Everywhere else, American omnipotence is taken for granted. |
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At one time when buying property it was taken for granted that one would consult with a lawyer and a land surveyor to ensure that the legal description was both accurate and consistent with what was on the ground. |
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While it is taken for granted that children's time is highly scheduled and controlled at the elementary school level, it is a more recent phenomenon that the preschool child is exposed to a more regimented day. |
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In our modern society, water is taken for granted or hidden away. |
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I say it is a sad day when the civil liberties of a people are taken for granted by the government and only judged to be at risk when the elites or special interest groups deign to acknowledge the risk. |
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I believe that if we renounce our claims today our acquiescence will be taken for granted tomorrow and we would have to fight hard to regain a position whose surrender today might seem of no consequence. |
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We must put more pressure on the Member States to introduce a statutory minimum wage, so that it can be taken for granted that women can earn a living wage, because that is the best safeguard against poverty in old age. |
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But, say experts at Samsung, microwave ovens can get taken for granted, abused and misused. |
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Although this may seem very basic, Esquivel argued, the right to work, to a living wage and to decent working conditions cannot be taken for granted, particularly in a development context. |
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They pass down the memories from generation to generation as powerful reminders so that the peace and freedom within their borders will never be taken for granted. |
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After three postwar decades when cheap oil was taken for granted, the oil-importing nations were hit for six by the 1973-74 oil shock, and Healey's chancellorship was beleaguered by a quintupling of the price of oil. |
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Space-based applications such as weather forecasting, terrestrial navigation, remote sensing, and telecommunications are taken for granted by most of the world's population. |
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Across the south-west, residents of small communities like Barnhart are confronting the reality that something as basic as running water, as unthinking as turning on a tap, can no longer be taken for granted. |
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Theoretically we all agree about building a fairer and more fraternal society, but when the time comes to act, we barricade ourselves behind our privileges that are taken for granted as rights. |
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When the atrocities of the wartime death camps were exposed for all to see, it became impossible for individuals with a normal sense of morality to continue believing that intolerance could blandly be taken for granted. |
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At least four times per week we found ourselves working for a common goal, the impact of which, if truth be told, I certainly had taken for granted back then. |
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Government atrocities were taken for granted. |
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Investing in communities is taken for granted. |
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It has long been taken for granted that the introduction of agriculture had been an unequivocal progress. |
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The reason is this: I am unimpressed by the fact that it is taken for granted that Members of the European Parliament are influenced in their decisions by other people, and that, consequently, regulation is deemed necessary. |
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Many a marriage breaks up in sorrow because one of the parties basks in the sunshine of appreciation expressed by workshop or social friends, while at home everything able and good is taken for granted. |
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This is a human resource that's sometimes taken for granted. |
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It is often taken for granted that egalitarians value a completely equal distribution at any moment in time of whatever it is that they believe should be distributed equally. |
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The importance of supply, vital to military success, was appreciated even if it was taken for granted and features only incidentally in the sources. |
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Now, it is virtually taken for granted that the line-up will be common knowledge well before the day of kick-off, which is an unsatisfactory situation. |
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But these attitudes in male writers were taken for granted, accepted as sound philosophical bases, as quite normal, certainly not as womanhating, aggressive or neurotic. |
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Today, this provision is sometimes taken for granted, but in the days of the Articles of Confederation, crossing state lines was often arduous and costly. |
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What the pupil already knew was indeed rather taken for granted than expressed, but it performed the useful function of transcending all textbooks and supplanting all studies. |
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Slurring appoggiaturas to their resolutions was nonetheless a performance convention, taken for granted along with slurring trills to their termination and so on. |
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One difference was that the ideal of encompassing all the people of England in one religious organisation, taken for granted by the Tudors, had to be abandoned. |
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