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whatever and terms
It has been noted that the bipolar disorder diagnosis is officially characterised in historical terms such that, technically, anyone with a history of ( hypo ) mania and depression has bipolar disorder whatever their current or future functioning and vulnerability.
Thus in Austinian terms a moral code can objectively determine what people ought to do, the law can embody whatever norms the legislature decrees to achieve social utility, but every individual remains free to choose what to do.
Another writer says, " My own position can be summarized in the following terms: just as music is whatever people choose to recognize as such, noise is whatever is recognized as disturbing, unpleasant, or both " ( Nattiez 1990, 47 – 48 ).
It is, rather, " one of those innumerable objects of thought which are themselves incapable of definition, because they are the ultimate terms by reference to which whatever is capable of definition must be defined " ( Principia Ethica § 10 ¶ 1 ).
All police officers in the United Kingdom, whatever their actual rank, are ' constables ' in terms of their legal position.
That is in itself evidence of a kind of discomfort with achievement measured in terms of identifiable entities, and an announcement that continuity of thinking in whatever form, around whatever subject, is the real ambition.
During the exercise, practitioners may find that, in terms of physical and emotional expression, they involuntarily move, make sounds, walk around, dance, jump, skip, laugh, cry or whatever.
* July 14 – WWII: Winston Churchill, in a worldwide broadcast, proclaims the intention of Great Britain to fight alone against Germany whatever the outcome: " We shall seek no terms.
The Chicago Manual of Style, in its section " Words derived from proper names ", gives some examples of both lowercase and capitalized stylings, including a few terms styled both ways, and says, " Authors and editors must decide for themselves, but whatever choice is made should be followed consistently throughout a work.
In other words, moral constraints are justified because they make us all better off, in terms of our preferences ( whatever they may be ).
King Chulalongkorn appealed to the British, but the British minister told the King to settle on whatever terms he could get, and he had no choice but to comply.
" Article 153 itself expressly forbids particular forms of discrimination ; clause 5 states that " All persons of whatever race in the same grade in the service of the Federation shall, subject to the terms and conditions of their employment, be treated impartially ," while clause 9 states: " Nothing in this Article shall empower Parliament to restrict business or trade solely for the purpose of reservations for Malays.
His efforts to recruit Sir John Barbirolli and Rafael Kubelík were unsuccessful, and he was obliged to offer the post to his third choice, Sir Malcolm Sargent, on whatever terms Sargent demanded.
Theodore Brameld noted: " In simplest terms, education already projects and thereby reinforces whatever habits of personal and cultural life are considered to be acceptable and dominant.
As an alternative to usury, Islam strongly encourages charity and direct investment in which the creditor shares whatever profit or loss the business may incur ( in modern terms, this amounts to an equity stake in the business ).
Its most notable feature is that it gives the original developer of Mozilla ( Netscape, now a subsidiary of AOL ), the right to distribute modifications made by other contributors under whatever terms it desires, including proprietary terms, without granting similar rights to these other contributors in respect to contributions made by the original developer.
Although Workington is a remote place in football terms and the team was close to the bottom of the Third Division North, Shankly saw it as a challenge and " he attacked the job with all the enthusiasm and relish he always showed at whatever he did ".
20th century American philosopher Arthur Danto asserted that " a phenomenalist, believ that whatever is finally meaningful can be expressed in terms of our own experience .".
Those blacks willing to testify against others and who agreed to work on whatever terms their landlords set for them were let go ; those who had been labeled ringleaders or who were judged unreliable were indicted.
As a small province, Manitoba needed to be on favourable terms with whatever party was in power at the federal level.
The terms that best render political opposites at the time were “ Oligarch ” and “ Democratic .” Politics as described by Lysias meant that “ no human being is by nature oligarchical or democratic, but whatever constitution brings advantage to an individual is the one he would like to see established .” This passage illustrates that whatever ideology a person chose to support is not based on their core beliefs or principles.

whatever and were
This light did not penetrate very far back into the hall, and my eyes were hindered rather than aided by the dim daylight entering through the fan vents when I tried to pick out whatever might be lying, or squatting, on the floor below.
The forest had become an alien world where she strove, alone, unprotected, unguided, to deal with whatever hindrances were offered.
`` It was foolish of him to keep them, whatever they were.
When these chores were finished, only then, was she allowed whatever freedom she could find.
But in ways more fundamental than specific political opinions they are still what they always were: passionate, sure without a shadow of doubt of whatever it is that they are sure of, capable of seeing black and white only and, therefore, committed to the logical extreme of whatever it is they are temporarily committed to.
Francesca and Grazie were habitual committee chairmen and they usually managed to be elected co-chairmen, equal bosses, of whatever PTA or civic project was being launched.
He went down to Mills and Bradley's Hardware Store and bought a full set of carpenter's tools, including a rotary power saw and several other pieces of power machinery that Mr. Mills said were essential for babbiting and doweling, whatever they were.
could piece, as it were, the jumbled mass together into an organized whole and then recognize it as a man or a triangle or whatever it turned out to be.
If anyone thought of the John Harvey, it was to observe that she was straddled by a pair of ships heavily laden with high explosive and if they were hit the John Harvey would likely be blown up with her own ammo and whatever else it was that she carried.
His saloon was a meetin' place for influential Wyoming cattlemen, and one year durin' a severe blizzard, when his herd-owner customers were wearin' long faces, he said, `` Cheer up, boys, whatever happens, the books won't freeze ''.
Dr. Melvin W. Barnes, superintendent, said he thought the schools were waiting for some leadership, perhaps on the national level, to make sure that whatever steps of planning they took would `` be more fruitful '', and that he had found that other school districts were not as far along in their planning as this district.
And, in the half-year left before reaching their destination, the men would carry out whatever preparations were needed.
Shell people resembled mature dwarfs in size whatever their natal deformities were, but the well-oriented brain would not have changed places with the most perfect body in the Universe.
The questions were at this time attributed to Isaac the Jew, but it is now generally considered more prudent to attribute them simply to Ambrosiaster, whatever his identity might be.
They were the assistants to the tribunes in whatever matters that the tribunes might entrust to them, although most matters with which they were entrusted were of minimal importance.
In the 1980s, companies had few people who understood the growing personal computer phenomenon, and so most technical people were given free rein to purchase whatever software they thought they needed.
" They lived in unwalled villages, without any superfluous furniture ; for as they slept on beds of leaves and fed on meat and were exclusively occupied with war and agriculture, their lives were very simple, and they had no knowledge whatever of any art or science.
But whatever were the reasons behind the votes of the majority, the rejection of the Measures made it plain that the Church does not possess full spiritual freedom to determine its worship ..." Stephen Neill points out that the Roman Catholic members of parliament abstained from voting.
Although evangelical sentiments were uttered by some of the members in favor of the supreme authority of the Scriptures and justification by faith, no concession whatever was made to Protestantism.

whatever and arranged
A " trainset " ( or " set ") is a semi-permanently arranged formation of cars, rather than one created " ad hoc " out of whatever cars are available.
You have arranged marriages, a friendship between two men is created by the desires and wills of those two men, whereas a relationship between a man and a girl is actually constructed completely peripheral to whatever the feelings of the said boy and girl are.
The band's keyboard and accordion player David Boulter recalled in 2003 that " we'd always worn very ill-fitting second-hand suits, shirts, whatever, and, as a treat for our hard work, we arranged to have a tailor-made suit each.

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