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Some Related Sentences

Politicians and sometimes
Politicians often resent this need for separation – sometimes sending their bodyguards away from them for personal or publicity reasons ; U. S. President William McKinley did this at the public reception where he was assassinated.
Politicians can sometimes try to use to their favour the complexity of the relationship between the monarch, viceroy, ministers, and parliament, and the public's general unfamiliarity with it.
Politicians and those connected to them were the only people, seemingly, able to obtain these plates with four, three or sometimes even only two digits.
Politicians are sometimes also children with guns, in all periods of time a lot of politicians are far too trigger happy and war too easily becomes an " easy solution ", whereas for me it should never a solution, there should be no war in the first place.

Politicians and refer
Politicians and pundits frequently refer to the ability of the President of the United States to " create jobs " in the U. S. during his or her term in office.

Politicians and status
Politicians had spent the previous three years divided on the issues of eliminating the status of the French language as an official language of the territory, and of assimilation of the French-speaking population.

Politicians and .
Politicians in the party win a place in parliament by being on the Party List, which is drawn up before the elections and enumerates, in order, the party's preferred MPs.
Politicians, who had previously opposed the Stalinist leadership, could be rehabilitated if they renounced their former beliefs and began supporting Stalin's rule.
Politicians struggled to cut spending and the public debt doubled to around 60 % of GDP.
" Politicians were concerned about the potential negative impact the film might have on the morale of the allies, as World War II had begun.
Politicians, labor leaders, and their followers flocked to the streets in May 1956 to protest Magloire's failure to step down.
Politicians with Scottish connections continued to play a prominent part in UK political life, with Prime Ministers including the Conservatives Harold Macmillan ( whose father was Scottish ) from 1955 – 57 and Alec Douglas-Home from 1963-64.
Politicians, ancient and modern, have employed hero worship for their own apotheosis ( i. e., cult of personality ).
Politicians struggled to cut spending and the public debt doubled to around 60 % of GDP.
Politicians and the government tried to limit child labour by law, but factory owners resisted ; some felt that they were aiding the poor by giving their children money to buy food to avoid starvation, and others simply welcomed the cheap labour.
Politicians offered labour an institution that could attempt to achieve trade-union demands.
* Dan Agin, Junk Science: How Politicians, Corporations, and Other Hucksters Betray Us, 2006.
* Politicians who favored the United States entering World War II on the German side asserted that the international media were controlled by Jews, and that reports of German mistreatment of Jews were biased and without foundation.
Detroit's Death self-released one of their 1974 recordings, " Politicians in My Eyes ", in 1976.
Politicians past and present have been accused of short-sightedness in speculating that they would.
Politicians such as René Pleven, who later became Prime Minister, and officers as General Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque, Lieutenant René Amiot, Captain Raymond Delange, Colonel Edgar De Larminat and Adolphe Sicé helped him to gain control of the AEF territory.
* A. Huffington, Third World America: How Our Politicians Are Abandoning the Middle Class and Betraying the American Dream.
Pets, Professors, and Politicians: The Founding and Early Years of the Atlantic Veterinary College.
* Downey, Matthew T. " Horace Greeley and the Politicians: The Liberal Republican Convention in 1872 ," The Journal of American History, Vol.
Politicians were arguing over peace treaties and the question of America's entry into the League of Nations, which was overturned due the return to isolationist opinion, a continuation of the nation's opinion since the early 1800s.
Politicians campaign standing on principle and demonizing their opponents, which is to be expected in a robust democracy.

sometimes and refer
It is now used to refer to any island group or, sometimes, to a sea containing a large number of scattered islands such as the Aegean Sea.
However, some asexuals who identify as straight, gay, lesbian, or bi before asexual, or simply prefer that terminology, will sometimes refer to themselves as " straight asexual " or " asexual lesbian ".
Abstractions sometimes have ambiguous referents ; for example, " happiness " ( when used as an abstraction ) can refer to as many things as there are people and events or states of being which make them happy.
In economics, regulatory arbitrage ( sometimes, tax arbitrage ) may be used to refer to situations when a company can choose a nominal place of business with a regulatory, legal or tax regime with lower costs.
To refer explicitly to the technical meaning of " at bat " described above, the term " official at bat " is sometimes used.
The intent is usually clear from the context, although the term " official at bat " is sometimes used to explicitly refer to an at bat as distinguished from a plate appearance.
It is typically measured in hertz, and may sometimes refer to passband bandwidth, sometimes to baseband bandwidth, depending on context.
This singularity is sometimes called " the Big Bang ", but the term can also refer to the early hot, dense phase itself, which can be considered the " birth " of our Universe.
Sportswriters sometimes refer to the Red Sox as the Crimson Hose and the Olde Towne Team.
In English usage, the word bean is also sometimes used to refer to the seeds or pods of plants that are not in the family leguminosae, but which bear a superficial resemblance to true beans — for example coffee beans, castor beans and cocoa beans ( which resemble bean seeds ), and vanilla beans, which superficially resemble bean pods.
The term compiler-compiler is sometimes used to refer to a parser generator, a tool often used to help create the lexer and parser.
English-speaking media commentators and journalists will sometimes refer to celebrities as belonging to the A-List or state that a certain actor belongs to the B-List, the latter being a disparaging context.
It is widespread practice in the media in the UK ( and elsewhere ) to use the word Europe to mean continental Europe ; that is, " Europe " excludes Britain, Iceland and Ireland ( though the term is sometimes used to refer to the European Union ).
The continent may sometimes refer to the continental part of Italy ( excluding Sardinia, Sicily, etc.
The term is sometimes ( improperly ) used to refer to any church of great size.
The moniker Conservadox is sometimes employed to refer to the right wing of the Conservative spectrum, although " Traditional " is used as well ( as in the Union for Traditional Judaism ).
In practice, however, " codec " is sometimes used loosely to refer to formats.
The term " creed " can also refer to a person's political or social beliefs or is sometimes used to mean religious affiliation.
In American contexts, the word " Camelot " is sometimes used to refer admiringly to the presidency of John F. Kennedy, as his term was said to have potential and promise for the future, and many were inspired by Kennedy's speeches, vision, and policies.
Outside Japan, the word is often used to refer to any of the various Japanese drums, ( 和太鼓, " wa-daiko ", " Japanese drum ", in Japanese ) and to the relatively recent art-form of ensemble taiko drumming ( sometimes called more specifically, " kumi-daiko " ( 組太鼓 )).
While the latter part was a boom and bust cycle, the Internet boom is sometimes meant to refer to the steady commercial growth of the Internet with the advent of the world wide web, as exemplified by the first release of the Mosaic web browser in 1993, and continuing through the 1990s.
This complex exponential function is sometimes denoted The formula is still valid if x is a complex number, and so some authors refer to the more general complex version as Euler's formula.
The term is sometimes also colloquially used to refer to acceptance of the modern evolutionary synthesis, a scientific theory that describes how biological evolution occurs.
Historians have liberally used emperor and, especially so, empire anachronistically and out of its Roman and European context to describe any large state and its ruler in the past and present ; sometimes even to refer to non-monarchically ruled states and their spheres of influence: such examples include the " Athenian Empire " of the late 5th century BC, the " Angevin Empire " of the Plantagenets, or the Soviet and American " empires " of the Cold War era.

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