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Page "Denazification" ¶ 17
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delicate and task
There remained only the delicate task of maneuvering the laws through the labyrinth of Palace politics and making a small number of policy decisions.
The task of taking the raw material of Marcel Pagnol's original trio of French films about people of the waterfront in Marseilles and putting them again on the screen, after their passage through the Broadway musical idiom, was a delicate and perilous one, indeed.
Niel managed to carry out this delicate and difficult task with as much success as could be expected, and he directed siege operations at the Battle of Malakoff.
As the new head of his family, he is assigned a delicate task by his Aunt Clara and by Plimsoll, the family lawyer: He is to go to Hollywood and look for Aunt Clara's son, his cousin Eggy, who seems to have gotten himself into trouble, and bring him back home.
This delicate and difficult task I subsequently undertook, and re-edited the violin solo part, and it is this edition which has been played by me, and also by my pupils, up to the present day.
He has developed his concentration and control to the point that he can engage a single opponent, like Spider-Man, or multiple opponents with the arms while performing a completely separate, more delicate task, such as stirring coffee or constructing a machine.
The accomplished abbate was sent on this delicate mission in 1696, with the title of envoy extraordinary, and he fulfilled his difficult task so well that Pope Innocent XI, in recognition of certain privileges he had secured for the Hanoverian Catholics, consecrated him bishop of Spiga in the Spanish West Indies.
If the task is handling fragile objects, such as hand-washing delicate crystal glasses, then a person showing sustained attention will stay on task and will not break any dishes.
The new Khagan Guyuk entrusted the delicate task of trying Odchigin to Mongke and Orda Khan, the eldest brother of Batu.
In 1730, as a major-general, he was a member of the court martial which tried the crown prince Frederick for desertion, and in 1733, at the head of a Prussian army, conducted with great skill the delicate and difficult task of settling the Mecklenburg question.
As we go by the analysis in policy-based design, it is a delicate task to create a good set of policies, just the right number.
The need to build these came from two areas: the need to house such delicate plants, also the image status from the wealthy, both however were constricted in their choice of materials available for the task, if they were south facing then they were constructed with brick or stone bases, brick or stone pillars with a corbelled gutter arrangement and mainly had large tall windows to benefit from the warm sunlight in the afternoons, if north facing then very heavy on the solid walls and much smaller windows to be able to keep the rooms warm.
He went to sea just before finishing high school, but his delicate health proved unequal to the task, and after two years sailing the seven seas he went to Rijeka to study law.
Selune has been said to aid devout worshippers of her Mystery of the Night by sending aid to those lost by trails of “ moondust ” ( small motes of light similar to Dancing Lights or tiny will-o ’- the-wisps that produce moonlight where none would otherwise be, to give sight to someone engaged in a delicate task ,- guide the way through treacherous ground or back to a known trail, and the like ).
As Papal Nuncio in London during the reign of James II he was charged by Pope Innocent XI with the delicate task of inducing the English King to intercede with Louis XIV ( then quite inimical to the Holy See ) in favour of the oppressed Protestants of France.
He came out very successfully in this delicate task.
In the latter capacity he served with the headquarters of the allies throughout the War of Liberation ( 1812 – 1814 ); his success in the delicate and difficult task of maintaining harmony and devotion to the common cause amongst the generals of many nationalities was recognized after the war by his elevation to the earldom ( July 1814 ).

delicate and those
For example, the marked susceptibility of the monkey to respiratory infection might be related to its delicate, long alveolar ducts and short, large bronchioles situated within a parenchyma entirely lacking in protective supportive tissue barriers such as those found in types 1, and 3.
However, modern horticulturalists tend to use the term " pansy " for those multi-coloured large-flowered hybrids that are grown for bedding purposes every year, while " viola " is usually reserved for smaller, more delicate annuals and perennials.
In ' My Friends Pictured Within ' Elgar wrote, " The variation is really a prolongation of the theme with what I wished to be romantic and delicate additions ; those who knew C. A. E.
" As a man, he may not have deserved the adoration which he received from those who, bewitched by his fascinating society, and indebted for all the comforts of life to his generous and delicate friendship, worshipped him nightly, in his favourite temple at Button ’ s.
His light and graceful love-songs and anacreontics, with their undisguised joie de vivre, introduced a new note into the German lyric ; his fables and tales in verse are hardly inferior in form and in delicate persiflage to those of his master La Fontaine, and his moralizing poetry re-echoes the philosophy of Horace.
The British House of Commons, with its traditions … is a machine too peculiar and too delicate to be managed by any but those who have been born within these isles ".
In those delicate moments, the club opted for a relatively unknown trainer: Joaquín Caparrós.
The weaker suction makes them more suitable for smaller sized veins, because the standardised suction of the tubes may cause the veins of elderly people or those with delicate veins, to collapse.
The subject was particularly delicate in those days, given the frequent visits of the Royal family to the site ; these visits led to an increase in demand for land to build houses and support buildings mainly for civil servants working in the Royal household.
Among the more delicate negotiations of his later years were those of 1580, which had for their object the ultimate union of the crowns of Spain and Portugal, and those of 1584, which resulted in a check to France by the marriage of the Spanish infanta Catherine to Charles Emmanuel I of Savoy.
In those early days stocking were not so delicate and were sold by weight, warmth not high fashion appears to be paramount as the heaviest were the most expensive.
Any deviation from this delicate balance would have enraged those pro-Catalan and Spanish-identifying industrialists.
Second, she was a woman and in those days people wondered if a woman and her delicate cameras could stand up to the intense heat, hazard, and generally dirty and gritty conditions inside a steel mill.
The most politically delicate OLAF investigations were those into alleged wrongdoings in the EU statistical office EUROSTAT.
The contrast between the styles of the re-used Imperial reliefs of Trajan, Hadrian and Marcus Aurelius and those newly made for the arch is dramatic and, according to Ernst Kitzinger, " violent ", although it should be noted that where the head of an earlier emperor was replaced by that of Constantine the artist was still able to achieve a " soft, delicate rendering of the face of Constantine " that was " a far cry from the dominant style of the workshop ".
The first recompense came, however, not from those princes, but from Christina, the ex-queen of Sweden, who, from her circlc of savants and courtiers at Rome, spontaneously and generously announced to Filicaja her wish to bear the expense of educating his two sons, enhancing her kindness by the delicate request that it should remain a secret.
These paintings often exhibited a sophisticated and delicate treatment of light similar to those of Vermeer, who lived in Delft at the same time as de Hooch.
Flashes of light replace the sun, and those who are alive to see it are reminded of their delicate existence.
Now the delicate are those who cannot endure toils, nor anything that diminishes pleasure.
Conventional combined mechanical / biological filtration used in fish only systems is avoided because those filters trap detritus and produce nitrate which may stunt or even kill many delicate corals.
Not only the family bonds but also those of friendship and tentative romance are traced with delicate economy and nuance.
Children, however, get impacts fromthe social suggestive norms ” differently and their brains are more delicate than those of adults.

delicate and truly
For example, in the 19th century, Charles Babbage described the importance of having " a few simply honest men " on a committee who could be temporarily eliminated when " a peculiarly delicate question arises " so that one of them could " declare truly, if necessary, that he never was present at any meeting at which even a questionable course had been proposed.

delicate and responsible
Each cognac house has a master taster ( maître de chai ), who is responsible for creating this delicate blend of spirits, so that the cognac produced by a company today will taste almost exactly the same as a cognac produced by that same company 50 years ago, or in 50 years ' time.
The citation describes the Hopkins ' work as " not only a matter of exploiting technology to build beautifully, nor simply of accommodating difficult and changing tasks in the most elegant way, but above all of capturing in stone and transmitting in bronze the finest aspirations of our age ", praising their contribution to the debate about the " delicate relationship between modernity and tradition " and adding: " For Hopkins, progress is no longer a break with the past but rather an act of continuity where he deftly and intelligently integrates traditional elements such as stone and wood, with advanced and environmentally responsible technology.
In November 1999 he cautioned the members of the committee not to intervene in delicate negotiations over funding of Hampden Park before it had a full briefing from the Minister responsible.

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