The focus of discussion remains reframing the species problem as a linguistic conundrum. |
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Although the diagnosis of many fetal abnormalities is now possible antenatally, the conundrum of what is the most appropriate treatment remains. |
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One other conundrum for the board and would-be investors to contemplate is the question of future leadership. |
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At no time was an audience challenged to question a moral conundrum, or inspired to see the world through different eyes. |
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Leigh steers clear of the religious dimension, arguing that abortion is a human moral dilemma, not a religious conundrum. |
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Fortunately for all of us, we may never have to find out the answer to that conundrum. |
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I have not the answer to this conundrum that has become the bane of my existence. |
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Children with recurrent abdominal pain present a difficult conundrum for doctors. |
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Here we review the animal and human studies that bear on this complex, yet common, clinical conundrum. |
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It is a dreadful and continuing conundrum for which it seems nobody has a convincing answer. |
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It's actually by focussing on this last point that investors can find the true answer to the conundrum. |
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It makes life too much of a purgatorial balancing conundrum, where pleasure and pain are a roll of the dice. |
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But the real conundrum in the characterization offered above lies in the presumed subjunctive tense. |
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Over the years this conundrum has niggled and niggled, and some pretty heavyweight theoretical physicists tried to prove Stephen wrong. |
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When I awoke it was to the brilliant glowing answer to our little conundrum. |
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The problem remains a conundrum to me, and I hope others can propose ways of dealing with it. |
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The answer to this conundrum can be found at the heart of the society that he lived and work in. |
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Other than that, it can be something of a difficult ethical conundrum for somebody. |
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Fortunately the answer to the conundrum came into reach as we shuffled along. |
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It's not exactly Sophie's Choice, but this year's crowded crop of Emmy nominees presents a conundrum for more than a few series. |
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I can't seem to see a clear answer for this conundrum and therefore it sidetracks me and taunts me. |
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What makes the conundrum of the obtunded slumberer unique is not that his malady is difficult to diagnose. |
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This creature has been a constant conundrum to cryptozoologists in North and South America for over 50 years. |
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But just how the executive branch should help to deal with cyberthreats is proving more of a conundrum. |
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For Australian mothers, the conundrum of achieving work-life balance extends beyond surviving the day-to-day difficulties. |
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I was also perturbed with the ethical conundrum of prospects feining interest in APM so that they could get access to the tools for free. |
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The more cerebral cinemagoer, however, is left in a conundrum as he or she tries to unpick the film's slapdash symbolism and script. |
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The ruling also highlights, once again, the conundrum local school boards face under Alberta's education system. |
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Perhaps you would like to see a little bit of legerdemain, or a paltry amount of prestidigitation, or a conundrum of conjuring. |
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One seductive resolution to this conundrum is to abandon all pretence to scientific neutrality. |
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He takes one look at the luscious lady and starts getting his crankshaft in a conundrum. |
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Stocking four flavors of dishy, piquant womanhood, it treated the audience to one tasty conundrum after another. |
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Current fast-breaking technological advances may bring them together to definitively solve the conundrum. |
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But in this never-ending chicken-and-egg conundrum, time is on our side. |
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The only answer to that conundrum is to extend the period during which these costs are paid, perhaps by loans, a graduate tax or a combination of both. |
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The last two days may have finally supplied an answer to that conundrum. |
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The answer to this conundrum is buried in the depths of the article. |
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The conundrum is simply stated, even though the answer is complex. |
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At first glance, the gloomy outlook for Mr. Sarkozy is somewhat of a conundrum. |
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Is the choice between partner track at that law firm and bearing children a feminist conundrum? |
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This Janus-faced image of the Columbia represents both a vexing conundrum for Pacific Northwesterners and a battleground over what the river means to the human community. |
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Part of the solution to this conundrum must lie in the manner that genotypes map to phenotypes. |
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The conundrum of patent protection continues, however, to loom large in any contemplation of future developments. |
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To solve this conundrum, Vikram teams up with Aziza, Haji's young, aggressive and outspoken protege. |
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It's a partial but positive and practical answer to the conundrum of English devolution. |
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This comment, made to David Markson, indicates the conundrum Maupassant presents to readers. |
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While we are seeing a strong domestic picture, cracking the productivity conundrum would really help cement the recovery. |
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There is no obvious solution to this conundrum within the existing Memorandum of Understanding or under existing legislation. |
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In the course of preparing my report, I have had to struggle with that particular conundrum. |
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For some the horror of this phenomenon has produced a conundrum in reconciling the sheer scale of this tragedy with a God of love and kindness. |
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The only way to resolve this conundrum was to sort the waste directly during collection. |
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I wish to propose to you today that complementarity should be seen as an important element in resolving this conundrum. |
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Unfortunately, if the currently popular urban development theories are correct, the City of Thunder Bay is in a very real conundrum. |
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What became apparent was that our strategies to date had brought the SLSMC to a conundrum. |
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But then there's talk of ducks in tailings ponds and Imperial's conundrum becomes crystallized. |
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What now exists is a conundrum in which each side must present a face more resistant to compromise than the other. |
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An approach drawing on a specific legal system would gain in clarity whilst not getting us any nearer to solving our conundrum. |
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As Ahmed's story shows, the only way out of this conundrum is to accept jobs well below one's level of qualification. |
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The conundrum architects face is whether to use a commercial installer familiar with the material or a residential contractor familiar with the house type. |
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In fact, the communion conundrum highlights the first visible fissure in the church of Francis. |
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The Burger Chef conundrum leads to another poignant exchange between the two lost souls. |
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Compounding the conundrum further is the fact that many cellphones allow direct access to information in remote cloud storage. |
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The result is a conundrum for the Republican Party where there is no clear middle ground. |
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Take this lack of cooperative instinct and add a competitive situation, and Benenson says you get a real conundrum. |
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Of course, the central conundrum of this painting is the massive area given over to the foliage at its center. |
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So what was the craziest Turkey hotline conundrum that you ever had to handle? |
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Apathetic, yet curious, he solved the conundrum by facebooking his prey, then weathering the blamestorm. Victory was his. |
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Some governments are already making progress in this area, and demonstrating that it is, indeed, possible to find win-win solutions to the aging workforce conundrum. |
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So far the Conservatives have had two opportunities through two different budgets to fulfill their promise to fix the foreign credentials conundrum. |
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It has always tried different ways of doing business, centred around the principles of shared wellbeing, and recognised the conundrum of entering the coffee pods market. |
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In these debates, etymological precision was welcomed, spinning many a nomenclatorial conundrum. |
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The first two hacks in this chapter provide, well, hackish solutions to that conundrum. |
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And yet, illogical as the ban is, it is not a terrible inconvenience, since passengers don't expect to use their phones at 30,000 feet and normally can't. It is the Kindle conundrum that really drives me dilly. |
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The European Commission will hope to square this circle next week when it produces a roadmap for further work. Sharing the burden of hosting refugees presents a conundrum that has foxed the EU for years. |
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The conundrum for anti-dialectical official physics is that the existence of antiparticle itself is problematic. |
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Hamlet's conundrum, then, is whether to avenge his father and kill Claudius, or to leave the vengeance to God, as his religion requires. |
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Sustainable development for many Canadians is a conundrum. |
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So the pitch conundrum remains one of many at the end of an Ashes tour, although the more difficult choices over bowling options would seem to still reside with England. |
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The categorisation conundrum comes despite stunts involving one pulling a mobile phone from the other's chest, and both using knives to lacerate themselves. |
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He also employs clever pairings in which formal pleasure is the flip side of a perceptual or interpretive conundrum. |
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The conundrum remains, that it is educated nations that leave the deepest ecological footprints, using large amounts of resources and energy to support their lifestyles. |
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Public sector unions create a genuine political conundrum for Democrats. |
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The conundrum is that in order to raise funds for projects, IFAP must first of all explain its objectives and also demonstrate quality processes in selecting and implementing projects. |
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The grocer associations and food companies face a political conundrum. |
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Perhaps the next report will cast light on that conundrum. |
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The conundrum, initially for them was why so few women when arrested became pentito, as opposed to men. |
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And, Dr. Dunbar said, they also provided a partial answer to the ageless conundrum of whether we laugh because we feel giddy or feel giddy because we laugh. |
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Who would have thought, even as little as a year ago, that we would be facing this conundrum, and having to weigh up the interests of agricultural product processors against those of the farmers who produce the products. |
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This conundrum has been known as the West Lothian question for nearly 40 years, since the MP for the seat at the time, Tam Dalyell, first asked it. |
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He then presents a novel solution to CTM's epiphenomenalist conundrum. |
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He is pro exercise but against physical exertion, quite a conundrum. |
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Kerry Killinger solved the conundrum of finding time for spontaneous brainstorming by institutionalizing an informal coffee klatsch on the executive floor. |
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I would not dare even attempt an answer to this Flaubertian conundrum. |
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