The history of the Bank provides ample testimony to its propensity for torpidity. |
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Attachment theory emphasizes the propensity for human beings to make and maintain powerful affectional bonds. |
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Many of us lack the leisure or propensity for deep, inquiring relationships with our aging parents. |
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It would be misleading to assert that a woodwind trio has a propensity for entertaining music rather than solid serious stuff. |
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Both saphenous veins are clinically important because of their propensity for becoming varicosed. |
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He's just incredibly ignorant and ill-informed, with a propensity for sweeping unresearched generalisations. |
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For whatever reason, I believe band possesses this propensity for rocking out. |
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Given its propensity for recording literal truth, the camera seems at odds with the interpretive truth of the art on the walls. |
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The narcos' propensity for gold-plated toilets and loud parties has not endeared them to their neighbors in the fashionable districts. |
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Andrea Seppi, a creative photographer from Germany, combines a trigger-happy attitude with propensity for perfection. |
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It seems unlikely that overnight my son has developed the male propensity for uncommunicativeness. |
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The connection between propensity for risk-taking behaviors and body art is supported by previous research, primarily with college age subjects. |
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Combine these qualities of self-denial and there is a propensity for deep unhappiness. |
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Today his reputation as a composer is only rivalled by his propensity for writing musical dramas of an unparalleled length. |
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Despite his exemplary crooning ability and his propensity for loungey arrangements, his was never an easy career to sum up. |
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With their propensity for schoolboy humour and scatology, they deal with the subject by uproarious laughter. |
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The Brits, with their propensity for schoolboy humour and scatology, deal with the subject by uproarious laughter. |
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Given my propensity for frittering it away, it's better that I have a legal obligation to pay it to her. |
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The propensity for people enriched by capital gains to borrow and spend is gradually diminishing. |
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Furthermore, the model postulates that individuals vary in their propensity for both excitation and inhibition. |
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It reflects more than the senator's indisputable propensity for mischief-making. |
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Due to the proximity of and propensity for renal cell carcinoma to spread to the adrenal cortex, this possibility should be excluded. |
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The government is acting in line with its age-old propensity for heavy-handedness. |
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Groups of Hies are introduced into the top of the cylinder, where they remain temporarily due to their natural propensity for negative geotaxis. |
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Others find her propensity for tacky glamour and ostentatious lack of decent clothing a little too much to bear. |
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Towards the end of his reign he showed an increasing propensity for paranoia. |
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It is better to look for those tulips with a natural propensity for repeat performance. |
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Their propensity for misalignment and poor passing was only exceeded by their ability to kick good ball away. |
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Every advance in knowledge has to be earned by a painful struggle against our spontaneous propensity for ignorance. |
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It's about populism and the national propensity for sheer ignorance and execrable taste in visual art. |
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As the search for effective antivenom goes on, the rattlers continue in their propensity for remaining placid until disturbed. |
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A hallmark of H. influenzae infections in bronchiectasis and COPD is their propensity for recurrence. |
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That's hard to imagine, given the creature's resistance to domestication and its propensity for using its quills to keep humans away. |
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I feel like people with chin straps have a high propensity for wearing jorts. |
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Alex is extremely intelligent with a propensity for fits of anger and uncontrollable rage. |
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McAndrews agreed that the androgenic hormone pill would be problematic for those with a genetic propensity for Ada. |
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Scientists, particularly those from developed nations, have a propensity for identifying problems and methodologies to address them. |
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She wavered between hesitancy and her natural propensity for fun. |
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They have a propensity for preventive, personalised, joined-up service delivery – exactly the things the government says it is looking for. |
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Right now, it could tell an employer that a job applicant might have a propensity for heart trouble in the future, or for Parkinson's disease. |
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The propensity for ad-libs lends a natural feel to the dialogue that suits the actor and character, and this is probably the strength of the film. |
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As experience mounted the time taken for surgery fell, bigger fenestra were created and the propensity for iatrogenic trauma and hence postoperative scarring diminished. |
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I think the main reason why I had won this award is that I have a propensity for publishing externally. |
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Street gangs pose a significant public safety threat through their high propensity for violence, which tends to be spontaneous and opportunistic. |
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Children are active by nature and by the harnessing of this propensity for doing they can be directed towards positive outcomes. |
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Maybe I have a propensity for those sort of muddles, but maybe I'd rather have a propensity for that sort of a muddle, for my demonstrative pronouns are very dear to me. |
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He doesn't suffer fools gladly and has a propensity for telling the truth. |
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This test is conducted on human volunteers who have a propensity for breakouts. |
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Rail manufactured prior to the late 1930s using this process have a known propensity for entrapping inclusions. |
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This ensures that no basepair in the DNA double helix, regardless of its sequence context, acquires a very high thermodynamic propensity for opening. |
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For Celtic's French defender has shown a propensity for injudicious decision-making when finding himself in the white heat of colossal continental confrontations. |
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It also shows that they are single, with no dependants, and that there is a high propensity for them to return to their native homes. |
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They must doubt everything I write with my propensity for typos. |
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But if you have a natural curiosity, a carefree attitude and a propensity for fun, then giddy-up! |
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Milosevic illustrated very clearly his propensity for pursuing asymmetric approaches. |
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Kyrgios sometimes elicits comparisons to Monfils, if only because they both have a propensity for tweeners. |
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He is said to have a propensity for making off-color remarks and riding people extremely hard. |
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For it soon became clear that this movement had a propensity for street violence, directed at a common enemy: the police. |
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Owing to the growing prison overpopulation, crowding has worsened for detainees, and with it a propensity for violence. |
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Some privacy advocates think that our propensity for being unnerved by drones will end up being a boon to privacy. |
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I fail at this, and I have a propensity for misconduct, but I learn in the end. |
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Pensak's propensity for innovation has led to 38 patents and made him a multimillionaire. |
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This format was greatly appreciated due to its propensity for promoting discussion and networking. |
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There may prove absolute barriers to engineering propensity for complex behaviors, all of which are environmentally mediated. |
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There is an increased propensity for sleep especially in the early afternoon, which is generally known as the early-afternoon energy slump. |
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As annual household income increases the propensity for seal hunt opponents to change their minds and support the hunt decreases. |
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Denmark reported that its small recorded increase was not solely an increase in actual incidents, but also an increased propensity for kidnappings to be reported. |
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However, breeds that reach a mature body weight of over 50 pounds have a propensity for a number of developmental bone problems that can be responsive to nutrition. |
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These tumours have a propensity for hematogenous dissemination. |
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Caution should be observed when using a drug of this category in patients who may have a propensity for development of defects in cardiac conduction. |
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Shogan discounts the two most serious charges made against political journalists: that a liberal bias skews their coverage, and that a propensity for scandalmongering damages the political process. |
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In sum, the various capacity expansions do not point to a propensity for US exporting producers to dump on the Community market because of the likely match of supply and demand on a worldwide level. |
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The first and most serious criticism concerns the Commission's propensity for rather grandiloquent self-satisfaction with regard to the European Union and for a cursory and even condescending view of our partners. |
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It seems that as time goes on, there is a greater propensity for people to get involved in schemes that are the plan of someone who has sat down, concentrated and drawn up a Ponzi scheme or some type of scam. |
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Strummer had his own propensity for depression. |
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His propensity for proving doubters wrong is already obvious. |
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Mr. Duquette's propensity for embellishment is reflected in numerous lots. |
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Zilkens advises persons with a propensity for high blood pressure to drink not more than two alcohol units per day: beer, wine? the one, or indeed the other. |
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The two main political parties in Canada, who have until now taken turns in government, seem to have quite a particular propensity for attacking seniors. |
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Unfortunately, it is often not fully appreciated that the genetic propensity for rapid growth rate, co-selected with mature body size, is associated with potentially negative consequences. |
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A perfect score, indicating zero perceived propensity to pay bribes, is 10.0, and thus the ranking below starts with companies from countries that are seen to have a low propensity for foreign bribe paying. |
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In the next section, we use multivariate analysis techniques to measure the association between these and other variables and the propensity for young people to confide in their father. |
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For example, we might try to find out whether the well-being of a community is associated with a greater propensity for its members to turn to their neighbours for help. |
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The other problem is the propensity for the EU to bring in legislative regimes well ahead of the ability of national governments to create the necessary infrastructure to support them. |
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To avoid markers with a propensity for homoplasy, we used only those indels with 2 allelic variants and devoid of substantial sequence repeats. |
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The propensity for nationalistic feeling varies greatly across the UK, and can rise and fall over time. |
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Siltstones differ significantly from sandstones due to their smaller pores and higher propensity for containing a significant clay fraction. |
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Not only is there no special propensity for cancer causation among chlorines, the addition of chlorine can actually detoxify certain compounds. |
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Diabetes could be controlled and the propensity for heart disease may be reduced, for instance, by adding pistachio nuts to one's diet. |
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Given his propensity for screw-ups and self pity, DHH isn't the easiest character to stick with, and it takes Lee a while to find the man's center. |
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Sympathetic paragangliomas have a greater propensity for secretion and are divided into pheochromocytomas of the adrenal medulla and extra-adrenal paragangliomas. |
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Hem fir is preferred by many builders because of its ability to hold and not be split by nails and screws, and its low propensity for splintering when sawed. |
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Perinatal exposure of rodents to low doses of bisphenol A has been associated with altered mammary gland development and increased propensity for mammary tumors later in life. |
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The propensity for damage is enhanced by monocultural farming practices, especially where the caterpillar is specifically adapted to the host plant under cultivation. |
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It is also important to recognize that spindle and desmoplastic melanomas have higher propensity for neurotropism, thus resulting in high local recurrence. |
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