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stuart造句
(181) Stuart Chase and others have come near to claiming that all abstract words are meaningless, and have used this as a pretext for advocating a kind of political quietism. (182) Mike: Come on dad, Stuart was not, it was peppy . (183) Drambuie's recipe was given to the MacKinnon family out of gratitude by rebel Prince Charles Edward Stuart (better known as Bonnie Prince Charlie) after they hid him on the Isle of Skye. (184) Stuart Pearce even considered the young Ramsey as a possible captain of the GB team before picking veteran Giggs. (185) K. Fisher in her book "The Gastronomical Me, " Ms. Stuart liked to cook Sunday dinners for them. (186) Muscle physiology expert Stuart Phillips of McMaster University in Canada said he was quite convinced by the study results. (187) What makes the class so compelling is the way Sandel uses real-life examples to illustrate the philosophies of the likes of Aristotle, Immanuel Kant and John Stuart Mill. (188) The period from the late Tudor to the early Stuart was the conversion period which was originated from the mid-century of British society with increasingly modern characteristics. (189) Production designer Stuart Craig says that the exterior of the orphanage was inspired by a building he came across while location scouting on the dockside in Liverpool. (190) "We will remain in a very sloppy bottoming process," says Stuart Schweitzer, global market strategist for the JPMorgan Private Bank in New York. (191) Another view that might be taken by researchers is John Stuart Mill's utilitarianism. (192) The last of the Stuart monarchs, Queen Anne, died in 1714 and the British throne passed to the Hanoverian king George I, a German protestant who could speak no English. (193) HSBC Chief Executive Stuart Gulliver had said in February that the group planned to reveal quarterly reports starting in the second half of the year. (194) Mother worries about Stuart and me fooling around these lakes as it is. (195) 'Some have proposed it as another reference to 2012, but I remain rather unconvinced, ' said David Stuart, a specialist in Mayan epigraphy at the University of Texas at Austin. (196) The belief is that this process will reveal the truth, just as the best idea will triumph in what John Stuart Mill called the "marketplace of ideas." (197) The producer is Stuart Oken, former executive vice president of Walt Disney Co.'s theatrical division, who helped bring 'The Lion King' to Broadway. (198) So why did it take so long to remove Stuart Copperman from his private practice? (199) Leon Stuart reported what he saw to the publication The Strolling Astronomer. (200) A man named Leon Stuart of Tulsa , Oklahoma , was taking pictures of the moon. (201) HSBC's investment banking division suffered a fall in profits year-on-year but still had its second-best six months in history and is now hiring 400 more staff, its head Stuart Gulliver said. (202) Another early petition was presented by John Stuart Mill, the philosopher, political economist and Member of Parliament, in 1866. (203) The appalling truth is out, although a tantalizing portion of it vanished forever when Charles Stuart jumped to his death into the icy waters of the Mystic River. (204) Likewise, Stuart Townsend plays a nebulously likable best friend who flirts openly with Frank's wife, but has his back when things get rough. (205) Tradition has it that the Stuart kings were curlers, and both Mary Queen of Scots and Darnley are reputed to have played. (206) Also, the cat "Snowbell" hates Stuart to be his master. He will lose face if a mouse to be him master, and Snowbell expends all his energies to hurt Stuart (ex: eat or kill). (207) Never let Chairman Mao write the article "Goodby , Leighton , Stuart" again, When in 1946, American left China, but came back in 1972, why? (208) The story of Nonsuch and the other forests of increasing returns, as well as the data from Stuart Pimm's microcosms overlap into a powerful lesson that Pimm calls the Humpty Dumpty Effect. (209) Freegans like Stuart would stand no chance of survival in China coz we would "tamper" with the "best before", "sell by" labels when it is due. (210) Stuart Butler of the Heritage Foundation, a right-wing think-tank, argues that their approach is a scorched-earth policy that will lead to "great uncertainty for a few years".