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taken for granted造句
(1) The officials felt taken for granted and grumbled loudly. (2) Water is a precious commodity that is often taken for granted in the West. (3) Maureen There's nothing worse than being taken for granted. (4) Nothing is taken for granted, everything at every period is subjected to searching scrutiny. (5) The organic connection between the four elements was taken for granted. (6) It is simply taken for granted by the public that curriculum and examinations go together. (7) That seemed to me to be taken for granted and perfectly possible. (8) It is taken for granted that men do and should occupy the leadership roles and make the important decisions. (9) But free speech is taken for granted, and authorities have traditionally practiced minimum government. (10) Monarchy was as widely taken for granted at the end of the nineteenth century as is universal suffrage today. (11) It was taken for granted that for the first few months there wouldn't be very much. (12) It was taken for granted that the President would do whatever was asked of him to make the effort a success. (13) But things taken for granted attract less attention than the striking and untypical. (14) Water is a precious commodity too long taken for granted in the West. (15) The whole word flows as one-it is taken for granted. (16) The recession blindsided a lot of lawyers who had previously taken for granted their comfortable income. (17) We are having to re-educate the public very quickly about something they have always taken for granted. (18) All particulars should be carefully checked and verified; nothing should be taken for granted. (19) That institutions work in this way, contributing to the general statusquo, becomes taken for granted by Radcliffe-Brown. (20) We have, however, reached a point at which family functions can no longer be taken for granted. (21) It was the unsettling effect he had on her, making her question everything she'd always taken for granted. (22) Or rather, they laid down specific principles that were to be more or less taken for granted by subsequent positivists. (23) In the Politics the existence of the city-state is taken for granted. (24) Such problems received considerable attention at this time; it is clear that nothing was being taken for granted. (25) He claims he would like to bring these people into the Republican Party, but he refuses to be taken for granted. (26) In the vast majority of cases hierarchical inequality is taken for granted as part of the natural order of things. (27) Almost everywhere these edifices of civil engineering, the basis of life in urban Britain, have been taken for granted. (28) The relationship between parents and children can never be taken for granted. (29) Even the hardened expert will find something which illuminates in an original way some concept he has long taken for granted. (30) The symbols had a tinge of feminine superiority, an aura of vast power that was taken for granted.