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The exceptionalism
noun
The state of being special, exceptional or unique
Exact(42)
The exceptionalism of Goldman Sachs has taken another knock.
"The exceptionalism part of it is a political strategy that is going to have to be stomached until we have fair immigration policy," said Maria Chavez-Pringle, the department chair of politics and government at Pacific Lutheran University, in an interview with VICE.
But there is one big difference between the "exceptionalism" debates in the two countries.
He explains that "the sanctity of the city grew out of the exceptionalism of the Jews as the Chosen People.
The deep structure of sentences was something revealed by Noam Chomsky, a strident advocate of the exceptionalism of human language.
When will Western media view the challenges in this part of the world not through the "exceptionalism of Muslims," but through an appreciation of the global human condition?
Similar(18)
But when it comes to the people running the country, exceptionalism is suspect; leaders should be — as Palin, O'Donnell and Angle keep saying — just like you.
For all of the talk of American exceptionalism, the U.S. is exceptionally bad in the treatment of its workers.
This is the myth of exceptionalism – the notion that through talent, determination and luck, anyone can trounce their born circumstances.
Few making this argument, however, seem to realize the peculiar origins of the phrase "American exceptionalism" or the idea's troublesome implications for the study of history.
The real exceptionalism, which goes unspoken, is that which showed any resistance to the bonds of white supremacy.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com