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McDonnell was always a vehement reformer, but Corbyn has a more ambivalent record.
Sanders comes from a rural state with plenty of hunters, and he's had a rather ambivalent record on gun control, sometimes voting for it and sometimes voting against it.
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Ambivalent records, i.e. when the identity of an individual was ambiguous, were excluded (7.1% and 4.8% of total records of EPT and CPT, respectively).
He is, he says, "very ambivalent about recording" and, because he wants to make "recordings that sound like recordings", he chooses to work with technologies that very obviously impose themselves on what is recorded and how it is heard.
Perhaps because of this, I've been ambivalent about recording.
The record is ambivalent as to whether Purcell (himself a countertenor) used a tenor with a particularly high range (though lighter at the top) and tessitura (known sometimes as a haute-contre, the descendants of the contratenors alti of medieval polyphony) or a falsettist.
In her ruling, Judge Johnson said the recording "was ambivalent at best".
Doctors were ambivalent about opening their records, concerned that patients would demand more of their time as a result, or be worried and confused, said Ms. Walker, the study's senior author.
Many Indonesians are deeply ambivalent about Mr. Suharto's record.
In "Nobody Knows.," his squirrelly second record, he seems ambivalent about what to do with it.
Clinton's likeliest rival, the Senate Majority Leader, Bob Dole, is also on record as being ambivalent toward the press.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com