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The material body of a life must be fragile in the sense that it must run the risk of disintegrating or ceasing to function.
When it has completely cooled remove the base from the cake – it will be fragile in the middle so handle it carefully.
Kymlicka (2016) pointed out that "local projects of intercultural interaction (will) always be fragile in the absence of an explicit state commitment to redefining nationhood" (p. 172).
Gaillard argues that in its initial formulation, vulnerability referred to "the social construct leading people to be fragile in the face of natural hazards and food shortages (Gaillard 2010: 219)".
Their lives seems to be fragile in the whirlpool of estrangement.
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However, unlike what one sees in many European countries, these cohabitations are fragile in the US.
Tottenham's defensive line was fragile in the early running and they struggled for offensive rhythm throughout the first half.
Graf, whose mental state had been fragile in the two difficult matches that preceded this one, reduced Sanchez Vicario's game to rubble while polishing her own.
He is fragile in the streets, afraid people will know what he's done, entirely sympathetic as he tackles a crash course in modern life.
What had been built to seem so solid was fragile in the face of time because time is impassive, more animal than human.
Mr Rogozin later softened Moscow's stance slightly, saying that the Russians understood that the ISS was "fragile in the literal and figurative sense", and that it would "act very pragmatically and not put obstacles in the way of work on the ISS".
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com