Sentence examples for continued realisation from inspiring English sources

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Welcoming the long awaited Bill as "another exceptional milestone and imperative step towards realising children's constitutional rights," UNICEF observed that the continued realisation of the rights of children in South Africa was one of the most intractable challenges of the post-apartheid society.

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"Taking account of the fact that until now we have not received permission from Bulgaria, we believe that in the current conditions Russia cannot continue with the realisation of this project," said Mr Putin, speaking alongside Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Ankara.

Through his teaching, Bedward's followers come to the realisation that slavery has continued by another name.

Books on Books came out of his realisation that, as rare photography books continued to shoot up in value, some of the greatest titles would all but disappear from public view.

It wasn't just the lethality of what had occurred on the eastern border that was troubling although it was the worst such "friendly fire" incident involving Pakistani forces in the ten years of the war but the realisation that the air strikes had continued unabated for up to two hours.

But then I'm reminded of why I spent eight years at university, costing £60,000 and continued into another seven years of training; and this realisation all occurs within the confines of a small consulting room and a four-hour morning surgery.

Few believe any more that a final status accord with the Palestinians is anywhere close to realisation, given the weakness and unreformed nature of the Palestinian Authority, continued Hamas rule in Gaza, and growing Islamist radicalisation among Palestinians.

Increasingly there is a realisation that because immigration was the main concern for most Leave voters, continued single market membership will be, as one minister put it, "politically unsellable", as it would involve accepting EU free-movement rules.

He continued to investigate late Restoration comedy, in 1983 with Simon Callow in Vanbrugh's The Relapse, and a sober realisation of Congreve's The Way of the World with Smith and Plowright (Chichester and London, 1984).

As he continued to chart the course of his illness, through treatment to terminal diagnosis and beyond, there was a growing realisation among both readers and editors alike that his immense facility for language, previously expended for the most part on the smallest of domestic issues, had disguised a writer of immense talent and skill.

The realisation that neurogenesis continues in the dentate gyrus into adult life has aroused considerable interest for several reasons.

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