Sentence examples for discourse for instance from inspiring English sources

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Job hunters today must learn to navigate the sometimes slippery social mores of online discourse for instance, learning to promote themselves without coming off as self-involved.

It is more glittery, perhaps, but also less respectful of the rule of law, stubbornly unreformed economically and more distant from European correctness in its public discourse, for instance on issues of sex and race.

We will use the tools learned in the previous parts to trace ideology in different forms of discourse, for instance, the building of Latin identity in music, sexism in advertisement, the Latin bourgeois family in soap operas, and political discourse.

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Balancing human rights discourses (for instance, the right of a single mother to migrate for economic reasons), in the context of social and health impact to both families and remittance dependent economies form formidable policy challenges for governments seeking to 'manage' migration and development.

She has been using the theory to study the use of intonation to convey information about discourse structure, for instance how tones demark, in spoken language, some of the structure that paragraphs and parentheses indicate in written language.

Such criteria should rather emphasize the diverse, indirect yet valuable influences that SPIs can have on broader policy discourses including, for instance, agenda-setting and the diffusion of programmatic policy ideas (such as, for example, Emissions Trading Schemes).

With the exception of celebrity campaigns apparently conceived as some kind of satirical dare – BBC3 sending Lindsay Lohan to India to discourse on human trafficking, for instance – it has become one of the orthodoxies of the age that entertainer advocacy is a good and effective thing.

Elsewhere in Being and Time, the text strongly suggests that discourse has inauthentic modes, for instance when it is manifested as idle talk; and in yet other sections we find the claim that fallen-ness has an authentic manifestation called a moment-of-vision (e.g., Being and Time 68: 401).

In Part 5 of the Discourse on the Method, for instance, Descartes identifies the ability to use language as one of two features distinguishing people from "machines" or "beasts" and speculates that even the stupidest people can learn a language (when not even the smartest beast can do so) because human beings have a "rational soul" and beasts "have no intelligence at all".

The discourse of anti-abortion advocates, for instance, emphasizes the rights of the unborn in order to regulate female sexuality.

A discourse on cooking pork chops, for instance, comes with a memorable account of the vivid social and economic rituals set in motion whenever a woman decided to have a pig butchered.

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