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Espousing a Cause Some nonprofit groups have board members who are married to their work.
We don't know why, but it's a fact that lately every time the Post has espoused a cause, that cause, becomes both dead and absured.
Thereafter you were radicalised and each became an extremist – espousing a cause and views which, as has been said elsewhere, are a betrayal of Islam and of the peaceful Muslim communities who give so much to our country.
In February, the Supreme Court of India rejected a woman's plea to recognize marital rape as a criminal offense, saying that she was "espousing a personal cause, and not a public cause".
Maciek is a slightly dandified Polish Hamlet who has fought in the uprising but is now uncertain about continuing to espouse an inevitably lost cause against the left.
The difficulty about espousing any cause, however well intentioned, is that a significant number are bound to dissent.
The Ugandan-born churchman has espoused a weird variety of causes, making him impossible to categorise.
Even if, like May, she has not only espoused a range of women's causes, but modelled a "This Is What a Feminist Looks Like" T-shirt.
Many viewed him as a martyr for continuing to espouse his cause, and some thought the king had lost more than he gained by having him executed.
Richard described his grandfather as a feminist and appeared proud to continue to espouse the cause himself.
"We totally espouse the cause of Proust: refinement, dandyism," Darel told _Libération _at the time.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com