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As highly educated immigrants, Chinese parents define success narrowly; more importantly, they invest their resources in achieving it.
A Conservative Home survey earlier this week suggested that she is narrowly more popular than May, who has been home secretary for six years.
And by the end Norwich looked like what they are: a game, spirited team lacking real incision, undone by moments of class from wasteful but narrowly more thoroughbred opposition.
She found something saintly and crazed in his undertaking, an element of self-denial, an element of penance.... Or he was a man escaping his past.... Was he at the movies to see a movie, she said, or maybe more narrowly, more essentially, simply to be at the movies?
Leo ponders the reason for his activity: "Was he at the movies to see a movie or maybe more narrowly, more essentially, simply to be at the movies?" Later, Leo says of his fellow communicants or co-religionists: "He did not speak to the others, ever, not a look directed their way.
Scotland also set quite narrowly, more suited to an up-and-out defence.
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Main findings were similar when catastrophic spending was defined narrowly versus more broadly to include less severe levels of spending.
More narrowly, within social gaming, women also play much more than men.
Perhaps only justified beliefs should qualify as evidence; or, more narrowly, only true justified beliefs; or, more narrowly still, only beliefs that amount to knowledge.
Other taxes are focused even more narrowly.
Would I have collected more narrowly?
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com