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The right to strike is considered a fundamental right whose derogation would be inimical to the proper functioning of employer/employee collective bargaining in democratic societies.
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From that celestial origin, the term's meaning expanded beyond the strictly religious, coming to mean something akin to "an embodiment, or object of worship," as in David Masson's 1859 derogation of John Donne (a poet whose claim to the metaphysical was of a wholly different stripe) in his book "The Life of John Milton".
Izar, by whom continually letters are written, whose contents have for their purpose a derogation of my skill.
'No,' sighs our antihero, whose life is, in fact, one of arses, self-loathing, arses, sexual frustration, arses, coke and yet more arses (whether as objects of admiration, derogation or lust, Winkler is obsessed with them).
Moreover, Stephen Dale, of FEE, argues that all the derogations, combined with reduced paperwork controls, could spawn other fraud, such as more cheating on corporation tax.According to Donato Raponi, a commission official whose job is to "fight against fiscal fraud", the EU's system is basically "very good".
Whose crime and whose punishment?
Depends on whose mind, whose soul.
And know whose socks are whose.
But whose home?
And small by whose?
But by whose standards?
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com