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There's a more open, wider definition for jazz".
He added that Americans have a wider definition of what culture is.
The IMF uses the wider definition to reach its $5.3 trillion figure.
New York is now focusing on a wider definition of affordable housing than previously, to help more middle-income households.
But in 2000, the Labour government enacted for the first time a new permanent Terrorism Act which produced a new much wider definition of terrorism.
What proved to be controversial was the government's decision to create a wider definition of terrorism that included the use of "serious violence against persons or property".
Theatre, he believes, reveals what people care about at a given time and is part of a wider definition of culture.
It is an example, she says, of "the wider definition of heritage" under which "heritage is everything in the past, everybody's story".
In many ways these shocking, and illegal, attempts to intimidate are easier to spot and deal with than the wider definition, which represents a general meanness that often exists in online debate.
PAGE 14 Trial Ending on Sex Slavery The first international trial to focus entirely on war crimes of sexual violence ends this week, and is expected to deliver a new and wider definition of slavery.
Along with that wider definition, doctors have been diagnosing autism earlier and more frequently, said Dr. Melissa Nishawala, director of the Autism Spectrum Disorders Service at New York University.
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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