tout court การใช้
- None of these philosophers are eliminativists " tout court ".
- The reference to " Landmark " " tout court " disparages other respectable entities which use the name " Landmark ".
- Instead an enlightened person would just work to end suffering " tout court ", without thinking of the conventional concept of persons.
- No doubt many thousands of people sincerely belive that they can best characterize Landmark Education as a " business " " tout court ".
- Viceversa I agree he cannot be considered an expert about pandeism " tout court "-- talk ) 20 : 55, 12 March 2014 ( UTC)
- The Annalistes, especially Lucien Febvre, advocated a " histoire totale ", or " histoire tout court ", a complete study of a historical problem.
- Those persuaded by Burgess's approach do not say, tout court, either that it is rational to one-box or that it is rational to two-box.
- England's Tudor monarch Henry VIII rejected " tout court " the juridical primacy of the Bishop of Rome and his papal successors in favour of his own royal supremacy.
- While many older speakers refer to the language as Krio or Pidgin, most present-day speakers refer to it as Pichinglis, Pichin with a nasalised final vowel or Pichi tout court.
- However, by distinguishing between homosexual orientation and homosexual acts, the Vatican directive was technically according to Archbishop Timothy Dolan of New York " not " tout court " a no-gays policy ".
- :: Tendentious editing : should Gibraltar be described as self-governing, tout court, in the lead, when there are multiple impeccable sources describing the limits ( mild / only for emergency but real ) to its powers of self-government?
- When James was looking for anti-Puritan allies, he found this party willing, and, although few members of this party actually accepted the Arminian position " tout court ", they were quickly labeled " the Arminian party " by the Puritans.
- So it caught my attention again that when King Abdullah was assassinated, it wasn't a Palestinian Arab ( Mustafa Ashu of the the Sheikh Jarrah suburb of Jerusalem ) but a Palestinian " tout court ", a good example of double-standard composition . etc . talk ) 12 : 35, 9 July 2008 ( UTC)
- For its centenary in 1948, its publication was no longer the exclusive domain of Marxists and academicians; general publishers too printed the " Manifesto " in large numbers . " In short, it was no longer only a classic Marxist document, " Hobsbawm noted, " it had become a political classic " tout court " ."
- Lyrically, Nekfeu proves that he is one of the best lyricists at the moment and that is set to last . " " L'info tout court " remarked that the album " stands out for its lack of melodies ( except for the Clara Luciani feature on the melancholy " Avant tu riais " ), and its cold and metallic atmosphere ."
- So, for instance, if we are dealing with girls, qua units, and know how to compare two girls in respect of the property clever we can sensibly say Joan is the cleverest girl in her class but not Joan is the cleverest girl tout court, as the latter statement purports to quantify over all the things falling into the species girl.
- While I am as skeptical as anyone about whether there can be a non-blank " list of honest politicians " ( or of honest people " tout court " ), the " keep " opinions make the valid point that whether a political leader is indeed " renowned for their integrity ", as the list is now entitled, is a matter of collecting reliable sources to that effect, and not of editorial opinion ( read : original research ).
- I understand the objection that an admin who's not trusted to do x should not be trusted to be an admin " tout court ", but I disagree ( the best solution would be to unbundle the sysop toolset, but, unfortunately, that won't happen any time soon ) : we have " technical " admins who do great things and are sorely needed and we also have admins who are great at doing repetitive tasks but who lack the people's skills required to deal with a person who is being troublesome but is neither a vandal nor another kind of malicious editor and I don't see any reason why we should deprive ourselves of the good these admins can do to the encyclopaedia . . . Regarding the procedure to actually impose a sanction, I'd say that the current one governing sanctions on editors is adequate and see no reason to create a new process . . . "'