Two oft-cited earmark recipients are longtime Sens. From Wordnik.com. ['Unethical?'] Reference
"When, in the course of human events" is an oft-cited line. From Wordnik.com. [Mariangela Anzalone: There ISN'T anything wrong with that] Reference
What about that oft-cited rising industrial production figure?. From Wordnik.com. [The New Deal Jobs Myth] Reference
According to the oft-cited 2007 survey, the industry can use the help. From Wordnik.com. [Ad Industry Teams Up With University Of Missouri For New Ethics Institute] Reference
And I see absolutely nothing on the oft-cited 1776 map of Don Bernardo. From Wordnik.com. [The Material Culture of Pueblo Bonito] Reference
So where does the oft-cited "greed and corruption on Wall Street" fit in?. From Wordnik.com. [Corporate Hell-Raiser] Reference
"Share and share alike" is an oft-cited tenet of the free software movement. From Wordnik.com. [Open source IQ test] Reference
A principal reason for this is the oft-cited figure of 46 million uninsured Americans. From Wordnik.com. [What Do We Really Know About the Uninsured?] Reference
There is an oft-cited reason for this; it comes under the heading of "job satisfaction.". From Wordnik.com. [On Yankee Station]
But on the Web, it became one of the oft-cited "irregularities" in the 2004 election in Ohio. From Wordnik.com. [What really happened: lockdown in Warren County, OH, 2004] Reference
Recently, an oft-cited study from New Zealand that looks at the local food argument was upd. From Wordnik.com. [Graham Hill: Eating Local or Not: It Depends] Reference
The oft-cited argument against a more proportional system is that it would allow in extremists. From Wordnik.com. [For Tories, STV is the answer] Reference
A lack of private facilities to give testimony at police stations was another oft-cited problem. From Wordnik.com. [ANC Daily News Briefing] Reference
But one of the most oft-cited benefits of such a setup is the chance to collaborate with other tenants. From Wordnik.com. [Freelance Office Space: The New Second Bedroom] Reference
Surely, it would take more than the oft-cited handful of rushes to establish a swamp on such a hillside. From Wordnik.com. [The American Journal of Archaeology, 1893-1] Reference
According to Dr. Fine, this undermines the oft-cited argument that consumption spikes drive price increases. From Wordnik.com. [OpEdNews - Diary: Energy Security and the Regulation Imperative in a New Economic Era] Reference
So, to use an oft-cited example, people being laid off in Europe do not need to be terrified of getting sick. From Wordnik.com. [The Engine That Could] Reference
This is one way to understand the oft-cited distinction between the "real economy" and the "financial economy.". From Wordnik.com. [Barry Schwartz: In Defense of "Inefficiency"] Reference
And surely, John McCain's oft-cited reputation as a heroic warrior-aviator is among his greatest political assets. From Wordnik.com. [The "Hero" Who Runs from the Battlefield] Reference
He makes passing references to Green Day, "The Addams Family," "American Idol" and our era's oft-cited Wall Street-vs. From Wordnik.com. [In 'Sycamore Trees' at Signature Theatre, Marc Kudisch stays true to his roots] Reference
The oft-cited measure of cement's impact on global warming is one ton of carbon dioxide for every ton of cement produced. From Wordnik.com. [Bay Area Cement Plants and Global Warming] Reference
One oft-cited exception is Michael Moore, but what has he ever said to compare to what, say, Beck says on a nightly basis?. From Wordnik.com. [Michael J.W. Stickings: Right-Left Equivalency and the Inside-the-Beltway Stupidity of Howard Kurtz] Reference
Catholic opposition to birth control was one of the most oft-cited policy areas latched onto by the anti-papal Protestants. From Wordnik.com. [John R. Bohrer: Kennedy, the Pill and Conservatives for Contraception] Reference
Even Richard Lindzen, one of MP's most oft-cited sceptics, accepts that some global warming has occurred over the last century. From Wordnik.com. [On Thursday, the Legg report will be published along with...] Reference
The Huffington Post has become, according to The New York Times, "a well-known, oft-cited news media brand in the blink of an eye.". From Wordnik.com. [Jay Rosen: Zack Exley and Amanda Michel Join OffTheBus.Net. Press Release, June 19, 2007] Reference
Hearkening back to and paraphrasing Mr. Justice Stewart's oft-cited formula for defining pornography: You'll know it when you see it. From Wordnik.com. [Lionel: Gatesgate: They've All Got It Wrong.] Reference
And while oft-cited methods such as increasing social-welfare payouts would take years, there is a more immediate remedy: urbanization. From Wordnik.com. [Chinomics: China Can Urbanize Its Way to Prosperity] Reference
"From almost any page," he declared, in a bizarre and oft-cited passage, "a voice can be heard ... commanding: 'To a gas chamber -- go!'". From Wordnik.com. [Rand and the Right] Reference
Legendary college football coach Bill McCartney set the standard high for all terrestrial pursuits with this oft-cited rhetorical chestnut. From Wordnik.com. [Paul Gunther: A Great Design Would Help Park51 Transcend Cultural Borders] Reference
As one oft-cited study puts it, "The results of this study offer preliminary support for the validity of the evaluations on RateMyProfessors. com.". From Wordnik.com. [Methodology] Reference
Layoff numbers from the Chicago outplacement firm of Challenger, Gray & Christmas, an oft-cited source, are fill of holes, as the firm readily admits. From Wordnik.com. [The Hit Men] Reference
Consider this oft-cited comparison: in 1979 a recent male college graduate earned 30 percent more than his high-school counterpart; by 1993 the gap was 70 percent. From Wordnik.com. [The Myth Of Cyber Inequality] Reference
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