"Sadly, people use the word pervasively even if they don't realise it," Kirsten Seckler, spokeswoman for the Special Olympics added. From Wordnik.com. [AustralianIT.com.au | Top Stories] Reference
"Sadly, people use the word pervasively even if they don't realize it," "People with intellectual disabilities have fought their whole lives for understanding and recognition. From Wordnik.com. [ImNotObsessed.com] Reference
But it's different in that it's not as pervasively disrupted. From Wordnik.com. [The Sooner the Better] Reference
Politics distorted the process more subtly -- more pervasively. From Wordnik.com. [Did the government overpay in the auto bailout?] Reference
Many of these representations were pervasively known to be false. From Wordnik.com. [Fred Silberberg: The Ultimate Act of Cowardice in the Prop 8 Case] Reference
Maybe it was that the name had been so pervasively in her mind recently. From Wordnik.com. [Drowned Hopes]
Medicine is pervasively regulated, from drug approvals to nursing-home rules. From Wordnik.com. [Health-Care Nation] Reference
But nobody could then have guessed how pervasively they would shape our lives. From Wordnik.com. [The First Round] Reference
If so, then moral reasoning will pervasively pull us away from the first order. From Wordnik.com. [Moral Reasoning] Reference
The only pervasively happy life for man is the life of cooperation and loyalty. From Wordnik.com. [Problems of Conduct] Reference
And she echoes previous complaints of a pervasively racist atmosphere at the paper. From Wordnik.com. [Third Staffer Joins Suit Against Post] Reference
Frank Nelson loved the ministry, and his convictions glowed and radiated pervasively. From Wordnik.com. [Frank H. Nelson of Cincinnati] Reference
The powerlessness I experienced on that day was utterly and pervasively overwhelming. From Wordnik.com. [Jon Host: Seven Years Later, a Service Mandate] Reference
We've been too pervasively susceptible to confusing ends and means and needs and wants. From Wordnik.com. [Chip Conley: What We Measure Matters] Reference
Like the acceleration, the deceleration happened too swiftly and pervasively to be felt. From Wordnik.com. [Starfarers]
The other answer is that Europe — and not just Muslim Europe — is pervasively anti-Semitic. From Wordnik.com. [Europe Reverts to Type] Reference
Refracted through the medium of poetry and drama, they may appear beautiful pervasively and long. From Wordnik.com. [Human Traits and their Social Significance] Reference
More pervasively, it threatens to make cynicism about another's motives acceptable even rational. From Wordnik.com. [Cristina Page: Higher Ground] Reference
Premise (B): Mystics of different mystical traditions possess pervasively different conceptual schemes. From Wordnik.com. [Mysticism] Reference
Moslems there feel pervasively misunderstood and sneered at for what is most precious to them, their faith. From Wordnik.com. [The Calming Effect of Religions Tolerance] Reference
Similarly, Auto-Tune is a tool in the music or audio industry that's used pervasively for corrective methods. From Wordnik.com. [CNN Transcript Jul 31, 2009] Reference
It would be a platform that would demonstrate more pervasively the idea of recognizing messages from all sides. From Wordnik.com. [Monroe Price: Changing International Broadcasting in the Obama Era?] Reference
We need to shine the light on how pervasively this occurs in schools and universities in America and around the globe. From Wordnik.com. [The Almontaser Case & the Fact that Many in Education Have to Fall on their Sword or Take Dives for Bad Leadership] Reference
Today, we face horizontal proliferation -- with arsenals at a lower level, but spread more pervasively around the world. From Wordnik.com. [Remarks By Samuel R Berger To Georgetown University] Reference
Since connectionism does not guarantee systematicity, it does not explain why systematicity is found so pervasively in human cognition. From Wordnik.com. [Connectionism] Reference
Disruption is the causal mechanism behind the "creative destruction" that Schumpeter saw so pervasively at work in capitalist economies. From Wordnik.com. [Clayton M. Christensen: The Past and Future of General Motors] Reference
The intelligence, to be sure, was flawed, but it wasn't so pervasively flawed as to prevent people from reaching the correct conclusions. From Wordnik.com. [Ankush Khardori: In Search of a Better Apology] Reference
Now, if you want to write your lede like so -- "President Obama, struggling to ameliorate pervasively bad economic conditions" -- I can get with that. From Wordnik.com. [What We Have Here Is A Failure To Communicate, About Communications] Reference
I won't be paying attention to those articles either, as I'm genuinely curious as to how Obama plans to ameliorate the pervasively bad economic conditions!. From Wordnik.com. [What We Have Here Is A Failure To Communicate, About Communications] Reference
Rather, the beneficial nature of these virtues requires their being pervasively and consistently expressed throughout a society in accordance with a general rule (T 490). From Wordnik.com. [Kant and Hume on Morality] Reference
An oxymoron is a faux paradox, an incongruity that arises not out of the pervasively contradictory nature of the universe but out of a clumsy or deceptive misuse of language. From Wordnik.com. [Fierce Invalids Home From Hot Climates]
Despite the unifying theoretical vision suggested by this doctrine, much of Neu's work explores the pervasively messy and multifarious ways in which emotions influence our lives. From Wordnik.com. [Emotion] Reference
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