It made it harder for his sympathisers to dismiss the whole thorny question. |
|
Remove context and you remove the possibility of people thinking about awkward issues or raising thorny questions. |
|
Yet all of these thorny questions will have to be addressed when inevitably he has a much smaller majority. |
|
He addresses this thorny question in his third book on the science of belief. |
|
Companies today are now faced with the thorny question as to how they should spend their limited budgets. |
|
Scientists tackling the thorny problem of a foreign superweed hope a humble insect could halt its rampage across UK gardens. |
|
The last pitch is a memorable chimney with a thorny bush that you have to climb through. |
|
I must confess that on this thorny question of tobacco and alcohol sponsorship, I'd be a bit of a maverick. |
|
Whether to hold a diversified portfolio is one of those thorny questions that never fails to get a group of investors arguing. |
|
A fresh row has erupted over the thorny issue of a northern bypass for Witham. |
|
All of the long tines that identify thorny oysters easily were gone, but a few nubs remained. |
|
However, there are many marine parks and sanctuaries in which the thorny oysters may be found. |
|
By late prehispanic times, the thorny oyster was distributed widely throughout the central Andes. |
|
I can still see the vivid orange flesh of a large thorny oyster, its shell spread open and decorated with a quilt of coral. |
|
The twin problems of unresolved anaphors and cataphors are especially thorny. |
|
As I watch, it slips off the edge and rolls down the slope into a thicket of thorny bushes. |
|
Generations of British musicians have found Britishness to be a rather thorny subject. |
|
In Scotland, the fruit of the thorny shrub is called a bramble, while in England it is a blackberry. |
|
He didn't make life easy for himself by choosing a selection of rigorously unmelodic, rhythmically thorny music by Ligeti. |
|
He's confident, firm, unflustered and willing to debate the many thorny issues bedeviling SA rugby. |
|
|
Flowering quince is Chaenomeles, that dense, thorny, spring-blooming shrub that comes in all those incomparably rich and tarty hot colors. |
|
Without mandated standards, many corporate managers are left with some thorny ethical dilemmas. |
|
In the introduction, Lauret confronts the thorny questions of definition and categorization. |
|
Nearly all roses are well equipped with sharp thorns, and some are very thorny. |
|
In addition to the thorny proboscis, acanthocephalans are distinguished morphologically as cylindrical and unsegmented worms. |
|
The lack of consistency in program labels and definitions nationwide creates a thorny obstacle to research synthesis. |
|
Even more thorny is likely to be the issue of school rolls, allocation of places and admissions policies. |
|
Wild multiflora roses are considered a nuisance by hunters who have to trudge through the thorny plants. |
|
For at its heart this election has highlighted the thorny, divisive issue of what that flag stands for. |
|
Grow thorny plants like agave, barberry, cactus, Natal plum, and yucca under rear windows. |
|
As if sensing death they fought hard not to be caught, one beast even leaping the thorny fence. |
|
Yet all this activity detailing the history of the blues during the twentieth century obscures a few thorny questions. |
|
This is a large genus of usually thorny shrubs, including raspberries and blackberries. |
|
The moat was drained of water with only moss growing at the bottom and the outside walls crawling with thorny vines. |
|
Pruning thorny rose shrubs requires sturdy, thorn-proof gloves and safety glasses to protect your eyes. |
|
Peter has written rather more of this than he lets on, leaving thorny problems of attribution for future historians. |
|
Without pausing she went forward until tall salal, wild spiraea bushes and thorny blackberry wands barred her way. |
|
The issue of whether sport and politics should mix is a thorny one which endless talking will not smooth out. |
|
Well, they've dealt with some pretty thorny issues in a reasonably tasteful way. |
|
Avid orchid collectors often risk thorny undergrowth, mapepires and tarantulas in search of specimens. |
|
|
The vegetation consists of succulent plants, cacti and terrestrial bromeliads, with thorny trees and bushes hitched to a sandy soil. |
|
He killed 13 animals worth around USD 5,500, including a turtle, bearded dragons and thorny devil lizards. |
|
And scientific progress is a force that's apt to create, rather than solve, thorny ethical issues. |
|
She picked her way through the scattered broken branches and around the thorny brambles, trying to locate her friend. |
|
I begin my hike next to a rushing stream, picking my way through thorny bushes in search of the trail. |
|
He was a reforming works and pensions secretary who must tackle the thorny problems of invalidity and provision for old age. |
|
For instance, this thorny bush was growing near the entrance to our dormitory. |
|
Nests are built in cactuses or thorny vegetation or hanging from branches, and can be up to two meters long. |
|
Some species use twigs from thorny plants, making the nests difficult for predators to destroy. |
|
On my trip in Namibia, I watched from a blind amid the thorny scrub brush as a leopard crept up on a meal at sunset. |
|
It is a land that is difficult to grow anything in, except that flora which is tough, resourceful and thorny. |
|
Ignoring the stones sticking into his knees, Jack carefully parted the thorny branches. |
|
The Inuits' traditional caribou skin garments protect against severe cold, and a cowboy's chaps protect against thorny vegetation. |
|
It doesn't address the thorny issue of politely informing him that phubbing is obnoxious. |
|
My garden in Arizona is filled with strange succulent plants and small thorny trees with green trunks. |
|
The thorny branches almost seemed to reach out and grab him with each step he took, ensnaring him in their grasp. |
|
It was this thorny question which bogged down the Saturday night delegates. |
|
As I pause to take in the panoramic views, a squirrel runs out of a thorny hedgerow, searching for food. |
|
The plant itself is characterised by its long tapering sharp leaves with ribbed thorny ridges along the spine. |
|
Industry leaders met in Los Angeles Tuesday night for a seminar on the thorny problem of downloadable music. |
|
|
As the technology stands today, there's also the thorny question of deformed or reject clones. |
|
The big question is whether or not Namibia will take the bull by the horns and address the thorny question of inheritance. |
|
As time moved on, and in the process of looking for answers to difficult questions, the thorny issue of forgiveness cropped up. |
|
But in the UK, the important and thorny question of ethics is holding up research. |
|
In an effort to deal with this thorny question, I will propose a method for discerning the elements of worship. |
|
Later she addressed the thorny question of American independence from the mother country. |
|
Defining art's place in civil society is a no less thorny issue today. |
|
Given half a chance, she's rabbiting passionately about cultural strategies, architectural policies and the thorny problem of getting teenage girls into sport. |
|
Just to pluck at blind random one of the many very thorny Operation Relex circumstances from the bastardly murky and unexamined recent historical fray. |
|
Along with age-old border disputes, this is a thorny issue for Khmers, and bodes ill for the hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese living in Cambodia. |
|
Even at this time of the year, the very beginning of summer, it sprawls dry, thorny and desiccated, in shades of tan, amber, and a hundred browns. |
|
The sea buckthorn Hippophae rhamnoides should not be planted on sand dunes as its vigorous suckers can reduce species rich dunes to an impenetrable thorny thicket. |
|
The bark was extremely coarse and the branches were thorny and brittle. |
|
We walked through thick thorny brushes, till we could go no further. |
|
I described how I'd had to climb up a steep and dangerous rock face to a thorny bramble bush on a narrow ledge, from where I could hear the cat meowing. |
|
The thorny branches quickly entangled him, biting deeply into his skin. |
|
The white blossom stands out against the black thorny branches. |
|
And there's always that thorny question of what came before the big bang? |
|
The problem of personal identity can be thorny and frustrating. |
|
He is the only scholar to date to tackle that thorny question. |
|
|
In addition, they could swim the roughest rivers, pack heavy equipment, and browse on greasewood or thorny brush that other animals could not eat. |
|
Avoid thorny and spiny plants, which can cause serious eye injuries. |
|
But the politics of Hibernian equality are thorny, even among Hibernians. |
|
These are also the most thorny and fundamental issues affecting Taiwan's management of cross-strait trade and economic relations over the past decade. |
|
Two weeks before, she had pricked her index finger on a thorny cactus. |
|
Thorny bush, swamps and even tidal waves impeded early settlement, as did the belief that evil spirits inhabited the islands. |
|
Thorny shrubs planted outside ground floor windows can also be a good deterrent. |
|
Behind her, ten other zompires snarled at me, baring their own thorny fangs. |
|
The interpretation of the wavefunction was one of the thorny issues facing the early pioneers of quantum theory. |
|
The genus comprises about 20 species of thorny evergreen shrubs in the subfamily Faboideae of the pea family Fabaceae. |
|
In the Philippines, a local thorny oyster species known as Tikod Amo is a favorite seafood source in the southern part of the country. |
|
Thorny plants are unpleasant to rub against and trimmings from spikey, prickly plants placed under bird-feeders help protect our feathered friends. |
|
Another favourite from the mountain is the bluish-black berry found on the thorny boot trees. |
|
Elaeagnus pungens is a Chinese herb in the Oleaster family with the common name thorny olive or silverthorn. |
|
Other newcomers to the centre include 20 giant thorny stick insects plus fruit beetle grubs, sand lizards and Indian stick insects. |
|
Kumquats and thorny limes appear in China as early as the 7th century BC, along with loquats, persimmons, lichee, oranges and quince. |
|
Of course using washables ensures parents avoid the thorny issue of disposable nappies and over-full landfill sites. |
|
The savannah valley is shadeless, spotted only with the thorny ravel of mesquite bushes. |
|
I shall not attempt to enter on the thorny thicket of Jacob Behmen's polemical and apologetical works. |
|
The interior of the state is covered mostly by the dry thorny scrub vegetation called caatinga. |
|
|
Camels' mouths have a thick leathery lining, allowing them to chew thorny desert plants. |
|
They occur in a variety of habitats, such as grasslands, savannas, woodlands, thorny scrublands, mountains, and coastal hills. |
|
The thorny oyster Spondylus right and left valve interiors from the Pliocene of Cyprus. |
|
Similarly the issue of quartering the British regular troops became a thorny issue, with colonists objecting to their billeting in private homes. |
|
Thornless blackberry is a chimera, with the epidermal layers genetically thornless but the tissue beneath it genetically thorny. |
|
The thorny varieties are sometimes grown for game cover and occasionally for protection. |
|
Gorse is a valuable plant for wildlife, providing dense thorny cover ideal for protecting bird nests. |
|
Initially the NSCA guidance addressed the processes of assessing air quality problems and the thorny questions surrounding the declaration of Air Quality Management Areas. |
|
Bramble bushes have long, thorny, arching shoots and root easily. |
|
As our journey takes us deeper into the thorny scrub, we pass a large water hole speckled with Jabiru storks touching down and taking off in quick succession. |
|
We recently proposed a new genus of Thorny Lacewing from the Eocene amber of France. |
|
Root cuttings of thornless blackberries will revert to thorny type because the adventitious shoot develops from a cell that is genetically thorny. |
|
If you are unfamiliar with the thorny Elaeagnus, you may walk right by it, wondering at the mysterious source of the delightful scent that bewitches your nostrils. |
|