It is now widely accepted that plants infected with endophytic fungi are often at a distinct advantage at times. |
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In the US, the widely accepted rule is that if your front light is on, you're welcome to trick-or-treaters at your door, and you'll have candy. |
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The health of all Americans could benefit from the use of de-identified data to meet widely accepted public health objectives. |
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Today, the only widely accepted way to fight a phobia is with real-world experimentation and acclimation. |
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The most widely accepted view is that of an accretionary prism developed above an active subduction zone. |
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It is now widely accepted that a high proportion of crime is the result of drug addiction. |
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If, or when, the technique is widely accepted, a judge may have to decide whether to admit test results as evidence. |
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Profits will come from services that either utilise widely accepted technology or are not dependant on any one system. |
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As for money, credit cards are widely accepted in most countries and cash machines are increasingly commonplace. |
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It is widely accepted that workers are being priced out of London because wages cannot keep up with spiralling house prices. |
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Major credit cards are widely accepted, even in some of the remotest spots. |
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This is the official story, the one most widely accepted, the one that future generations will tell. |
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The story is Kipling's brilliant refutation of the widely accepted saw that time heals all wounds. |
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It is widely accepted that a complete, all-round excellent education has to go well beyond good teaching in the classroom. |
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The importance of asepsis and sterilization of instruments and supplies for invasive procedures became widely accepted. |
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The family crisis widely accepted on the Right as well as the Left is an optical illusion. |
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Bretz was called a dunce and a heretic, but over time his work became widely accepted. |
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The use of the tawse, a then popular and widely accepted form of punishment in Scottish schools, did not infringe the European Convention. |
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However, in Europe and Japan, there are general standards that are widely accepted by balneologists. |
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Although widely accepted and taught as early as elementary school, Batesian mimicry has remained unconfirmed. |
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Despite the drawbacks stated above, tape is still a widely accepted storage medium. |
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Stereotactic mesencephalic tractotomy constitutes a widely accepted procedure in treating unilateral head and neck cancer pain. |
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But it is widely accepted now that prosecution service is under-powered, under-resourced, poorly managed and insecure about its purpose. |
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It's nice to see that what was once considered to be an impolite and undiplomatic term has now been so widely accepted by its targets. |
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Nonetheless, it is a myth that persists as widely accepted conventional wisdom. |
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If hitherto public service broadcasting had been widely accepted in a largely unquestioning way, from Annan onwards old certainties crumbled. |
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Although widely accepted in public, the discoidal structure has not been verified experimentally. |
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Most credit cards and travellers' cheques are widely accepted, as are cash notes of the world's major trading currencies. |
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It is widely accepted that stemmatics originated in the work of Karl Lachmman. |
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Similarly, open-toed shoes have become more widely accepted in warm months. |
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Today, it is widely accepted among doctors and homeopaths that some ingredients found in tea do have legitimate curative properties. |
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No single classification scheme for bronchiolar diseases has been widely accepted. |
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It has been widely accepted that a code of practice is essential if the act is to be implemented as originally intentioned. |
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Immunization programmes are now widely accepted as an efficient form of preventive medicine. |
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The extension of this model to securities pricing has created a widely accepted but perverse understanding of financial markets. |
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It has yet to become a widely accepted core element of computer science or IT degree programs. |
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It is widely accepted by commentators that he has made a major contribution to the peace process. |
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The Universal Declaration of Human Rights is the most widely accepted international convention in human history. |
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They are now widely accepted at U.S. commercial banks, hospitals and even airlines, and they are easily forged documents. |
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Consequently, the oxide mixture seems to be widely accepted as the post-spinel phase of forsterite. |
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There is currently no widely accepted, concise, definitive list of key health education journals. |
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Based on widely accepted criteria, pterodactyls and other pterosaurs are not dinosaurs. |
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Fernow played up a widely accepted historical dichotomy between European theory and British empiricism in science. |
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The four species of owls divide into two strongly supported clades, corresponding to the widely accepted bifurcation of the owls into two families, Tytonidae and Strigidae. |
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But false claims of biodegradability in the past and a lack of a widely accepted and credible degradability standard have undercut the public's trust. |
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By the 1960s, the use of gloves to improve the grip was widely accepted. |
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The most widely accepted and significant leukemogenic mechanism attributed to the fusion protein involves the constitutive stimulation of tyrosine kinase. |
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The trumpet shaped flowers are widely accepted as being a symbol of the Orange Order, and members wear the lily with pride on their sashes during marches. |
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Even though the theory of plate tectonics is now widely accepted by the scientific community, aspects of the theory are still being debated today. |
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Those who challenge widely accepted orthodoxies, believing them to rest on sand, will need to ensure that their own challenges have secure foundations. |
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Opportunities for adventitious habitat creation have been widely accepted. |
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As one article critical of skeptical discussion of SCT makes clear, it is a long way from becoming a widely accepted diagnosis. |
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It then presents a brief outline of how legal developments proceeded to make the bill of exchange a more liquid and widely accepted financial instrument. |
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It is now widely accepted that CO2 emission is a kind of pollution. |
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That was a decade before the October Revolution, but racialism was already widely accepted as the mark of the Left in many countries, including England. |
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This staging certainly retains the futile but widely accepted cuts. |
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Hyper-tokenism embraces the widely accepted notion that we are all pretending, and further insinuates that pretenses can be more or less complete, more or less willed. |
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The book has been widely accepted in English classes with many students producing creative response pieces that beautifully detailed their involvement with the novel. |
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His proposal is not widely accepted and no genetic evidence for their existence is available. |
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Early in the century, due in part to the discoveries at Java and Zhoukoudian, it was widely accepted that modern humans first evolved in Asia. |
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As evidence of symbolism, none of them are widely accepted, although the same is true for Middle Palaeolithic anatomically modern humans. |
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The Bergeron classification is the most widely accepted form of air mass classification. |
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Owing to a lack of confidence in the Somali shilling, the US dollar is widely accepted as a medium of exchange alongside the Somali shilling. |
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It took three centuries after their introduction in Europe for tomatoes to become widely accepted. |
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American Frederick Albert Cook claimed to have reached the North Pole in 1908, but this has not been widely accepted. |
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The study confirms the widely accepted idea that portolans are mosaics of smaller charts, each with their own scale and orientation. |
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By the later 2nd century, it was widely accepted that the celebration of the holiday was a practice of the disciples and an undisputed tradition. |
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However, there is no widely accepted theory that would account for those perceived similarities. |
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The most widely accepted etymology is from a Chinese pronunciation of the English word business. |
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A widely accepted practice is for all to receive and hold the elements until everyone is served, then consume the bread and cup in unison. |
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Paine provided a new and widely accepted argument for independence by advocating a complete break with history. |
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A standardized destructive test according to the Inch Fastener Standards is widely accepted. |
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Endochondral ossification of retained fetal bones is the most widely accepted aetiological hypothesis. |
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It is widely accepted by medieval historians that this marks the point at which Lothian came under Scottish control. |
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He posited a geocentric cosmology that we may discern in selections of the Metaphysics, which was widely accepted up until the 16th century. |
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That the plague was caused by bad air became the most widely accepted theory. |
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The most widely accepted estimate for the Middle East, including Iraq, Iran and Syria, during this time, is for a death rate of about a third. |
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Nonetheless, British Isles is still the most widely accepted term for the archipelago. |
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By the 19th century the pound sterling was widely accepted outside Britain. |
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We should also remember that the very existence of atoms and molecules was not widely accepted for another 50 years. |
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It was not until the middle of the 18th century that a widely accepted standard was created, ending the period of Early New High German. |
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This view of Baptist origins has the most historical support and is the most widely accepted. |
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Thus, the name Quaker began as a way of ridiculing George Fox's admonition, but became widely accepted and is used by some Quakers. |
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Two hundred years after Johnson's death, the posthumous diagnosis of Tourette syndrome became widely accepted. |
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While they had significantly increased the frequency of their performances, the band were still not widely accepted. |
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In the 1870s, it became widely accepted that the side with fewest losses should be the champions. |
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The most widely accepted theory is that the modern game of golf originated in Scotland in the High Middle Ages. |
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Cannibalism has been suggested to explain the apparent subsequent disturbance, though it is not widely accepted. |
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Anguilla's currency is the East Caribbean dollar, though the US dollar is also widely accepted. |
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Currently, the quantity theory of money is widely accepted as an accurate model of inflation in the long run. |
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It is now widely accepted that the center of nearly every galaxy, not just active ones, contains a supermassive black hole. |
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The signatures of Germanic influx to England is now widely accepted and has been shown in other studies, such as Capelli et al. |
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Unofficial customs that are widely accepted are sometimes called the de facto standard. |
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This was widely accepted by the four main parties of the Northern Ireland Executive plus the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland. |
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The guitar is not traditional in Irish music but has become widely accepted in modern sessions. |
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Until 2004, the national debit card Dankort contained a photo of the holder and was widely accepted as an identity card. |
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Owing to a lack of confidence in the local currency, the US dollar is widely accepted as a medium of exchange alongside the Somali shilling. |
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He received considerable criticism at the time, but most of his proposals were subsequently widely accepted in the Church of Scotland. |
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On its side, Gallo language has never had a widely accepted writing system and several ones coexist. |
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These claims have never been fully verified, although Lewis' innocence is widely accepted throughout Merthyr. |
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Though Hutton believed in uniformitarianism, the idea was not widely accepted at the time. |
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Today it is widely accepted that Rungholt did in fact exist and was not just a local legend. |
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It is widely accepted that the male palp fits specifically into the female epigynum of conspecifics. |
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Some you might be able to regift, a practice now widely accepted as long as you cover your tracks. |
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The harried executive who developed an ulcer was a widely accepted profile of an ulcer diathesis. |
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Futures markets were widely accepted with establishment of CBOT and introducing opportunity to offset futures contracts obligations. |
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But in Russia, the wooden ruble seems to be widely accepted. |
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Tin Aung Myint Oo, 61, widely accepted as the most powerful hardliner in the Cabinet, officially resigned on July 1, citing health reasons. |
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He invented the Boyne Snowmaker, the first efficient snowmaker widely accepted as the standard for marginal temperature snowmaking. |
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Nevertheless, the mission and culture of community colleges in the United States do not foster the kind of research that is widely accepted and valued by the academy. |
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Control over combustion quality and improvement in the antiknock properties of petrol engines through the use of oxygenates has become widely accepted practise. |
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Though widely accepted as an alga there is still debate over its taxonomic affinity, with recent work arguing that it should be reclassified as a chaetetid sponge. |
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When bodily substances and fluids appear or are used outside of widely accepted margins they have the potential to be read as contaminable or threatening. |
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A year after Shii wrote his essay, forced anonymity had become widely accepted on the image board. Anyone deemed a tripfag was quickly shot down and mocked. |
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Although his opinion was only law in New York State, the solution he advanced was widely accepted elsewhere and formed the basis of the doctrine of product liability. |
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Yet the 13 Fundamentals expounded by Maimonides in his Commentary on the Mishnah, authored in the 1160s, eventually proved the most widely accepted. |
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A medium of exchange permits the value of goods to be assessed and rendered in terms of the intermediary, most often, a form of money widely accepted to buy any other good. |
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It is widely accepted that it is harder to achieve surfaces with oleophobic than hydrophobic properties because most oils have low surface tension. |
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The true figure is likely to lie between the two extremes of half and one and a half million, and the most widely accepted estimate is one million. |
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This contention, however, has not been widely accepted, and most other scholars, such as John Fennell and Ruslan Skrynnikov continued to argue for their authenticity. |
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Retailers may sometimes market ingots and bars of base metals, such as copper, nickel, and aluminium as bullion, but this is not a widely accepted definition. |
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The most widely accepted estimates are that between 500,000 and one million people were killed, with some estimates as high as two to three million. |
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However, by the late 1970s and following the publication of further research, the discovery was widely accepted as a significant breakthrough in theoretical physics. |
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A widely accepted general standard is Pareto efficiency, which is reached when no further change can make someone better off without making someone else worse off. |
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This theory has since become a widely accepted view in anthropology. |
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These examples are sui generis for they simply exist in society and are widely accepted without thoughts of where they come from or how they were created. |
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After discussing it for decades, Robbins' definition became widely accepted by mainstream economists, and it has opened way into current textbooks. |
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Even if it is not a protostome, it is widely accepted as a bilaterian. |
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It is widely accepted that the activity of certain protein degradation enzymes, the calpains and calpastatins, are important determinators of tenderness in meat. |
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Hays, Shackleton and John Imbrie, which is still very widely accepted today, and covers the MIS timescale and the causal effect of the orbital theory. |
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The most widely accepted version at the time, although a philosophical account of the beginning of things, is reported by Hesiod, in his Theogony. |
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Mabillon's version was widely accepted, but contradicts the early sources. |
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However, the evidence is controversial and is not widely accepted. |
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By 2009, the existence of a negative correlation between fertility and industrial development had become one of the most widely accepted findings in social science. |
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These programmes have not yet gained widespread acceptance, and the Canadian passport remains the most useful and widely accepted international travel document. |
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While often mentioned, this etymology is not widely accepted. |
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Although not widely accepted by modern scholarship, John Morris's theory deals with the hypothetical link between the Midlands Cornovii and later Cornwall. |
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Controversy over the actual meaning of the word Kenya notwithstanding, it is clear that the mountain's name became widely accepted, pars pro toto, as the name of the country. |
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It is not known how widely accepted this idea is within Anglicanism. |
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