How To Use Reinterpretation In A Sentence
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But why does it matter whether you call that disapplication or reinterpretation?
Vodafone 2 v HMRC
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The tracks contained within are no mere retreads but carefully constructed reinterpretations that update and pay homage to the original in mostly excellent fashion.
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Something familiar yet different, his reinterpretation of the trench is just genius.
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Conventions can be modified by changes in behaviour or by reinterpretations of the significance of certain behaviour.
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Sometimes the message has been much more subtle and capable of reinterpretation in a later and more conscious age.
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On the pronunciation front: tighty and tidy get to be the same in pronunciation in American English via intervocalic flapping, which plays a role in a large number of reinterpretations, and plain spelling errors too.
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It is important to note that using comparative ethnography for historical reconstruction does not necessarily require that things be now precisely as they were in times past, but rather that they serve as evidence that how people did or said certain things or what they believed long ago represent continuities from the past, and, although they may have undergone reinterpretation, at times significant and in other cases subtle, the foundational features lasted into the ethnographic present.
Societies, Religion, and History: Central East Tanzanians and the World They Created, c. 200 BCE to 1800 CE
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But to the extent that you don't apply the provision to Vodafone, I don't see why it matters whether you call it reinterpretation or disapplication.
Vodafone 2 v HMRC
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No reinterpretation of the evidence and no protestations of innocence can alter those facts.
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You can't say NBC stinted on the new studio or the set, a kind of bigger, bluer, shinier reinterpretation of Carson's old Tonight set, with Andy Richter off to the side at a podium and the audience once again seated as in a theater rather than in Leno's comedy club configuration.
Conan back in comfort zone: Two 'Tonights' and counting
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It is especially difficult given that several of the most important Idealists were also actively contributing to the reinterpretation of Liberal principles.
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Lyell's uniformitarianism was the ruling dogma of geology for almost 150 years until the late 1970s, when ‘neocatastrophism’ began to emerge, and with it came reinterpretations of the geological record.
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They note the emergence of large private business in the post-bellum U.S. following the courts' reinterpretation of shareholding companies as a legal person.
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Within state and regional museums, policies for cultural repatriation and consultation with indigenous communities have contributed to a museological reinterpretation of colonial histories.
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The Military Explanation by Arther Ferrill lays out his reinterpretation of the collapse of the Western Empire.
Archive 2008-07-01
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Methods Reinterpretation of Freud s theory of dream interpretation with logical analysis.
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Common to all these groups, either white or black, is either a total reinterpretation of Biblical text to support a racist agenda or an espousal of neo-pagan beliefs.
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The epic has been the object of adaptation, interpolation, reinterpretation and expurgation by a number of retellers, each seeking to reflect what he saw as relevant to his time.
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Donald Worster, on the other hand, provides an analytic reinterpretation of explorer John Wesley Powell as a neglected visionary.
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[For a reinterpretation of Leibniz, with an eye to tropes inter alia, see C. Schneider (2001), bearing in mind Leibniz's own words: “Interpretari est docere circa orationem seu orationem non satis cognitum facere cognitum.”]
Tropes
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Conciseness is also at a sufficiently high level of generality to provide the flexibility so a right is open to reinterpretation over time from many perspectives.
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He then discusses marriage vows, the history of divorce, and modern reinterpretations.
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Moreover, through the use of space, light, colour and reinterpretation of archetypal forms such as modestly scaled internal courtyards, it manages to humanize and civilize workplace life.
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You can't say NBC stinted on the new studio or the set, a kind of bigger, bluer, shinier reinterpretation of Carson's old Tonight set, with Andy Richter off to the side at a podium and the audience once again seated as in a theater rather than in Leno's comedy club configuration.
Conan back in comfort zone: Two 'Tonights' and counting
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JRR Tolkien, after all, was a pioneering scholar of Anglo-Saxon poetry and wrote a definitive reinterpretation of the epic poem.
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A contemporary reinterpretation of a traditional form, the cloister is a luminous, humanly scaled ambulatory space that leads visitors through the pavilion.
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Its curved frame suggests almost a modern reinterpretation of the bentwood chair.
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Sometimes the message has been much more subtle and capable of reinterpretation in a later and more conscious age.
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Recent developments in microbial genetics have lead to reinterpretation of the virus concept itself.
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1966 - Presentation Speech
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They note the emergence of large private business in the post-bellum U.S. following the courts' reinterpretation of shareholding companies as a legal person.
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During his study of the sastras he became convinced about the inherent weakness in the Advaita philosophy and developed a keen desire to revive the theistic science of Vedas with his own thorough reinterpretation of the texts.
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Few eras of American history have undergone as sweeping a reinterpretation by historians in the past forty years as Reconstruction, the turbulent period that followed the Civil War.
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No reinterpretation of the evidence and no protestations of innocence can alter those facts.
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The Lord of the Rings films turns this on its head; they are tightly scripted, zippy reinterpretations of a bloated, forensic epic.