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choice (exact matches only)


So long as Saddam was still at large, many may have felt they had no choice but to keep up the assaults.

He notes that a "religious supermarket" with a free choice of different products and brands has not been introduced in the Muslim world, but sees signs of hope that intellectuals and religious officials in the Muslim world are discussing new ideas openly and are suggesting reforms which could lead to greater religious liberty.

The "religious supermarket" with a free choice of different products and brands has not been introduced in that part of the world yet, and governments are not interested in introducing it, probably partly because of a fear of anything that threatens stability and predictability.

The PCUSA has a choice.

It irritates me to point to the United States for an example of keeping top-class sport irritating, but salary-caps and the fact that the weaker teams get first choice on the best young players ensures the American Football season is fresh, exciting and always hard to call.

But it was clear that this would be an utterly subjective choice.

The quality of playing is terrific, but what distinguishes them is the choice of repertoire and their commitment to the works' performance.

(David drove a Lexus in real life and on the show until three years ago; his wife, an environmentalist, may have influenced his choice.) I asked him what kind of television he liked to watch when he was growing up.

The main thing today is that the woman does not face the problem of choice between her child and career.

House prices have surged so vertiginously that, even when interest rates are low, any family which wants to live in its own home finds its lifestyle choices severely limited.

Instead of grabbing a package and taking it up to the counter, I stood rooted to the linoleum, transfixed by the 26 choices -- I counted them -- arrayed before me.

In "The Paradox of Choice," Schwartz lays out a convincing argument that choice is one good thing that we've got entirely too much of.

And choice, Schwartz stresses, really is a good thing.

He seems far less interested in flogging a particular thesis than he is in explaining what we know about how people make decisions, and in doing so, he vividly evokes the psychic damage that can result from having no choices.

But the benefits of choice are now being eclipsed by the problems produced by an excess of it, he argues: The increased economic specialization that gave us leisure time (and modern civilization) in the first place is now threatening to take it back, as we spend more and more hours in making consumer decisions.


More examples in news.google.com [choice]