Parties invoke the Convention in different contexts and manners, such as by participating in meetings and conferences, within the framework of cultural or trade agreements.
Profits reflect the efficient usage of capital in manners that others willingly remunerate.
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In a comedy of manners set amid the chaos of modern Beijing, the characters have a hard time just keeping their heads.
The first is the simple good manners both correspondents evidence in the way they address one another and present their arguments, in spite of the real, keenly felt differences of opinion.
In his mid-teens, he had the tastes and manners of a teen-ager from an earlier era.
The sentimental strain is both unconvincing and ungrounded, but in the all-too-rare moments when Murphy, who invests with psychodrama the role of a misfit learning manners, lets himself go the movie comes brilliantly to life.
The manners and morals of the recently enriched is a recurrent theme in American life, as is the resentment which inevitably greets new wealth.
Nonetheless, it might be seen as incongruous that Austen's fandom is so extensive in the US, a nation founded on the rejection of aristocracy and old world manners and traditions.
This ability to freely label government receipts and payments in alternative internally consistent manners renders the government's cash flows meaningless from the perspective of economic theory and is called the labeling problem in economics.
Born in 1732 into a Virginia planter family, he learned the morals, manners, and body of knowledge requisite for an 18th century Virginia gentleman.
There were a few investors, Soros among them, who either invested their own money using more complex strategies or who were willing to take the money of other such high net worth investors and manage that money in similarly complex manners.
Breillat gives the entire cast of characters delicately declamatory manners that fit the refined depravity of their milieu, and she frames them in subtly sculptural images to match.
Professor Shuji Hashimoto, director of the humanoid robotics centre at Waseda University in Tokyo, has a theory: robots need a solid dose of those Japanese manners (don't we all?) encompassed in the Japanese word kansei, which includes feelings, mood, intuitiveness and sensibility.
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More than almost anywhere else in the world, history and traditions will be revered and preserved, and will continue to inform the manners and values of the Japanese people.
It was created in 1996 by former British model Lyndy Janes and Apple Computer refugee Sue Fox after they recoiled at the appalling table manners of Nerdistan's accidental billionaires.
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