Practitioners: we have a responsibility to not talk to laymen in a deceptive way.
Here, however, was a group of evangelical laymen whom they could be seen to endorse.
Britain's politicians are reluctant to get into a public scrum with clinicians, health managers, clergy, laymen and so on.
King's is the first book for laymen to focus exclusively on the dome.
Financial literacy is on the rise, but many laymen still consider savings and investments a complex and alien world.
But for astronomers, it's something more - a chance to engage laymen and enthusiasts with the studies of the cosmos.
And it certainly shows that pursuing corporate wrongdoers is tricky when complicated laws meet expensive lawyers before a jury of laymen.
Behind him, chanting to the beat of a drum, would stream 200-300 laymen, monks and nuns, walking across Cambodia for peace.
Public pension boards, made up of laymen, advised by conflicted Wall Street experts selling product should never be reluctant to admit mistakes.
It deflates their egos wonderfully: they do hardly any better than laymen.
As surprising as this is may be to many laymen, such rigor is now in retreat in the billion-dollar world of Big Science.
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Many studies show that laymen actually prefer cheaper wines (PDF).
Judges say that laymen cannot grasp the complexities of the law.
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Both publications are written to be accessible by intelligent laymen.
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Biologists and laymen alike think of the genome as linear.
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After Henry VIII's dissolution of the monasteries in Britain, their place was taken by philanthropic laymen, and lighthouses began to emerge as far across the continent as the Bosphorous.
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The pope's response to this and other cases is attracting criticism, including from prominent laymen such as Wolfgang Thierse, a former Social Democrat president of Germany's lower house of parliament, the Bundestag.
One would hope that even laymen in the U.S. Senate, to say nothing of the attorneys who populate the membership of its Judiciary Committee, would want to consider carefully such implications of the Law of the Sea Treaty.
The English of Geoffrey Chaucer (born in the 14th century), for example, is incomprehensible to modern laymen, whereas that of William Shakespeare (born in the 16th) is not only comprehensible but held by some to be a model.
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Now, lawyers and laymen too often, I think, treat the standard of proof as meaningless legal jargon with no real application to the world of difficult decisions, but I suggest to you that it is much more than that.
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Yet for all of his popular appeal and surface accessibility, Einstein also came to symbolize the perception that modern physics was something that ordinary laymen could not comprehend, "the province of priest-like experts, " in the words of Harvard professor Dudley Herschbach.
Everything about Opus Dei, at least from the official point of view, exists to promote this aim: forming ordinary laymen and women in Christian doctrine and spirituality, so that they may sanctify the world from within, using their own judgment about the best means to do so in their particular profession or walk of life.
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