Democracy might have been much more mature by now had elections been allowed to run their course.
So, yes, in some contexts, buttons and other administrative debris of the traditional interface have run their course.
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In the other semi-final South Africa take on Argentina, and I think the Pumas have run their course.
And the pain is everywhere, now that the salutary effects of zero percent interest rates have run their course.
One reason for the emphasis on ideals is prosaic: Germany's economic reforms, at least for now, have run their course.
But EU leaders might still prefer to let the corruption cases run their course before admitting Croatia, lest they implicate more high-level figures.
The prevailing sentiments from Congressional Democrats, meanwhile, came out Wednesday -- with some questioning Clinton's chances and others waiting to see the primaries run their course.
There is much uncertainty about the economic impact of fiscal tightening, not least because some temporary measures will also have run their course by next year.
Inexplicably, we transfer this illogical message to our investing lives, taking out-sized bets on flaky stocks, following crackpot self-help promoters or simply staying far too long in assets that clearly have run their course.
The effects of passed-on energy costs, as well as higher import prices stemming from a weaker dollar, have probably not run their course, so core inflation may edge higher in the months to come.
However, those strategies may have run their course.
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After the presidential debates are done and all the campaign ads have run their course, the final outcome of the 2008 election will depend on one thing, making sure voters actually get to the polls.
Israel has repeatedly threatened to act militarily should Iran appear to be on the verge of obtaining a bomb, while the U.S. has pushed for more time to allow diplomacy and economic sanctions to run their course.
Once their effectiveness has run its course, memory loss and cognitive decline progress unimpeded, and sometimes even accelerate.
Finally, once the initial inflation trade has run its course, traders will make their way back into names with excess cash, solid fundamentals and growth prospects.
The OneLogin survey finds, for example, about 22 percent of respondents now run 10 or more Software-as-a-Service applications (that they know of, of course) within their enterprises. another 35 percent run between four and nine apps.
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For all their outward chumminess, the course of true love has not run smoothly between Sandy Weill and John Reed, the co-chairmen and co-chief executives of the financial-services giant since it was formed in April 1998 by the merger of Citibank and Travelers.
If the NFL were run on these principles, of course, and offered such a shoddy product, their stadiums would be empty, no one would watch on television and the TV contracts would be canceled, along with the sponsorship deals.
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Fulham issued a statement on their official website saying that the dispute between the club and Tigana had not run its course.
In the face of such uncertainty, of course, many people are just throwing up their hands, not bothering to run comparative figures.
The committee said it would be "inappropriate" for either of the two to be able to resume their duties in the House "before the whole sentence imposed by the court has run its course".
And of course, users must download and install most native mobile apps in order to run them on their device.
Learning how the States work was something that Roy Bisson from the Workers Educational Association (WEA) also said was important and is something the WEA teach on a course designed to brief potential politicians "on what happens in the States and how they run their finances".
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