So, ironically, the risk of miscommunication is greater with a close colleague than a brand-new coworker.
So, ironically, those guiding the investment management process are completely unregulated, and there are virtually no legal precedents defining their role.
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And so, ironically, a visit that was meant to help enhance the bond between Britain and America, may instead have served to highlight the growing differences.
In doing so, ironically (and as Nietzsche would have predicted), he transformed himself to beyond-human, and left the rest of us with deeply scary questions about how we should relate to technology.
This issue comes up every ten years or so--ironically, at the beginning of a recovery.
The Nordic musician mimics Americana styles with ease, perhaps ironically so.
One outgrowth of this kind of carelessness was the rise of opportunistic thieves who especially targeted security complexes because they know people living there were, ironically, so utterly unconscious of security once they were inside the perimeter of the keep.
Ironically, in doing so, it actually made the transition harder for ex-8300 and 8800 users than a traditional soft keyboard would've.
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Ironically, they did so with the very technologies that most threatened them.
Ironically, he is so sincerely grateful that despite the fact that I have always paid him promptly and well, I still feel profoundly in his debt.
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Some soldiers did benefit from the Good Friday Agreement early release scheme, but ironically they were the so called "bad apples" who carried out crimes on behalf of either the UVF or the UFF, so therefore came under the aegis of the 1998 Northern Ireland Offences Act.
And so it increased demand overall and, ironically, it meant that businesses had more customers and could make more money.
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Ironically, by 2009 or so it was almost universally embraced.
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Ironically, it is the so-called "soft" services like youth clubs and initiatives that help keep young people out of trouble and which nationally the Education Select Committee says have been cut more than any other.
Ironically, some sin taxes are so successful at decreasing the targeted behavior that they may raise little money.
Ironically in this sport which concentrates so much on the skills, the deftness of the feet, it is the players' heads which have become the focus of scientific concern.
Ironically, the wood inlays are so impeccably finished they look artificial and both the hand-stitched upholstery and leather-trimmed dashboard are finished so precisely it looks as if the work were done by machine.
Ironically, he is also, like so many of his countrymen, a Francophile with a penchant for wine and a house in southern France.
Ironically, the reason why it was so successful nearly 100 years ago is the same reason why it's now in trouble, says Greg Hodge of Planet Retail.
So did Kipling expect readers to approach the poem ironically?
Because they suck up a lot of resources even when they're not actively running, and that slows down your work--ironically making it harder to finish quickly so you can get to the fun stuff.
Ironically, given that he first won over so many independents by speaking his mind, the case for Mr McCain comes down to a piece of artifice: vote for him on the assumption that he does not believe a word of what he has been saying.
Ironically, the three companies, which started out so different, are now competing in many areas.
Ironically, if the U.S. does so under present circumstances and outside of an effort to "enforce" the hapless Vance-Owen plan, suchobjectives actually stand a much better chance of being achieved and with less loss of American lives.
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They're forced to do so, in large part, because of the Chandler family, which ironically enough was the one that sold Times Mirror back in '99.
So filling in that -- what's commonly known as -- ironically, in health care -- the doughnut hole, about -- that up to 50 percent of the name brand -- the price for that name brand drug would be paid for, and I think that provides a hefty discount that will bear appreciable benefits for seniors all over the country.
Ironically, what made the merger a failure may be what makes unwinding it so easy.
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Ironically, a few years later that additive was banned because it was carcinogenic so the claims that consumers were getting a better product were clearly not correct.
Ironically, their moves, which are largely aimed at fostering confidence among banks so that they will more freely lend to one another and to customers, has yet to loosen the flow of interbank lending.
Lack speculates that the differences found in the study between men and women may be even greater than the numbers show, since some women who were asked to participate declined -- ironically, because the chronic strain of their daily demands prevented them from doing so.
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