The other three large works are stratigraphic layerings built up at the archaeological sites which inspired them, their earthy tones considerably weathered
by the practical necessity of being left out during the months of their formation on Welsh hill forts.
By practical necessity we are selective, picking those works of art that are in a vulnerable location, exceptionally valuable, seem to attract undue attention, have condition problems, or where relatively minor damage could be irreversible, such as the stain on the unprimed canvas of our Morris Louis.
Alternately many younger parents particularly appreciate the unique place of parents in the AP framework, when they are often forced
by practical necessity to depend on grandparents and other family members for «co-parenting» support.
Not exact matches
It is perhaps best thought of as a movement of peoples, some of whom define themselves doctrinally, some
by polity, but who cohere often on the basis of shared memories,
practical necessity (e.g., clerical pension plans) and — more than one might have expected — ethnicity.
And if many establishmentarian religionists were dragged screaming
by the Enlightenment and
practical necessity to grant religious freedom, some very firm believers, from colonial Baptists to Jesuit John Courtney Murray in the Second Vatican Council, also kept making the case for conviction blended with civility, commitment tempered with empathy.
On the most immediate,
practical level, these men saw the
necessity of protecting the free conscience from its own tyrannical tendencies, which protection they achieved
by separating the power of religious establishments from the power of the state.
However, since we have chosen to have a public school system (which from a
practical standpoint has to be run
by a government entity), «government» involvement in lunchtime activities is a
necessity (unless we send the students off - campus during lunch hour, which is not always doable.)
The
practical work is often compounded
by the
necessity of striking a balance between the customer's needs, on the one hand, and, on the other, the technical, time and other constraints that limit what a service provider can offer.
The experiments were,
by necessity, restricted to only extremely rudimentary forms of the two most promising approaches, and the results still can't be applied to
practical quantum computers that would contain thousands of qubits.
Mr White said head teachers wanted the government to focus on the
practical necessities before being «distracted»
by policies such as expanding grammar schools.
Celebrating makeshift solutions, survival instincts, and the reuse of discarded material, Anne Percoco's The Life Instinct infused
practical works inspired
by immediate
necessity with playfulness and wit.
Celebrating makeshift solutions, survival instincts, and the reuse of discarded material, Percoco's work infuses
practical works inspired
by immediate
necessity with playfulness and wit.
Participation is
by invitation only, so the artists know in advance if they will be included that year and thus have an opportunity to create something that's compatible with the show's
practical necessity to focus on small works.
It is paralleled
by the
necessity of providing university graduates with the
practical understanding of the realities of ordinary farmers — something most of them have only a theoretical awareness of.
Finally, the Supreme Court accepted, as was common ground on the appeal, that the business efficacy test did not require «absolute
necessity»: a better formulation, suggested
by Lord Sumption in argument, may be that «a term can only be implied if, without the term, the contract would lack commercial or
practical coherence».
This was especially common in the days when research was primarily done with books, as a matter of
practical necessity in controlling size and expense, but it's still used
by many US state courts to filter which decisions become precedent.