Not exact matches
Further, man is always under the obligation to use his freedom as
much as possible for shaping his life; he may never
abdicate his responsibility under pretext that everything happens in any case as it must happen.
Lerner has
abdicated but but he has still given Lambert as
much money to spend as all but the mega rich owners.
I'd mentioned the article as part of a larger discussion of whether we adults have
abdicated too
much power to children when we create school lunch menus that are entirely comprised of «kid food» like pizza, burgers, chicken nuggets, mac - n - cheese and the rest.
She's right, in a way: For decades there was no fighting, just
abdicating, as Democratic city officials gave the unions pretty
much everything they wanted.
As
much as I enjoy most audiobooks, I believe that when you listen to a book you
abdicate your role as co-creator with the author (at least in part).
In the last decade or so, major publishers have
abdicated — this is my word, not DeFiore's —
much of the job of finding and preparing strong manuscripts to the agent corps.
The outcome of those lawsuits will determine just how
much the Trump administration is able to
abdicate its responsibilities to protect public land and institute climate policy.
If you act too
much like a friend, you are
abdicating your responsibility as a parent.