Sentences with phrase «ambiguity by»

Because different states may have different minimum coverage requirements, financial responsibility clauses reduce ambiguity by stating the policy holder always meets that requirement.
Stewart Title urged that the application judge erred, in turn, by: (i) failing to give effect to the clear meaning of the exception, and in finding ambiguity by looking at the word «paid» in isolation; (ii) «giving no weight to the factual matrix surrounding how the Policy language operates in practice and in its commercial context» when resolving the ambiguity; and (iii) resorting to contra proferentem reasoning before exhausting other methods of contract construction.
For example, it can work to minimize ambiguity by changing communication models or by bringing in more project management.
If there's only one employment agreement, the drafter won't create ambiguity by referring to it as the employment agreement.
Author Jordan Amirkhani notes: «If the studio has traditionally been a place of solace from reality's complications, this exhibition seems to respond with urgent ambiguity by asking important and unresolved questions about the place of artistic practice within today's society, and the traditions of Western -LSB-.....]
If the studio has traditionally been a place of solace from reality's complications, this exhibition seems to respond with urgent ambiguity by asking important and unresolved questions about the place of artistic practice within today's society, and the traditions of Western art making that have not (and will not) go away.
Author Jordan Amirkhani notes: «If the studio has traditionally been a place of solace from reality's complications, this exhibition seems to respond with urgent ambiguity by asking important and unresolved questions about the place of artistic practice within today's society, and the traditions of Western art making that have not (and will not) go away.»
I try to intensify this optical ambiguity by collapsing the original altarpiece image on itself, multiplying its perspectives, disrupting the conclusive visual array of the original painting and replacing it with one that is still unfolding.
For a moment you think it is, because for most of us there's a residual association of silent cinema with the comic — and that something that has been exploited with brilliant ambiguity by Otar Iosseliani, of whom The Tribe also rather reminded me.
The movie's villains weren't nefarious foreign forces; they were cruel and bumbling bureaucrats, malevolent middle managers who react to any ambiguity by trying to kill something.
And if someone can speak volumes in a glance or a gesture without saying a word — or if cinematographer Roger Deakins can suggest menace and moral ambiguity by letting the camera slowly creep - glide into a performer's personal space (what Villeneuve calls the visual equivalent of «putting pressure on your characters»)-- he'd much rather do that.
His confident ineptitude is at times comical — after breaking his brother out of a police - secured hospital like one of Danny Ocean's 11, he realizes, whoops, the bandaged guy isn't his brother — but the commitment to moral ambiguity by both the Safdies and their leading man amounts to the masochistic pleasure of sucking on a sour candy for just a second too long.
OMB's Mid-Session Review, however, resolves this ambiguity by stating in Tables 15 and 16 (page 31) that the Administration would exclude the «fiscal dividend» — i.e., «pull the trigger» — in order to balance the budget under the CBO economic assumptions.
BASC believes the changes will remove ambiguity by providing a definitive list of accepted obsolete calibres and ignition methods and will allow a firearm of a calibre and type subsequently not accepted as antique to be added to a firearm or shotgun certificate.
Cranking up the ambiguity by calling it a «higher power» doesn't make the idea any more palatable.
Although I thought that my meaning was clear in the context, perhaps I could avoid ambiguity by stating that standpoints correspond to regions or even occupy regions.
The total amount of the notes was relatively small so it didn't have a huge impact on the economics of the investment but we could have avoided the ambiguity by dealing it with more clearly up front.
Ramp - up the ambiguity by using your phone to record video of people speaking.

Not exact matches

And ambiguity is not a good thing for McDonald's, as evidenced by a tweet from ESPNW columnist and on - camera host Sarah Spain: While lovin» may indeed be greater than hatin», «Hatin» Beats Heart Disease.»
Later, Paul warned about the ambiguity over who could be targeted by drones, suggesting that they could have been used against Vietnam War protesters in the 1960s.
Projections from Scotiabank and the Bank of Canada estimate that if ambiguity lingers over NAFTA into next year, the ensuing investment concerns would reduce Canada's GDP by about one - fifth of one per cent through 2019.
But there's lower ambiguity on the paint - by - numbers path: very clear but more risky.
«The ambiguity of these very latest developments introduced by President Trump is casting a shadow over the future travel demand to and from the U.S.,» said Nadejda Popova, travel project manager at Euromonitor.
But anyone in leadership can avoid common pitfalls by adopting a direct style that nixes ambiguity.
Among the things that prompted the creation of the inquiries were: financial difficulties facing DB pension plans and related concerns about DB funding rules; long simmering and unresolved legal issues, the most prominent of which revolve around the use of surpluses in DB plans; ambiguity about how EPP regulations apply to new hybrid plans; a lack of harmonization among Canadian regulatory laws; and declining coverage by EPPs in general and DB plans in particular.
A problem with talking about average investment returns is that there is real ambiguity about what people mean by «average».
«In the history of rules issued by DOL, frequently issues arise» around provisions that may have «appeared clear at first blush but [are] creating ambiguity, so this is a regular part of the regulatory process where you put out a rule [after] a robust comment period and finalize the rule and you continue that outreach.»
None of the five members of the panel, led by Scott Egner, manager of managed account sales at Ameritrade Institutional, suggested that advisors should count on a delay or repeal of the rule, which is due to take effect April 10 although Larson noted that this is a «time of ambiguity
«By comparison, studies show that men are often more comfortable with ambiguity, and willing to take action with incomplete information, sometimes to a fault.
By avoiding the word «state,» a minimum ambiguity is left in place, though only marginally.
The «fair reading model» is driven, Souter concluded, by an understandable yet nonetheless naive «longing for a world without ambiguity» - by the «basic human hunger for certainty and control.»
Many of his peers were disturbed by his openness to ambiguity and he was often labeled a universalist and a man who slipped into open theology or process theology.
Remarkable how many on the right didn't seem upset by Ronald Reagan's religious ambiguity and his not attending church much while President.
Social Science and Moral Obligation by alan wolfe university of california press, 361 pages, $ 25 Let it be said at the outset and without ambiguity: this is an important book.
The Blind Spot reveals why our faith in scientific certainty is a dangerous illusion, and how only by embracing science's inherent ambiguities and paradoxes can we truly appreciate its beauty and harness its potential.
'» On the contrary: Here and elsewhere where the masculine / generic noun na'ar is used (of Dinah in Gen 34:3, 12; of young women in the legal texts of Deut 22:15 - 16, 21, 23 - 29) the context makes quite clear that no ambiguity of gender is implied by the non-use of the feminine na'arah.
To Begin the World Anew: The Genius and Ambiguities of the American Founders by Bernard Bailyn Knopf.
There was a time when gray areas of ambiguity were respected, when questions about treatment or non-treatment «would be resolved by a family, its doctor, and its clergyman.»
And the religious response to this suspicion is in each case the same: the formulation, by means of symbols, of an image of such a genuine order of the world which will account for, even celebrate, the perceived ambiguities, puzzles and paradoxes of human experience.
In spite of all the excruciating ambiguities of history, it is fundamental to the Christian faith that humanity is saved by the life of one righteous person!
What has been discovered... is that, on one main point at least (the choice between the three propositions), religion at its best was literally and philosophically right, and theology was but a first approximation, vitiated by ambiguities or inconsistencies.
The concept of ambiguity is useful to express the idea that the orders of creation are good as created by God, and yet permeated by the law of sin and death.
(Women, by contrast, being more relational and better able to deal with ambiguity, are thus more apt to deal with evil in themselves and work out the evil in their relations with others.)
The depths of human ambiguity are opened and plumbed by Christ himself.
One significant attempt to avoid the ambiguities of history, similar in some ways to that of Albrecht Ritschl, was made by Rudolf Bultmann (1884 - 1976), a German theologian who was much influenced by the writings of the philosopher Martin Heidegger (1889 - 1976).
Gregory makes a stunning point on the ambiguities of giving to those derelicts among the poor who are by consensus generally regarded as less worthy: One should give not just to the unworthy poor, but also to the worthy poor, regardless of their moral condition, and for a profound reason: because one «gives of his bread to an indigent sinner, not because he is a sinner, but because he is a man.
Such chronicles have always been fraught with ambiguity and the possibility of misinterpretation, however, and such reckonings have generally been disapproved by the church; Origen and Augustine, among many others, both argued that many of the ages chronicled in the OT are simply of unknowable length, and went on to note that the «days» of the creation story simply can not be «days» in the ordinary sense of the term as the sun isn't created until the fourth «day».
But Bohr went further by saying that this ambiguity was fundamentally related to the experimental conditions.
Moreover I, for one, have no wish to circumvent this issue by transposing it into a different key and speaking with calculated ambiguity of the poetically true or the true - for - me.
To decide to live by these ideals is surely also to decide to live with ambiguity, with possible career interruption and with no little degree of anxiety.
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