Sentences with phrase «even normal behaviour»

E and I ought by rights to be feeling very pleased with ourselves for being responsible enough to start making babies nice and young, i.e. at the time at which nature intended women to have them, but this is no longer regarded asresponsible or even normal behaviour by society.

Not exact matches

Studies with rats have found that even short bursts of such hormones during pregnancy can result in normal genitals accompanied by transgender behaviour.
«The professional Mario didn't just land here in Milan, even at Liverpool my behaviour and lifestyle were normal.
A middle - school teacher described how pupils now seemed to think that «losing it», even to the extent of throwing chairs around the room, was normal behaviour.
Consider whether it might even be just normal newborn baby behaviour, as your little one adjusts to life outside the womb - see Fussy babies: is it the arsenic hour?
Heijtz could even shift her germ - free mice towards «normal» behaviour and genetic activity by giving them a microbiome transplant, but this only worked early in their lives.
As he commented, «if you've ever had anonymous sex in a park or even in a bathhouse, basically it is like having sex with a zombie, and not necessarily in a bad way... having sex with them frees you from the personal and emotional restraints of normal sexual behaviour».65 American scholar Shaka McGlotten echoes this sentiment when he suggests that the «collective zombification» of «contemporary queer sociality» as represented in LaBruce's zombie films, possesses a creativity and «openness» from which «enlivening modes of agency» can be at the very «least» imagined if not cultivated.66 In symbolising the «return of the repressed» LaBruce's zombies evoke the idealised polymorphous body of sexual liberation.
Dr Gary Landsberg, a veterinary behaviourist in Ontario, Canada, explains that mounting is common play behaviour shown in puppies, and is even normal in the play of older dogs if it's not taken to extremes.
The Court of Appeal accepted that the judge was entitled to conclude that it was a normal characteristic for the horse to rear up in the particular circumstances of the case because it was «natural» for horses to do so in certain circumstances from time to time, even if such behaviour was not «usual».
In all cases, the underlying premise is that when a child is struggling with behaviour, they need our guiding and caring PRESENCE even more than normal.
[124] Both parents and children identified the levels of family and community violence as leading to an acceptance of violence as normal, describing how young children are initially scared after seeing violent behaviour but as they grow older «a normal pattern was for them to either ignore it, or to rush out to watch, discuss and even join in».
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