Sentences with phrase «very accepted practice»

Not exact matches

This is easy to accept in theory, but very hard to stick to in practice.
According to widely accepted practice, you can set your withdrawal rate at 4 % a year and have very little chance of ever running down your entire hoard to zero.
It was a bitterly resented practice, but the power of Roman arms was such that the moral philosophy of the day found a very practical reason for accepting it.
For at two very vital points the monogamy which is accepted theoretically and legally is challenged in practice.
«I see us playing at a very high tempo, accepting challenges, overcoming issues when they come up, whether it's in a game or in practice.
Thus, (even if this mainly stems from a reluctance to become rigidified if they accept authority, hierarchy and institutionalization), the protests have not attempted to build any sort of global organization, remaining instead very local in their practice.
This has not been the previous practice, would be very limiting and would go beyond what international humanitarian law currently provides (unless one accepts the ICRC view in principle IX of its interpretive guidance on direct participation in hostilities see further discussion here).
Mayor Bill de Blasio said Tuesday he doesn't accept the practice and said the city will «deal with it very aggressively,» but didn't say how.
This culture is very open to adapting to other cultural practices, and has accepted by some of them for their own way of life.
«There were some very practical outcomes such as changes in practice, accompanied by developing tangible «products»... these included a real and accepted definition of global citizenship, new student reports and assessment tools for global citizenship, enhanced use of technology for curriculum mapping, a more global and accessible library collection, just to name a few.
The students in this case study were encouraged to accept that the deliberate practice of their chosen instruments might very well be «effortful» and not «inherently enjoyable».
In addition, they needed to accept that the deliberate practice might very well be «effortful» and not «inherently enjoyable» (Schraw, 2005, p. 396).
In these first 25 pages, Richardson tells you everything you (probably) already know about guided reading — the what and the why of this very widely accepted practice.
Humans tend to state things in a very certain, simple, assertive manner — almost always our pronouncements should be classified, as per my essay, as Factoids — but in common practice, we simply call them facts and accept them as such.
The case is also significant because the claim was funded by a DBA and, in practice, very few solicitors have been willing to accept DBA funding arrangements because the current DBA Regulations 2013 leave claimant solicitors unable to recover their fees if the claim fails.
So, accepting life on life's term is not something we practice very often.
I believe that had Parliament intended to break rank with the international maritime community in regard to the right of arrest, which as I have already said, would constitute a dramatic departure from the accepted practice, section 43 would no doubt have been worded very differently so as to make it clear that in Canada claimants were not restricted to one vessel to secure their claim.4
Of note in this case is the court's reliance on both a fairly narrow (but common) reading of this rule, that restricts the right to file a reply factum very narrowly, as well as an «administrative practice» for the court to not even accept a reply factum unless leave is obtained by a judge.
Combining creative solutions and leadership to promote innovation in the practice of law are the foundations that allowed us to win the Innovative Workplace Award — a prestigious honour that we very graciously accept.
This is actually a very large subset of psychology that is often at odds with «mainstream» psychology due to the views practitioners have on the role of Christianity in our lives, homosexuality and other beliefs and practices that are accepted by society as a whole but not by various sects of Christianity.
It is very easy for discount brokerages to benefit from consumer ignorance, because it is very hard for someone who hasn't practiced in the industry to accept that there could be real «added value» with commissions at or around 5 % or 6 %.
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