Such practical problems in communal ownership are often overlooked by environmentalists who romanticise communal ownership. |
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For issues to be discussed in the form of poetry is not to romanticise them. |
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Outlaw, their fourth album, sets out to romanticise Britain's famed criminals in the same way that American country music celebrates its history of gunslingers and gamblers. |
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At the same time, nothing should be done to romanticise all the positions taken by ordinary people. |
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This study must, of course, be carried out without any ideological prejudices that might demonise or romanticise any particular source of energy. |
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The majority populations in all three countries tend to cite and romanticise the period when 'they' ruled the whole region. |
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There's a tendency, especially by Australians, to romanticise a villain. |
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Inevitably, there will be those who object to the T-pylon, who will want to romanticise the traditional design as an emblem of a century that has rejoiced in access to electricity. |
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It is important to involve community and religious leaders and local service providers being careful not to romanticise local practices and keeping a critical attitude that promotes the best interests of the child. |
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There is also the tendency to romanticise the tramp, feeling that his brain is aswirl with poems and profound thoughts. |
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Some tried to romanticise Callas' death with speculations of suicide in an attempt to lend an air of mystery to that most natural and banal of phenomena: death. |
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The biggest point this film raises for me is the way it may sensationalise or romanticise suicide. |
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The Soviet system Havel protested against as absurd was something Hitchens was inclined to romanticise from the safe distance of his perch at the Nation. |
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I prefer neither to romanticise nor to darken my experience. |
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It is easy to romanticise about the loss of this bygone era. |
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