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10 Sentences With "egality"

How to use egality in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "egality" and check conjugation/comparative form for "egality". Mastering all the usages of "egality" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"It's become a symbol of frugality and egality, but for those who are not big fans, it's a terrible thing," says Viestad.
As a devout Catholic growing up in Latin America in the seventies and eighties, he would no doubt have come into contact with ideas of equality, egality and social justice in the context of faith.
According to the introduction to his book "net.art. Materialien zur Netzkunst", the specific qualities of net.art are "connectivity, global reach, multimediality, immateriality, interactivity and egality".Baumgärtel, T. (1999). net.art.
Egality is collecting questions to UK candidates from people in Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Ghana. These questions are put before UK political parties by volunteers in the UK.The process in detail , Give Your Vote website, accessed 2010-03-22 Egality also plans to have SMS hubs in Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Ghana through which questions can be sent in.The process in detail , Give Your Vote website, accessed 2010-03-22 The answers from the parties will be translated and broadcast in local languages by local TV and Radio and will be published on the internet. Meanwhile, people registered to vote in the UK can pledge to "give" their vote, thus to act as proxies for people in Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Ghana.
The 1991 Afro-Asian Cup of Nations was the fourth edition of the Afro-Asian Cup of Nations, it was contested by Algeria, winners of the 1990 African Cup of Nations, and Iran, winners of the 1990 Asian Games football tournament. Algeria won by the away goal after egality 2 - 2 in aggregates.
Wikiversity logo for voting. If you give a man a fish he will have a single meal. If you teach him how to fish, he will eat all his life. Education allows each of us to do for ourselves In response to the project, the BNP has called Egality a "Marxist organization" and accused it of being "keen to punish the prosperity of Britain".
An English version of the explanation was also required, since the teachers used this language to communicate between themselves. National and European winners were selected the following year. By the contest deadline, 15 January 2000, 2016 mottoes had applied. A lexical analysis of this 400,000-word corpus was done by Taylor Nelson Sofres to reveal the most popular terms used by the young Europeans, which were: "Europe", "peace", "unity", "union", "together", "future", "difference", "hope", "solidarity", "egality", "liberty", "diversity", and "respect".
Brand gets his new church built (in the 1860s, many old Norwegian churches were being rebuilt as new, larger places of worship). Brand comes to believe that his new church is still too small, and rebels against the authorities, the local dean and the bailiff. The provost talks about getting people to heaven "by the parish", and denounces individual thinking. The provost's speech should be examined in detail, also because he has a vision of the masses "marching with equal steps" towards salvation, and stressing that egality matters more to the church than freedom.
Articles and poems published in numerous Journals and Magazines. Published books include: Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney (‘Guide to the Gardens’) (Ed.) 1982, Banyan, (Poetry) 1982, Drawn from Life (Ed.) (exhibition catalogue) 1983, Liberty, Egality, Fraternity! (Novel, please note ‘egality’ is derived from ‘egalitarianism’) 1984, The Dragon Tree, (Poetry) 1985, Discovering the Domain (Ed.), (Social History) 1986, Wild Tamarind, (Science fiction) 1987, Falling Up Into Verse, (Poetic Handbook) 1989, Songs of the Forest, (Rainforest Poems) 199o, The Rose Garden, (Poems) 1991, The Wishing Tree, (Social History, Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain) 1992, The Botanic Verses, (Poetry) 1993, Chaos Theory, (Poetry) 1997, Cosmos Seven, (Selected Poems) 1998, The Mullumbimby Kid: A Portrait of the Poet as a Child, (Poetic Memoirs, Book One) 2000, Cedar House, (Gothic Novel and Australian ‘Wuthering Heights’) 2001, Asteroid Belt, (Poetry) 2002, Anthology: Collected Poems 2002, Poetry of Place, (Social History, Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain) 2004, The Melancholy Dane: A Portrait of the Poet as a Young Man, (Poetic Memoirs, Book Two) 2006, My Brother Jim, (Poetry) 2009, New Selected Poems 2010, The Mullumbimby Kid (second edition) 2012, New Collected Poems 2012, Oliver Bainbridge – Lord Nelson's Great Grandson? 2013, Mullumbimby Dreaming, 2014 (exhibition catalogue), Stardust Painter-Poet, 2015, Lord Nelson, Uncle Oliver and I, 2017, Synthesis, (Poetry) 2018, and Long-Distance Poet, 2019.
The "ratnagotra" (lineal jewel, gem lineage) is a synonym for the buddha nature, the 'element' which is "as it is", the 'everlasting' aspect of the continuum of being, the aspect that is constant and 'unsullied'. In Dzogchen technical language, 'primordial purity' (Wylie: ka dag), which is none other than the 'one taste' (ro gcig) of the 'gnosis of commonality/egality' . This is metaphorically 'twilighted' in the RGV as dhruva "pole star". From the vantage of the Northern Hemisphere of Earth, the pole star is apt because day or night it is always in the sky, hence constant, immutable and fixed, but not necessarily visible.

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