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135 Sentences With "suffer the consequences of"

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

They reap the rewards, or suffer the consequences, of their actions.
The couples suffer the consequences of rampant infidelity and emotional neglect.
French Polynesia will undoubtedly suffer the consequences of unfettered greenhouse gas emissions.
"No children should suffer the consequences of political decisions," Mr. Beasley said.
"I think everybody will eventually suffer the consequences of these decisions," Asgari says.
Sadly, I suspect Yellowstone will continue to suffer the consequences of human idiocy.
Sure, it is unfair to corporations that they suffer the consequences of Trump's misbehavior.
Because most people, at some point in their lives, suffer the consequences of their actions.
The U.S. government and the American people would suffer the consequences of abusing march-in.
They believed in the dream, and they have to suffer the consequences of that optimism.
BoJack, a troubled but lovable antihero, will suffer the consequences of his many questionable actions.
I've seen my mother, now in her late 60s, suffer the consequences of not saving.
All Americans — farmers included — will suffer the consequences of degraded water quality and damaging floods.
But he took a social stand and he was willing to suffer the consequences of that.
In general — and especially compared to women — men in Hollywood don't suffer the consequences of their actions.
In the end, it's especially the working class who will suffer the consequences of the far right.
HBCUs, MSIs and other public institutions suffer the consequences of policymaking conducted with little regard for empirical research.
As a law-abiding US citizen, I never thought I would suffer the consequences of US counterterrorism measures.
Allowing the rest of your neighbors to suffer the consequences of his professional failings isn't one of them.
This did not sit well with the Tennants, who began to suffer the consequences of antagonizing Parkersburg's main employer.
A Taliban spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, told Al Jazeera that the US would suffer the consequences of axing the talks.
For those Americans living along the Southwest border, they suffer the consequences of a porous border — and have for years.
Because of their wealth, power and geography they will be the last to suffer the consequences of their own failures.
We suffer the consequences of our reproductive place in the world, but we don't even get enough paid maternity leave.
But that will only happen after people suffer the consequences of a rushed bill considered quickly with little public debate.
Critics of lawn mower parents, though, would have suggested I let my son suffer the consequences of his own carelessness.
We have a closely-knit network of venture capitalists who rarely have to suffer the consequences of their profit-seeking behavior.
This moves have already spooked the American farmers and others who may have to suffer the consequences of those Chinese tariffs.
"Contract workers and their families should not suffer the consequences of a shutdown that they did not cause," the letter said.
The invitation is a way for her to be nice without any threat she'll have to suffer the consequences of my company.
Only one thing is certain: The Nicaraguan people, already among the hemisphere's poorest, will increasingly suffer the consequences of a prolonged crisis.
But even if she can't make the trip, Rachel at least didn't suffer the consequences of her bad weekend in history class.
"The entire region will suffer the consequences of some very bad actors getting back on the battlefield again because of that," said Sen.
The Republican presidential candidate maintained that even children who entered the US illegally would have to suffer the consequences of their parents' actions.
"At a certain point, everyone in Russia is part of the corrupted system and must suffer the consequences of such involvement," Pound said.
However, Christie seems committed to making Pennsylvania "suffer the consequences of his failure to enact a responsible budget in a bipartisan way," Sheridan said.
If he selects for loyalty, then he might suffer the consequences of having a committed political ally if, perhaps, not much of a lawyer.
When a driver buys fuel for his car, for example, society as a whole has to suffer the consequences of the higher levels of pollution.
He's also used his Twitter account to taunt corporations and individuals, who later suffer the consequences of nose-diving stock prices or virulent online harassment.
The characters evade a system that normally persecutes minorities, and instead suffer the consequences of their own individual actions, much like rich, white men do.
Thousands of businesses—from bait and tackle shops along the coast to retailers and manufacturers across the nation—suffer the consequences of the government's folly.
Of course, were Pleasants alive today, he may well retort that nobody can judge who was not there to suffer the consequences of continued imprisonment.
Parental consultation would have been too complicated on all fronts, so we skipped it, deciding we would suffer the consequences of their hurt feelings later.
While individuals who abuse drugs should and do suffer the consequences of their actions, medical science has proven that addiction is a disease that demands treatment.
"Far too many people, their families and communities suffer the consequences of the harmful use of alcohol," said Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of WHO.
But sometimes, the people who suffer the consequences of our broken bonds are the ones too young to understand what's happening, or where the drama originated from.
All taxpayers, and particularly all charitable organizations, will suffer the consequences of politicians once again putting their own priorities above the interests of the people they serve.
"Rural populations have not been adequately represented: farmers, forest dwellers, indigenous and coastal communities - all suffer the consequences of uncontrolled urbanization," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
As student borrowers come to view their lender as being increasingly altruistic, taxpayers could ultimately suffer the consequences of being a rich uncle to far too many.
José Carlos Carvalho, a former environment minister, said he also saw signs in the tragedy that Brazil might be starting to suffer the consequences of climate change.
Jail is a necessity sometimes, and I'm certainly a believer that you should suffer the consequences of your actions, but jail alone is not going to do that.
Technology advancements will continue apace, but unless we do much more to assure that security is designed in, we will suffer the consequences of the havoc that ensues.
United States, the plaintiffs say their generation has already suffered and will continue to suffer the consequences of climate change, including health problems, extreme weather, and water shortages.
Self-righteous social justice warriors such as the authors of this book live in safe, upscale neighborhoods and do not have to suffer the consequences of their accusations.
A year later, the Saudi regime continues to suffer the consequences of its persecution of opponents — especially women seeking greater rights — and its ill-conceived intervention in Yemen.
Instead of karoshi cases affecting a majority-male workforce, as they used to, now women like Takahashi and Sado also suffer the consequences of staying committed to a job.
Family members were disappointed by the five-year sentence for Mr. Apai, noting that Ms. Gavios will suffer the consequences of the attack for the rest of her life.
But focusing on short-run growth, even in developing countries, may compromise long-run prosperity and well-being, as people suffer the consequences of environmental degradation and climate change.
The Saudis, according to Gause, are afraid of both "abandonment" (the US withdrawing its support) and "entrapment" (having to suffer the consequences of American mistakes in the Middle East).
If we entrust it to those who, as Murrow noted, seek only to profit from it without regard to their moral duties, we will suffer the consequences of mass delusion.
Thinly veiled military threats, including from President Donald Trump, have greatly worried current and former US officials and even pro-Guaidó Venezuelans who would suffer the consequences of such a move.
I'm part of the generation that's going to suffer the consequences of the decisions being made in Washington right now, mistakes that are going to affect the rest of our lives.
As a policy maven and academic, Mr. Meltzer has promoted the view that countries and investors should suffer the consequences of their mistakes, whether flawed fiscal measures or bad lending decisions.
"We have suffered the consequences of his actions over the years and it's time for him to suffer the consequences of his own actions," Cosby accuser Victoria Valentino told ThinkProgress on Monday.
"'White-washing would be moving people around one section of the city to another,'" he said, pledging that far-flung neighborhoods won't suffer the consequences of homeless people moved off the Embarcadero.
National Basketball Association star Stephen Curry said basketball remains an important vehicle for sparking conversation and driving progress, even as the league continues to suffer the consequences of political fallout with China.
It is the Palestinian people, virtual prisoners in an increasingly volatile conflict, who will most directly suffer the consequences of this callous and ill-advised attempt to respond to Israel's security concerns.
"My message to those outlets is that if your words can cause great harm, and has caused great harm, you must suffer the consequences of the law as a result," the attorney said.
Although children don't usually suffer the consequences of high blood pressure in the pediatric years, Dr. Kaelber said that, unless properly treated, it can result in early heart attacks, strokes and kidney disease.
It's easy: Just make sure to change your name, Social Security number and home address regularly — and don't go crying if you neglect to do that and suffer the consequences of your actions.
You can be as loyal as Jeff Sessions and still suffer the consequences of that plain and inescapable truth: This president should not be the president, and the sooner he is not, the better.
The wise few among us who know how to navigate these periods seem to take a similar tact — take things slow and go with the flow, or suffer the consequences of pushing against the current.
"I do not want my granddaughters or anybody else's to suffer the consequences of our failures," he said, "They would not forgive us if uncontrolled and spiraling climate change would be our legacy to them."
"Women have found strength in one another and the courage to come forward, leaving many powerful men to suffer the consequences of their actions," Trump accuser Rachel Crooks said at a December 2018 press conference.
During a meeting with Kagame Monday at the Vatican, the Pope expressed "solidarity with the victims and with those who continue to suffer the consequences of those tragic events," according to a statement from the Vatican.
But it's also true that the Kardashians seem always to be pressed up against black culture without ever having to be a part of it, or having to suffer the consequences of being born into it.
As fun as those things were, we're now left to suffer the consequences of summer fun, and we're not just talking about the hit on our wallets (as disappointing as our bank accounts look right now).
If the Trump administration continues to block international economic activity with Iran, a country of 80 million people will be abandoned — and the world could suffer the consequences of the unfettered spread of a deadly disease.
Having been raised in one of the poorest countries in the world, I feel a strong desire to help families like my own, who continue to suffer the consequences of economic failure every day of their lives.
Again, any incident of racial disparity is assumed to be the result of racists' judgmental attitudes, and beyond the agency of students who suffer the consequences of their dismal academic performance or anti-social and violent behavior.
"Banks in Spain, like in the rest of the Eurozone, suffer the consequences of low interest rates, increased competition for a limited amount of new business, and the threat from fintech entrants," Citi analysts said in a note.
If we don't turn the tide against global malnutrition, we will suffer the consequences of millions of lives lost unnecessarily and a generation of mothers and children in the developing world that never achieve their God-given potential.
In 2014, such views led him to tweet that President Barack Obama should not have evacuated American Ebola fighters who contracted the disease from West Africa, and instead, should have left them to "suffer the consequences" of their condition.
What these legal observers and pundits fail to notice is that the biggest potential beneficiaries of the immigration measures announced by Obama are U.S. citizen children who suffer the consequences of our broken immigration system on a daily basis.
To me, this recalls a classic pop-star sleight of hand: Promote "girl power," but don't ever suggest that patriarchy is the source of girls' disempowerment, and you'll never suffer the consequences of being seen as an angry feminist.
The United States and other countries also need to stop facilitating the extremist voices of Venezuelan politicians in exile — who, after all, do not suffer the consequences of their unrealistic schemes — and prioritize the many politicians still in Venezuela.
Only people from groups that are in power have the privilege of believing in the false notion that one can opt out of politics, while those in the margins suffer the consequences of being oppressed and excluded from the political system.
As many men lose their jobs and suffer the consequences of their alleged sexual misconduct, some still command respect and continue their work, including Woody Allen, whose new movie "Wonder Wheel" starring Kate Winslet and Justin Timberlake, is now in theaters.
When she was on a bad date, she would go to the bathroom, hit her nose until she got a nosebleed, and excuse herself, because it was easier to punch herself in the face than suffer the consequences of rejecting a man.
"Children who are placed into foster homes can be unhappy, distrustful or angry and may suffer the consequences of abuse and neglect," says John Simmonds OBE, who is the director of policy, research and development at CoramBAAF, an organization that supports adoption agencies.
In a speech in Brussels, Gibraltar's deputy chief minister, Joseph Garcia, said that the territory should not be a "whipping boy" made to suffer the consequences of Brexit and that Spain might prevent current conditions applying in a transition period after Brexit.
If gender-identity ideology becomes the law of the land, women in all walks of life will suffer the consequences of the blatantly sexist notion that a man who adopts stereotypical feminine roles, behaviors or clothing must be treated in all respects as a woman.
Mostly shot with an easy-to-conceal, point-and-shoot DSLR camera, cell phones, and secret-camera eyeglasses, the footage that comprises the film is dizzying and riveting, providing a first-person perspective on what it's like to suffer the consequences of being a political activist in China.
Rapidly, this revelation unleashed a firestorm of similar allegations about a myriad men across industries including arts and entertainment, major network news organizations and politics—even our newly-elected president was not immune from allegations, though has yet to suffer the consequences of alleged actions, unlike his peers.
In its 2018 report, AI Now found that "the gap between those who develop and profit from AI — and those most likely to suffer the consequences of its negative effects — is growing larger, not smaller," as it relates to concerns over bias, discrimination, due process, liability, and overall responsibility for harm.
"We will not stand idly by while President Trump and his agencies raze crucial environmental protections, ignore climate science, dispute well-documented facts and force future generations of Americans to suffer the consequences of this administration's reckless choices and ignorant policies," said Clean Air Council Executive Director and Chief Counsel Joseph Minott.
"Also, it is important to see that patients that are not having 'access' to bariatric surgery, either because they don't have specific insurance coverage or have not been educated, will suffer the consequences of remaining severely obese and deterioration of health and quality of life," he told Reuters Health in an email.
There is no room in Navarro's worldview to accommodate the fact that there is no monolithic national interest, but rather a broad diversity of interests that include import-competing and import-dependent producers, service providers, white-collar professionals, manual laborers, consumers and so on, who benefit or suffer the consequences of policies in different ways.
Tim KaineTimothy (Tim) Michael KaineA lesson of the Trump, Tlaib, Omar, Netanyahu affair Warren's pledge to avoid first nuclear strike sparks intense pushback Almost three-quarters say minimum age to buy tobacco should be 21: Gallup MORE (D-Va.) said Monday that leakers have to "suffer the consequences" of the law, even as he said Americans also deserve to know about Russia's involvement in the 2016 presidential election.
In response to recommendations by the United Nations Committee Against Torture, a February 2017 report by the Senate delegation on the rights of women has called for compensation for intersex people who suffer the consequences of medical interventions.
Its banks suffer the consequences of removal of sand and gravel in several points (in Luziânia sand was removed to build Brasília). The loss of the natural forest and agricultural activity are responsible for negative impact on all the course of the river.
Bouka is a gifted young teenager. He lives with his parents in a village and forms with them a solid family. His father gives him a traditional education close to nature. Unfortunately this happiness will be troubled by the brutal death of the father… Remained widow Bouka's mother will suffer the consequences of a relentless traditional principle.
Sometimes, the Master dies because the Townsfolk are "sick of his predations" and "storm his domicile -- pitchforks in hand and torches aflame". Some or all of the players' characters might also meet their end in the hands of the Townsfolk, or the Master kills them as they try to resist his commands and suffer the consequences of their failure.
Each novel in the Adventure series is notable for its memorable selection of loathsome villains and enemies. Some of these, through their interactions with Hal and Roger, are led to redeem their past misdeeds, while others simply suffer the consequences of their actions. Only one character, the cunning "Reverend" Merlin Kaggs, appears as a villain in more than one book.
After having sex with Anne, the gardener tells her that she must leave for he will suffer the consequences of their tryst. Anne does not want to leave, so the gardener smacks her. Anne hits him back, calmly puts her clothes back on and leaves. She walks over and kisses the male attendants that find her until Austin calls her to stop.
As it turns out, worked examples are not appropriate for all learners. Learners with prior knowledge of the subject find this form of instruction redundant, and may suffer the consequences of this redundancy. This has been described as the expertise reversal effect (Kalyuga, Ayres, Chandler, & Sweller, 2003). It is suggested that worked examples be faded over time to be replaced with problems for practice (Renkl, Atkinson & Maier, 2000).
As she doesn't want his past drug addiction to be widely known, Alexis is resigned to suffer the consequences of his actions. Therefore, she gave up her control of Denver-Carrington. Later, in 1983, she becomes romantically involved with Farnsworth "Dex" Dexter, the son of a Denver-Carrington board member Sam Dexter, an old friend of Blake Carrington's. Dex has been sent by his father to understand why ColbyCo.
During the course of their adventures, Hal and Roger have made many enemies. These include Hal's embittered ex-school friend, Sylvester K. Inkham (nicknamed "Skink") and an angry witch doctor with no scruples. Some, through their interactions with Hal and Roger, are led to redeem their past misdeeds, while others simply suffer the consequences of their actions. Of these enemies, only one, the "Reverend" Merlin Kaggs, has made more than one appearance as a villain.
By the 1970s, the mothers in his paintings exhibited a greater courage, and by the 1980s, they had a softer attitude. Longaretti stated that mothers are the same throughout the world – they suffer the consequences of war and the pursuit of glory, and once the destruction is complete, it is they who must rebuild. Other themes include loneliness, abandonment, exile, pilgrimage, and poverty. Subjects often include wayfarers, runaways, actors, mimes, and musicians.
She declares that, despite the poet's crooked back and extreme ugliness, none of that would matter in the bedroom. She therefore demands that Merriman must be the first man to suffer the consequences of the new marriage law. As a crowd of infuriated single women gleefully prepares to flog Brian Merriman into a quivering bowl of jelly, he awakens along the shore of Loch Gréine to find it was all a terrible nightmare.
Gage Creed has also been the subject of scholar works discussing what he represents. In Frankenstein's Monster: Hubris and Death in Stephen King's Oeuvre, Strengell draws parallels between Gage Creed and Frankenstein's monster. Both Gage and the Creature suffer the consequences of their father's/creator's hubris when defying God and attempting to create life. The Creature is driven to evil by hardship, whereas Gage has had his soul replaced entirely by evil.
In 2018 she spoke at the 18th International Anti-Corruption Conference (IACC) in Copenhagen, Denmark, arguing that "corruption hits most the poor who suffer the consequences of corrupt regimes." In 2019, she admonished Western banks for facilitating corruption in Gambia. In 2019 she argued that citizen's rights and democratic institutions were threatened by the trend for more authoritarian and populist regimes across the world which should be resisted by greater checks and balances.
Hell as depicted in Hieronymus Bosch's triptych The Garden of Earthly Delights (c. 1504). Hell in Christian beliefs, is a place or a state in which the souls of the unsaved will suffer the consequences of sin. The Christian doctrine of Hell derives from the teaching of the New Testament, where Hell is typically described using the Greek words Gehenna or Tartarus. Unlike Hades, Sheol, or Purgatory it is eternal, and those damned to Hell are without hope.
If the Klingon is found guilty of a crime, he and his entire family will suffer the consequences of the crime. For example, treason causes the family to lose their honor for seven generations. It appears that the members of the council serve at the pleasure of the Chancellor. This is the reason that Worf's brother Kurn was granted a seat on the council after the 2367 civil war, and was later taken from Kurn when Worf refused Gowron's orders to turn against the Federation in 2372.
The modernization of Haiti's state- enterprises remains a controversial political issue in Haiti. Comparative social and economic indicators show Haiti falling behind other low-income developing countries (particularly in the Western hemisphere) since the 1980s. Haiti's economic stagnation results from earlier inappropriate economic policies, political instability, a shortage of good arable land, environmental deterioration, continued use of traditional technologies, under-capitalization and lack of public investment in human resources, migration of large portions of the skilled population, and a weak national savings rate. Haiti continues to suffer the consequences of the 1991 coup.
Most characters wish for nothing more than to escape the supposed idyll of the Basque Country, though those who do are fated to return and suffer the consequences of inescapable roots and blood ties.Stone, Spanish Cinema, p. 165 Médem further illustrates the cyclical nature of the unresolved strife and vacillating alliance by using the same actor to portray generations of characters. Instead of typifying the beauty of the land, the mist of the basque Valley create a malignant atmosphere that enshrouds the protagonists of Vacas, stimulating and manifesting their latent desires and urges.
She also states that abolishing priestly celibacy is something only the Vatican can do and counsels patience. To the poet's horror, the younger woman angrily points him out as a 30-year- old bachelor and describes her many failed attempts to attract his interest in hopes of becoming his wife. She declares that he must be the first man to suffer the consequences of the new marriage law. As a crowd of infuriated women prepares to flog him into a quivering bowl of jelly, he awakens to find it was all a terrible nightmare.
This attracts other people's attention. Gradually, Lily begins to suffer the consequences of her indiscreet behavior. Percy, having been scared away by Lily's behavior and Bertha Dorset's malicious gossip, proposes to a young woman named Evie Van Osburgh, who is much better suited to him than Lily and who was introduced to him by Bertha Dorset herself. Mrs. Dorset's public pride in her match-making victory results in social ridicule for Lily from the people whom she directly and indirectly misled into thinking she and Percy were all but engaged.
The Byzantine troops not only failed to confront them, but withdrew to Bari, and the besieged towns preferred to ransom themselves than suffer the consequences of a sack. After Cassano, the Fatimids withdrew to their winter quarters at Messina, although al-Mansur had commanded them to remain in Italy. The Caliph sharply rebuked the commanders and ordered them to return to the Italian mainland, but this did not happen until the next spring. On 7 May 952, Hasan defeated the Byzantine army under Malakenos and Paschalios at Gerace.
Diaspora populations are also likely funding sources for rebel groups, as was the case with the Tamil population in North America funding the Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka. Diaspora populations, who are usually wealthier than their native counterparts, are able to mobilize for collective action, and do not directly suffer the consequences of a conflict. While the potential for diasporas to be financial backers of rebel groups was noted, Collier and Hoeffler found that diasporas themselves do not increase the risk of conflict. Overall, Collier and Hoeffler's study drew multiple conclusions in support of the greed model.
The complaints filed by Rajab and his wife filed with the Office of the Public Prosecutor were ignored and never investigated. On 15 July 2005, Rajab was beaten by Special Forces whilst attending a peaceful demonstration in solidarity with the Committee for the Unemployed. He suffered a spinal injury, a broken finger, a fractured arm and a head injury"Front Line Human Rights Defenders beaten in Bahrain" BCHR website, 16 July 2005 Accessed 18 May 2011 and was hospitalised for two weeks as a result (see pictures). He continues to suffer the consequences of the spinal injury.
From the original edition illustrated by Aubrey Beardsley The Woman Who Did (1895) is a novel by Grant Allen about a young, self-assured middle-class woman who defies convention as a matter of principle and who is fully prepared to suffer the consequences of her actions. It was first published in London by John Lane in a series intended to promote the ideal of the "New Woman". It was adapted into a British silent film in 1915, The Woman Who Did, which was directed by Walter West, and later into a 1925 German film, Die Frau mit dem schlechten Ruf.
His intensive program, often leading as far as the Second Narrows Bridge in all kinds of weather, morning and evening, soon began to produce results. The first to suffer the consequences of Read's training programs were the crews from the universities of Oregon and Washington. To their horror and surprise an unknown force had appeared on the West Coast and soon began to threaten and then demolish what hitherto had been an American preserve. When the crews met, if the UBC/VRC eight did not win, they still managed to give their rivals a painful and exhausting challenge to remember.
Henry Carey's work has been tarred with allegations of triviality since his own day. He had an extraordinary gift with melody and wordplay, and later authors, such as Edward Lear, would cite Carey as a predecessor for his tongue twisters and nonsense verse in Namby Pamby and Chrononhotonthologos. At the same time, Carey's productions were noted in his own day for their political acuity and bravery (if not foolhardiness). He was willing to offend and suffer the consequences of his convictions, but he made his political statements in a diverting and apparently frivolous manner, thereby allowing his friends to respond to his politics and his enemies to dismiss his levity.
However, there is evidence to suggest a number of people will come to London intent on causing violence and disorder. They are jumping on the bandwagon of these demonstrations with no intention to protest or interest in student tuition fees… those who are intent on committing crime will also be dealt with and they will suffer the consequences of their actions." The protesters marched from Bloomsbury to Parliament Square in the afternoon, where they pushed down metal barriers and occupied the Square. Around 3:30 pm, police kettled those several thousand protesters in the square, preventing them from leaving, stating that it was necessary "due to the level of violence that our officers are facing.
Limited Liability Partnerships, as well as all forms of limited liability companies, offer alternatives to traditional company and corporate structures. Limited liability can enable opportunities for new business growth that were formerly accessible only to those who had access to large amounts of capital or other resources. Depending on jurisdiction and industry, there can be negative consequences for stakeholders associated with limited liability. For some large accountancy firms in the UK, reorganizing as LLPs and LLCs has relieved them of owing the "duty of care" to individuals and clients who are adversely affected by audit failures. > Accountancy firm partners share the profits, but don’t have to suffer the > consequences of negligence by firm or fellow partners.
After spending a month in solitary confinement, Chapman is flown to Chicago to serve as a witness against the drug kingpin who had been Vause's boss. There, she spends time in a maximum security prison with dangerous inmates who menace her daily. Also in episode 1, "Thirsty Bird", we see Chapman as a young girl (Clare Foley) in a flashback, discovering that her father is cheating on her mother. Vause persuades Chapman to commit perjury in order to keep them safe from the drug lord, but ultimately cuts a deal to testify against her former boss in return for early release; she then leaves Chapman to suffer the consequences of her perjured testimony alone.
Student accountability is traditionally based on hang school and classroom rules, combined with sanctions for infringement. As defined by National Council on Measurement in Education (NCME), accountability is "A program, often legislated, that attributes the responsibility for student learning to teachers, school administrators, and/or students. Test results typically are used to judge accountability, and often consequences are imposed for shortcomings." In contrast, some educational establishments such as Sudbury schools believe that students are personally responsible for their acts, and that traditional schools do not permit students to choose their course of action fully; they do not permit students to embark on the course, once chosen; and they do not permit students to suffer the consequences of the course, once taken.
Having fallen in love, Giovanni enters the garden and meets with Beatrice a number of times, while ignoring his mentor, Professor Pietro Baglioni, who warns him that Rappaccini is devious and that he and his work should be avoided. Giovanni discovers that Beatrice, having been raised in the presence of poison, is poisonous herself. Beatrice urges Giovanni to look past her poisonous exterior and see her pure and innocent essence, creating great feelings of doubt in Giovanni. He begins to suffer the consequences of his encounters with the plants—and with Beatrice—when he discovers that he himself has become poisonous; after another meeting with Baglioni, Giovanni brings a powerful antidote to Beatrice so that they can be together, but the antidote kills Beatrice rather than cure her of her poisonous nature.
The incumbent Shankaracharya petitioned Tipu Sultan for help. A bunch of about 30 letters written in Kannada, which were exchanged between Tipu Sultan's court and the Sringeri Shankaracharya were discovered in 1916 by the Director of Archaeology in Mysore. Tipu Sultan expressed his indignation and grief at the news of the raid: > "People who have sinned against such a holy place are sure to suffer the > consequences of their misdeeds at no distant date in this Kali age in > accordance with the verse: "Hasadbhih kriyate karma rudadbhir-anubhuyate" > (People do [evil] deeds smilingly but suffer the consequences > crying)."Annual Report of the Mysore Archaeological Department 1916 pp > 10–11, 73–6 Tipu Sultan immediately ordered the Asaf of Bednur to supply the Swami with 200 rahatis (fanams) in cash and other gifts and articles.
Although Yoshimasa was defeated and killed in 1382, the fight against the Oyama clan continued for Ujimitsu's entire life. In 1391 he allied himself with shōgun Yoshimitsu against the Yamana clan and, although the campaign ended before he could participate, he was nonetheless rewarded with the Mutsu and Dewa Provinces. Ujimitsu never completely abandoned the ambition to become shōgun, and gradually his relationship with shogun Yoshimitsu worsened to the point of being described as one of open enmity. The fact he didn't have to suffer the consequences of the situation is probably due to the good offices of his childhood tutor Gidō Shūshin who, being in Kyoto, could intercede for him with Yoshimitsu, but also to the mediation of the Uesugi and to his work against the Oyama clan, which had served the interests of the Ashikaga's Kansai branch.
This increase in costs was a consequence of the government's wish to build a nicer- looking bridge (50 million euro) and a better connection with the R1 (94 million euro). On September 6, 2005, citizen action group stRaten-generaal proposed its own alternative plan, featuring a new tunnel further north of the city, and keeping the existing Kennedy Tunnel accessible to all vehicles. According to them, this would ensure that a lot fewer people would suffer the consequences of the new highway and the traffic congestion ensuing from it. On September 16, 2005, the Flemish Government chose as its preferred means of realising the Oosterweel Link a layout completing the Antwerp Ring Road by means of a sunk tunnel underneath the Scheldt, running from the Left Bank via the Sint-Annabos next to Blokkersdijk, to the Right Bank right next to the Oosterweel church.
First among these are our forests... there is no greater subject as to which there is more widespread ignorance, than that of forest conservation and the planting of forests.... The State of New York... is the owner of millions of acres of forest lands which are in constant jeopardy, and which is beginning to suffer the consequences of the evils of deforestation... [The State] is under an imperative duty to ... call a halt to the wild rage for destruction which seems to grow by what it feeds upon.... If the bill should become a law, it is the intention of the Board of Trustees of Syracuse University to select ... a number of gentlemen who are enthusiastic in their desire to further the great cause of forest conservation...Marshall, Louis. Letter to Governor Charles Hughes, June 8, 1910. In Reznikoff, pp. 1081-2. Bray Hall under construction, New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University, c.
Mary was born to elderly and previously barren parents by the names of Joachim and Anna (now saints), in answer to their prayers. Orthodox Christians do not hold to the Roman Catholic doctrine of the Immaculate Conception of Mary, in which it is taught that Mary was preserved from the ancestral sin that befalls us all as descendants of Adam and Eve, in anticipation of her giving birth to the sinless Christ. The Orthodox believe that Mary, and indeed all mankind, was born only to suffer the consequences of the ancestral sin (being born into a corrupt world surrounded by temptations to sin), the chief of which was the enslavement to Death, and thus needed salvation from this enslavement, like all mankind. The Roman Catholic Doctrine of the Immaculate Conception also recognizes that Mary was in need of salvation, viewing her as prevented from falling into the scar of sin, instead of being pulled up out of it.
The final set of passions, or "selfish passions", are grief and joy, which Smith considers to be not so aversive as the unsocial passions of anger and resentment, but not so benevolent as the social passions such as generosity and humanity. Smith makes clear in this passage that the impartial spectator is unsympathetic to the unsocial emotions because they put the offended and the offender in opposition to each other, sympathetic to the social emotions because they join the lover and beloved in unison, and feels somewhere in between with the selfish passions as they are either good or bad for only one person and are not disagreeable but not so magnificent as the social emotions. Of grief and joy, Smith notes that small joys and great grief are assured to be returned with sympathy from the impartial spectator, but not other degrees of these emotions. Great joy is likely to be met with envy, so modesty is prudent for someone who has come upon great fortune or else suffer the consequences of envy and disapprobation.

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