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1. way to mitigate the irritations caused by the thought of his home
2. Jack vainly tried to mitigate the attack
3. Whatever they may, be, I fervently beseech the Almighty to avert or mitigate the evils to which they may tend
4. Though the number of deaths Clinton ignored or caused by incompetence is more than double that of Polk or Fillmore, they did nothing good to mitigate their records
5. within limits, mitigate such blemish in his life by propitiating the
6. mitigate the sufferings of all supplicants and brought happiness and
7. The power in a sexual current will often mitigate the harsher reality
8. Mitigate any physical disabilities you may have by whatever means at your disposal
9. I sincerely hope I have been just enough in all my other dealings to mitigate my guilt in this matter somewhat
10. “Sometimes events are out of our hands and there is nothing we can do to avoid or even mitigate
11. That technological humanity can live in houses and cities rather than in caves or grass huts in small villages; that it can move about in comfortable mechanical devices rather than on foot or atop animals; that it has scientifically developed treatments for disease rather than having to rely on the ministrations of shamans and witch doctors; that scientists and engineers can create the enormous labor-saving capacity of the tiny computer chip; that astronomers can pursue an understanding of spiral galaxies, black holes, and the creation of the Universe—all of this and the rest of civilization is a result of patiently learning how to understand, to mitigate, and to exploit the potential of a raw and ferocious nature
12. The most obvious way to mitigate that guilt for those who feel it is to disassociate themselves from the racist past
13. his troops about the incident — factors that should mitigate the sentence,
14. This includes ensuring that you have appropriate financial controls in place to mitigate the risk of fraud
15. Continuing their rapid progress up the line, the groaning refrain was soon suffused with a more melodic chanting coming from those more used to heavy laboring activity, and the sounds were of the kind made in unison that helped to mitigate the arduousness and boredom of those efforts
16. were of the kind made in unison that helped to mitigate the arduousness and boredom of those
17. To mitigate my irritation, I minimized the amount of time I spent in her presence
18. The growing trend of population does not mitigate the lack of opportunity to the
19. We were hired to find it and help mitigate that threat
20. can be developed to mitigate the
21. I would by every possible artifice seek to prevent and dissuade him from making such an attack and to mitigate it in case of my failure to abort it
22. You would multiply the wrath to be visited upon your own heads, but you would not in the least mitigate the hatred which they bear me
23. Philo helped some to mitigate their objections, but Christianity revealed to them an even better concept of one God, and they embraced it readily
24. Captain Alina Darwin was admitted to an intense psychological program intended to mitigate her anxieties about men
25. consolingly to mitigate his faux pas
26. To suppress the traumatic physical effects, he consciously attempted to mitigate his psychological condition for his impending confrontation with the person
27. You don't have to mitigate this diseases seriousness to me; don't forget I'm in medical school
28. Fess up to mitigate your son's prison sentence? Hell no
29. This CSRF check enables CodeIgniter to mitigate against CSRF as the cookie set on a user's machine is unlikely to be guessed and imitated by an attacker on another machine who can then set that value in csrf_cookie_name and csrf_test_name
30. Obviously, SSL support isn't the be-all and end-all of website security, and should always be implemented alongside other security measures to mitigate against unwanted visitors
31. Thus, as we're passing the required language as a value in the URL, we'll want to use the CodeIgniter security method, xss_clean(), to mitigate against cross-site scripting
32. unconsciously raised his voice slightly, as if that would mitigate the
33. thought seemed to mitigate the pain that was still weighing heavy on
34. The President and the State Department are now scrambling to find a solution to that potential crisis and your name has popped up as a possible person able to prevent or at least mitigate it
35. cope, mitigate, avoid or respond
36. “Maybe it is such who mitigate some of the vileness of the world
37. bunked, she would quickly mitigate her mistake, taking pleasure in
38. Mitigate the losses as much as possible
39. When faced with the demand to contribute money to mitigate the insurer’s loss, the homeowner has several options:
40. We no longer have the excuse of not knowing any better to mitigate our guilt, do we? Anyone for pleading insanity?
41. We’ll need that now, more than ever, to mitigate the impact GrandGoods will have
42. Smart ownership systems strategize responses to compensate for suffering to mitigate the agitation, and hence possible rebellion, that job depletion will necessarily create
43. Baroness Glambeck, driving towards the town along the shade-flecked highroad, bent on one of those errands of mercy that are forced at intervals upon the great, with a basket of the properties, principally home-made jam and mittens, at her feet, endeavoured though vainly to mitigate the shock she received on being cut by her own pastor's wife, and a pastor's wife producing curiously the effect of somehow being in tatters, by using the same word to the female dependent who accompanied her on these occasions because somebody had to carry the jam--_Engländerin_
44. prevent, mitigate or at least to ease the pain of what lies
45. procedures to mitigate the higher risk involved
46. in all the solutions, you have the power to mitigate all pains of all those in your universe
47. To mitigate my actions, let me say that this is the first - and, for the foreseeable future, the last - canned hunt I have ever done
48. It also satisfied a belief in helping others, in trying to mitigate
49. Of every thousand dollars spent in so-called charity to-day, it is probable that nine hundred and fifty dollars is unwisely spent-so spent, indeed, as to produce the very evils which it hopes to mitigate or cure
50. This strategy is helpful to mitigate the anger of angry person
1. The cold of Dawnsleep was somewhat mitigated out here in the middle of the open water and there was never ice out here
2. Mitigated by: Disarmament treaties with the USSR
3. Mitigated by: Actions on AIDS in Africa saving or preventing the deaths of an unknown number, estimates from 200,000 to 5 million
4. These actions are themselves mitigated by the program's neglect of aid to gays, sex workers, and intravenous drug users
5. Mitigated by: 38 Dakota who were still executed and should at least have been fairly tried
6. Mitigated by: Carrying out the Trail of Tears, the forced removal of the Cherokee planned and put into place by Jackson and narrowly passed by Congress
7. Mitigated by: Not continuing to defend Blacks during Reconstruction
8. The pain and sorrow that comes when one has to face one’s imperfections can be mitigated if one has lived a life based on “reciprocity,” or based on the knowledge of everyone’s interdependence:
9. In the confusion of a general melee, the difference in weapons is greatly mitigated since backs and sides can be exposed
10. 18 For sometime the flame was mitigated, that it might not burn up the beasts that were sent against the ungodly; but themselves
11. For example, Lack of knowledge in a domain, is mitigated with Knowledge transfer from a subject matter expert
12. with affordable energy! “For years, construction projects that could have mitigated adverse impacts to our supply have been needlessly
13. Her crime of cursing an innocent person is mitigated somewhat because she was under a curse herself, but it is compounded by being a crime of passion
14. And I ran so fast that I did not know for how long and when my forces, mitigated by the exhausting effort to flee, seemed to abandon me, a leafy tree, that was guarding a small marble tomb, planted on one side of the road with its roots protruding as fingers scratching the ground, made my weakened legs bend and fall against the dusty and weary way
15. mitigated by the individual's ability "to define an event filled with negative
16. mitigated by his insatiable curiosity
17. Your risk exposure in this area is extremely high, but may be mitigated by limiting the amount you routinely spend on lottery tickets
18. The suffering from the war had however mitigated her joy at being reacquainted with Vietnam
19. In Enos Lake, where she had returned to her log cabin to continue her interrupted vacation, Tina Forster greeted the news of Guerrero’s demise with mitigated satisfaction
20. think of the ‘problem’ as a threat that might be solved, mitigated or reduced and
21. times superficial life; this was to some extent mitigated by her
22. Her mother was as usual on her sofa near a fire whose heat, that warm day, was mitigated by the windows being wide open
23. among the giants mitigated the carnage inflicted by bombs and spiked missiles, although they could not stave off injury for all
24. the area, his original excitement is somewhat mitigated
25. responsibilities, mitigated, perhaps, by the new glory and respect that this office conferred to him
26. The affects of karma potentially experienced are also believed to be mitigated by actions, and are not necessarily fateful
27. But having said this, the cruel frightening and scary thought and anticipation experienced by many contemplating one’s own death, or a friend’s death, is of course mightily mitigated by one’s belief in the reality of a Creator
28. The fear of one’s own death can be mitigated by the informed belief of the reality of Jesus Christ as the Son of the Creator, because the Creator also allowed His Son to suffer and ‘physically’ die
29. The fear of one’s own death is mightily mitigated in the belief in the reality of one’s real but invisible essence of one’s being, because the Self’s personality, spirit and soul can only be definitively and infinitely experienced and expressed as an invisible entity, a spiritual invisible entity, providing evidence for the possibility of one’s immortality
30. to have the consequences of your errors mitigated at the expense of
31. “Fear cannot be banished, but it can be calm and without panic; and it can be mitigated by reason and evaluation”
32. Linton's looks and movements were very languid, and his form extremely slight; but there was a grace in his manner that mitigated these defects, and rendered him not unpleasing
33. He dressed entirely in black, with the exception of his white tie, and his funeral appearance was only mitigated by the slight line of red ribbon which passed almost imperceptibly through his button-hole, and appeared like a streak of blood traced with a delicate brush
34. Kernan's decline was mitigated by the fact that certain of those friends who had known him at his highest point of success still esteemed him as a character
35. My tremendous sense of relief that I had a canopy and wasn’t going to die was mitigated by the rope burns on both sides of my face
36. My tremendous sense of relief that I had a canopy and wasn’t going to die was mitigated by the rope burns on both sides of my face
37. Some of the feeling of bitter hatred the women bore Scarlett for her share in the tragedy was mitigated by the knowledge that her husband was dead and she knew it disclosed the bodies and the authorities notified her, she must know nothing
38. Such a lady gave a neighborliness to both rank and religion, and mitigated the bitterness of uncommuted tithe
39. Well, I have a loser on my hands, but at least I mitigated some of the loss with my stock purchase
40. * Graham’s objection to high-yield bonds is mitigated today by the widespread availability of mutual funds that spread the risk and do the research of owning “junk bonds
41. Linton’s looks and movements were very languid, and his form extremely slight; but there was a grace in his manner that mitigated these defects, and rendered him not unpleasing
42. This was the mitigated translation of his first indignation
43. They can be mitigated but not fully avoided
44. If their influence cannot be managed and mitigated, the result of criteria application may become contrary to our expectations
45. The sample used for this chapter is the same sample used in Chapter 6, “Long Volatility Trades,” including only those options meeting our liquidity requirements, so the adverse impact from thinly traded options is mitigated beforehand
46. This means that the spectacular failures of most swing wave indicators are mitigated when the expected price turning point does not occur
47. These sad thoughts were at last mitigated by the news that the Russians themselves were setting fire to the city
48. He was arrested, tried, kept in prison for two years, and condemned to death, but the sentence was mitigated to one of hard labour for life
49. “Well, but if the sentence should be mitigated
1. Instead, we're going to look at how CodeIgniter mitigates against cross-site request forgeries
2. “Moving barely mitigates the risk
3. Any pickup in implied volatility mitigates time decay
4. Hence instead of a dependable dividend that mitigates the uncertainty of earnings we have a frequently arbitrary and unaccountable dividend policy that aggravates the earnings hazard
5. That a criminal was reared among male factors mitigates his fault in our eyes
6. It mitigates problems caused by smoothed and/or stale pricing of appraisal-based indices
7. Rank variables were applied instead of market cap itself because a rank variable mitigates the impact of outliers and the result is more relevant
8. There's the perception that having specific catalysts for all your positions mitigates risk, when in fact we believe the opposite is true
1. He tried mitigating his offence
2. I don‘t believe in the ―Age of Innocence‖, although I believe that recent generations have witnessed a rescission of innocence in proportion to mitigating sentiment in contrast with sentimentality
3. In this manner, a lapse in judgment due to neglect or an inability to reason (clearly) is not necessarily a mitigating factor for behavior that (otherwise) occasions undue hardships on other people, especially when the intended outcome of some particular action, in whatever manner conceived, should have or could have been properly determined beforehand; apart from such actions performed under
4. A balsamic mitigating sea breeze inspires, distracts and incites visitors to marvel once more at the pleasant outline of the city and to examine more closely one of the two majestic statues of the legendary icon Merlion
5. There was no mitigating influence from my family, half a world away
6. The only mitigating circumstance I can imagine is if one of his hooligan buddies heard Nigel carping about the contract negotiations and took it upon himself to make Nigel the star
7. • Be fair, taking into account any mitigating factors
8. I asked him if he felt there were any mitigating
9. Moving us to Xerxes is a way of mitigating us
10. As a result we would be seen as mitigating the damage, which in
11. ‘Then perhaps you might plead these as mitigating factors when it comes to your trial?’ the great sleuth helpfully suggested
12. But there were mitigating factors
13. Of course, Cartwright was an intimidating figure for Spalding, if Janet’s remarks were genuine, thus mitigating the possibility of any direct connection between the two
14. work on mitigating those
15. While it’s true that our store would bring in several thousand more vehicles locally per day, there are means of mitigating the impact of that traffic burden so that the character of Wishful remains intact
16. Cortas,where he sets up as mitigating
17. The HR rep told me there were mitigating circumstances and he had been a solid employee up to that point
18. To the racist Greeks, a Copt though indisputably inferior, is at least Christian and the word, rich, would have played its mitigating role
19. These are personal choices made albeit choices often based on ignorance and misinformation, or choices deliberately made without mitigating factors
20. I let breeze run through me, so that it can touch my soul and its innocence is captured inside me, mitigating me of any evil
21. I was in a place with mitigating silence
22. Another power of the president is the power of pardon, which allows the president to waive sentences when people are wrongly convicted or when there are mitigating circumstances
23. The American, Abe Slaney, was condemned to death at the winter assizes at Norwich; but his penalty was changed to penal servitude in consideration of mitigating circumstances, and the certainty that Hilton Cubitt had fired the first shot
24. Frank cast about in his mind for some mitigating information that would make the ladies feel better
25. Will wished that she would speak and bring some mitigating shadow across his own cruel speech, which seemed to stand staring at them both in mockery of any attempt at revived fellowship
26. All along, I’d been straining for some sort of framework, a holistic answer to one of the central challenges for a modern meditator: How can you be a happier, better person without becoming ineffective? The books and teachers I’d consulted had already done the most important work: reorienting my internal life by mitigating the noxious tendencies of my mind and juicing the compassion circuitry
27. It is still possible for you to take a growth-oriented stance while mitigating your risk to some degree by investing 70% in stocks and 30% in bonds
28. ‘She has been dying for your sake several weeks, and raving about you this morning, and pouring forth a deluge of abuse, because I represented your failings in a plain light, for the purpose of mitigating her adoration
29. The American, Abe Slaney, was condemned to death at the winter assizes at Norwich, but his penalty was changed to penal servitude in consideration of mitigating circumstances, and the certainty that Hilton Cubitt had fired the first shot
30. "Startled by this idea, the men of the various countries have sought for a means for stopping or at least mitigating the consequences of the terrible slaughter which is menacing us