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Both were out on a limb, ferociously challenging the slovenly relativism of everyone else.
ECONOMIST: Richard Neuhaus
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Now men in their mid-20s through early 40s are rebelling against that slovenly attitude.
FORBES: Life
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In contrast, Leslie Ann Warren goes through the 1965 version with a smudged face that makes her look more slovenly than sympathetic.
WSJ: Cinderella: That Flexible Fairy Tale
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Apart from petty corruption and slovenly officials, the main gripes have been low pay, rising income inequality, inefficiency, waste and asphyxiating bureaucracy.
ECONOMIST: Cuba's economy: Raúl's talking cure | The
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Then there is slovenly reporting , which happens because the standard of accuracy on the Internet is low, and the speed of dissemination is high.
ECONOMIST: Gossip on the web
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With Larry Tucker, as a slovenly grifter who knows too much.
NEWYORKER: Blast of Silence
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It also claimed the best TV sitcom award, while Ricky Tomlinson, who plays Jim Royle - the slovenly head of the Royle family - was named best actor.
BBC: The Royle Family
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If the airline does finally crash, it will be a big blow to Greece's reforming prime minister, Costas Simitis: it has become a test-case in his campaign to reform his country's slovenly public sector.
ECONOMIST: Greece
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Give up those adolescent, slovenly ways, we preach.
FORBES: Uncle Sam's My Name, And Reform Is My Game
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Next to him is a great 1999 addition (six of the works on display were acquired since the 1982-84 show), a slumped, slovenly old man painted just two years before the artist died in 1669.
WSJ: de Young Museum: More Than Just the Girl
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Were they slovenly, then, or always quarrelling?
NEWYORKER: Among Animals and Plants