He took ten years to come to terms with a very obdurate and highly original painter.
I'm struggling to come to terms with this pessimism and find it very frustrating.
America has yet to come to terms with a woman's right to an abortion.
Mrs Bennett said she was unable to come to terms with her son's death.
And the Republican Party can't seem to come to terms about what to do about immigration.
"The force will need time to come to terms with this, " Mr Stafford said.
However, they also argued for giving her more time to come to terms with having lost.
We have to now come to terms with the phenomenon, but not try to stop the phenomenon.
People familiar with the matter say the two sides are still on track to come to terms.
The verdicts marked the culmination of South Korea's efforts to come to terms with its traumatic past.
Even so, it is an approach that the business world has found hard to come to terms with.
Mr Stoneman believes broadcasters need to come to terms with second screen devices, and how they're being used.
But are the conservatives anywhere near ready to come to terms with the demands of the new generation?
Colombian society, one of old-fashioned machismo, may have to come to terms with an increasing trend toward matriarchy.
However UFJ has been perhaps the slowest to come to terms with this.
Prison gives prisoners an opportunity to come to terms with their drug use and find ways to tackle it.
We need to come to terms with the fact that global warming may only be slowed but not stopped.
In the town of Reyhanli on Sunday, locals were struggling to come to terms with the scale of the attack.
How nice if today's Russians could use the occasion to come to terms with one another, and with their past.
Family, friends and the football world are trying to come to terms with the death of Wales manager Gary Speed.
Early indications of the possible onset of diabetes give parents and clinicians adequate opportunity to come to terms with the condition.
Taken together, these cases illustrate two issues--both central to the debate about Islam and modernity--that Malaysia is struggling to come to terms with.
Her daughter is still struggling to come to terms with what happened - and is still angry at the treatment her mother received.
That is the sentiment of students across the nation as they begin to come to terms with this week's tragedy at Virginia Tech.
These trips were a chance for Peterson to come to terms with his wartime experience, which he had not talked about with his family.
Brzezinski, I said, seemed to argue that the United States had yet to come to terms with the strategic requirements of a post-colonial era.
In short, South Korea's chaebol are behaving as if they have still to come to terms with the events of the past few months.
The parish priest, Michael O'Meara, said the community in County Offaly were struggling to come to terms with the circumstances of Ms Gowing's death.
BBC: Photo of Catherine Gowing and candle inside funeral church
What can be difficult for victims to come to terms with is that they often become the focus of any investigation to start with.
But to have a chance, management has to come to terms with its Borders-like doomsday scenario, and map out a plausible survival strategy.
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