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long-standing造句
61. And the long-standing feud between Juran and Deming should not take away from the ideas or accomplishments of either. 62. Although from different ends of the political spectrum, Mr Kohl and Mitterrand enjoyed a long-standing and close personal friendship. 63. In the same vein there has been a long-standing tendency to equate rationality with logic, and logic with mathematics. 64. One long-standing allegation of satanic elements in masonry, however, still awaits a satisfactory answer. 65. As financial firms merged, long-standing relationships with lawyers inevitably were threatened. 66. There was a long-standing tradition of professionalism, which centred around jockeys and pugilists for the most part. 67. Its conclusions repeated a long-standing cry: Social vision and a collective determination was added to the rational argument of Barlow. 68. Investigators would not disclose other details of the probe but described it as a long-standing investigation that stretches nationwide. 69. Some is provisionality, some is long-standing. 70. Long-standing, tight-knit,[/long-standing.html] protecting each other. 71. Urbanization is a long-standing but flourishing and fadeless topic. 72. "The new contemporary art of China and the United States approaches, modifies and revitalizes existing, long-standing traditions," says curator Shore. 73. At this stage, the long-standing conflict between the kilesas and the citta is finally over. 74. Specifically, we consider the long-standing and challenging Maxwell's demon paradox from a new angle – quantum thermodynamics. 75. My contract legislation law of anticipatory breach of contract system and draw on a long-standing concern. 76. But the first principle of conservatism, constantly deployed against liberal reformers, is that it is not wise to make radical changes to long-standing laws and institutions for small gains. 77. New simulations now suggest such moon-on-moon violence could explain a long-standing puzzle about the moon's two-faced nature. 78. He continues a long-standing artistic tradition of imagining the end of civilization, a form of emotional and spiritual escape valve operated since man found a means to express himself. 79. One concerns long-standing doubts about the reliability of government economic data — what one U. S. hedge-fund manager calls "the Beijing fudge factor." 80. Personality disorders are characterized by long-standing maladaptive ways of interacting with the world, and they are notoriously difficult to treat. 81. Some of the observations are long-standing criticisms: doctors tend not to take nurses' or therapists' observations seriously, cutting off an avenue for communication about the patient. 82. She said the data overturns the long-standing theory that women work a "double shift, " juggling a job with household chores, and working longer hours than their husbands. 83. A longer-term worry is that the Great Recession seems to have put a crimp in Americans' long-standing love affair with the automobile. 84. Providing such highlight styles through a domain resolves a long-standing dispute for publication DTDs. 85. They cite long-standing inequalities, in income levels, in opportunities, especially for youth, and in access to social services as the root cause of the struggle for change. 86. The study confirms some long-standing folklore about the acuity of one of North America's most familiar birds—and offers new insight into how some wild animals may cope with living alongside people. 87. Because of the long-standing U.S. trade embargo against communist-led Cuba, Americans have been forbidden, with some exceptions, from visiting the island 90 miles from Key West, Florida. 88. That's the conclusion of two recent studies that confirm a long-standing stereotype of flirting: that women like joky men, while men like women who laugh at their jokes. 89. This is a PAS stain of nodular glomerulosclerosis (Kimmelstiel-Wilson disease) in a patient with long-standing diabetes mellitus. 90. For example, it was a long-standing practice among local farmers to dig what they called zai—shallow pits that collected and concentrated scarce rainfall onto the roots of crops.