defining造句31. Increasingly, federal officials were defining the problems of urban areas as local problems requiring local solutions.
32. The view of pedagogy proposed here, then, makes teachers responsible for defining their own problems and providing their own solutions.
33. It is emblematic of the difficulties facing those who attempt definitions in the current age of resistance to overarching defining characteristics.
34. They present and practise grammar and useful language functions, such as explaining, defining and comparing.
35. The single defining quality of leaders is the capacity to create and realize a vision.
36. The essential defining characteristic of this relation is its capacity to give rise to pleonasm.
37. They set the Core Groups to work defining performance targets and measures for the entire system.
38. Monotony was a cardinal sin for Victorian architects, just as it is the predominant defining characteristic of modern architecture.
39. The program's goal is to encourage and strengthen supplier relationships and improve communication by defining customer - supplier expectations.
40. A defining characteristic of the Bund was its acceptance of debate and dissent.
41. For this reason the purchaser should take considerable care in defining the restricted business.
42. Despite their different temporal and geographical foci, several defining research questions have remained the same.
43. It is a long way short of defining the format, but gives the flavour.
44. Yet the defining characteristic of all patronal social relations is the privileged situation of the patron.
45. It came to me that this was a defining moment in the relationship between these two brilliant minds.
46. This usually covers a short period to assist the applicant in defining a work programme.
47. Defining your mission statement is the most critical first step in planning for your success.
48. This has not consisted simply of middle-class reformers defining the working-class family as problematic, for which there is a long tradition.
49. Nevertheless, the defining characteristic of this period was undoubtedly the Cold War.
50. A further difficulty relates to defining precisely what does and does not constitute economic activity.
51. Optimism and energy, especially in the face of adversity, are defining characteristics of our clan.
52. But defining the basic nature of the managerial role reveals only part of what a managerial layer means.
53. So we have three possible points for defining the beginning of the Edwardian Era.
54. The leotard she wore was a pale yellow Spandex, defining the wide shoulders and lean hips of a gymnast.
55. With this age-old problem neatly disposed of, Warwick feels he need only concentrate on defining intelligence.
56. Its defining relationship is exchange motivated by individual self-interest, with prices crucial in signalling information, to which participants respond.
57. They are evaluated and yet play no part in defining the criteria, determining the methods, or controlling the process.
58. It is concerned with defining the scope of judicial review.
59. This is a theoretical entity that contains a specification of the word's defining characteristics.
60. Until a definition for asthma itself can be agreed the problem of defining attacks will continue to generate controversy.