1. In this context at least, new definitions can be re-negotiated. 2. There could, of course, be an entirely new statutory definition either wider or more restricted than existing law. 3. Therefore the choice is between leaving things as they are and adopting a new definition which is different in substance. 4. Would the new statutory definition be taken as a fresh start? 5. In European countries with a high prevalence of HIV and Mycobacterium tuberculosis co-infection, the new definition would significantly increase the AIDS incidence. 6. Now for a new definition of fast food -- Indian curries travelling at one hundred and twenty five miles an hour. 7. And he is part of a group that has economists, sociologists and demographers scrambling for new definitions of what it means to be wealthy. 8. And after the oratory against incrementalism, new definitions are required. 9. As part of its new definition, NATO is aiming to build relationships with non-NATO countries, particularly in areas of regional conflict. 10. At a news conference, Condon accepted the findings, including the new definition of institutional racism. |
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