11.   For whatever their shared antipathy toward the Taliban and bin Laden, Russia and the United States part over the broader definition of a terrorist.

12.   Gay reporting groups have a much broader definition of hate crimes than police agencies do, counting use of epithets and distribution of anti-gay literature.

13.   Minear defended his even broader definition of invention, saying Congress intended to put the onus on inventors to finish their proposed creations.

14.   Some scientists prefer a broader definition in which species are determined by physical, behavioral, genetic and geographic characteristics.

15.   Still, some broadcasting executives said the administration was opening the door to a broader definition of the public interest.

16.   The Clinton administration offered a broader definition of national security, bringing emerging infectious diseases and the aids pandemic under the security umbrella.

17.   The National School Boards Association filed a brief urging the court to adopt a broader definition of the medical services for which a school district would not be responsible.

18.   The NRA was bitterly opposed to the broader Senate definition.

19.   The plaintiffs, the court suggested, could provide the university a broader definition of diversity.

20.   There have also been convictions involving rape at the war crimes tribunal for Rwanda, but only under the umbrella of broader criminal definitions like torture.

a. + definition >>共 367
new 5.74%
legal 5.52%
high 3.65%
very 3.50%
precise 2.68%
broad 2.54%
common 2.46%
different 2.31%
broader 2.09%
narrow 2.01%
broader + n. >>共 848
market 20.68%
indicator 6.52%
index 3.38%
issue 1.95%
range 1.90%
audience 1.45%
question 1.43%
measure 1.42%
effort 1.15%
view 0.84%
definition 0.44%
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