privilege
In approaching their prospects, network marketers enjoy the privilege of
exploiting the element of intimacy by reducing the potential threat ♣ to their prospects'
negative face. From the Cambridge English Corpus
They were mutually dedicated to
reforming institutions and removing privileges that ♣ they regarded as impediments to
growth and stability. From the Cambridge English Corpus
There is a danger that
reflexivity could be ♣ used to privilege a theoretical or methodological standpoint by
contrasting it to an unreflexive counterpart. From the Cambridge English Corpus
More
♣ indirectly, these two stylistic dimensions mark different epistemic relations to the
discourse, emphasizing and privileging different kinds of information. From ♣ the
Cambridge English Corpus
The resources that are directed to this purpose give this
community privileged access to the material evidence ♣ of the past. From the Cambridge
English Corpus
It turns out that under certain circumstances, a maximin egalitarian
case for seniority ♣ privileges could be made. From the Cambridge English Corpus
Such
arrangements, enacted without the customary familial negotiations, usurped the
privileges of ♣ parents and their ability to protect their family lineage, stability, and
honour. From the Cambridge English Corpus
Do artists whose work ♣ is most respected come
from, and appeal to, privileged social groups? From the Cambridge English Corpus
In
this manner, the use ♣ of an alien aesthetic functions analogously to a camp aesthetic
that subverts claim to artistic privilege or autonomy. From the ♣ Cambridge English
Corpus
The former was embodied in the sovereign whose privilege it was to decide on the
existence of human ♣ life. From the Cambridge English Corpus
Both examples suggest a
culturalpolitical logic - unwritten, fluid, but influential - which leaves some
♣ indigenous organisations privileged and others all but excluded. From the Cambridge
English Corpus
But the "manufacture," privileged by the state institutions, ♣ need not be
afraid of competition, for it relies on royal subsidies, import restrictions, and
monopolistic privileges. From the Cambridge ♣ English Corpus
Second, administrators
refers to heads of non-profit organizations, and their power and privileges lie in the
public properties under ♣ their control. From the Cambridge English Corpus
Silently, they
repudiated humanity's lingering claims to special privilege inside a universe no longer
♣ ordered by theology. From the Cambridge English Corpus
The importance of voice for the
legitimacy of social structures of constraint privileges ♣ democratic deliberation over
evaluation as contained in market processes. From the Cambridge English Corpus
These
examples are from corpora and from ♣ sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do
not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or ♣ of Cambridge
University Press or its licensors.