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Examples
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Acquiescing, Strauss took his work's title from a line in a poem by Karl Isidor Beck.
The Waltz That Defines Vienna Barrymore Laurence Scherer 2010
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Acquiescing to power, merely because power is in the driver's seat has little ethical meaning and even less worth.
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Acquiescing to the investor bypasses the reality that the American people are the first "investors" to be paid when the banking industry's malfeasance is responsible for the destruction of their economy.
Matthew Anderson: The Anatomy of a Foreclosure Matthew Anderson 2010
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Acquiescing to our seemingly-endless appetites turns us into slaves blindly serving our lusts.
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Acquiescing to spammers and providing a link to their survey does appear to somewhat give a tacit approval of the survey, so I would advocate that anyone commenting upon or linking to the survey take it beforehand.
The Volokh Conspiracy » Dear Smith College Seniors Spamming Sites Looking for Survey Participants … 2009
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Acquiescing to Lieberman's lame blackmail is weakness not being "too nice."
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Acquiescing to the studio's demands for substantial revisions, Scott turned next to his friend John Paxton — in Dmytryk's words, "reliable, nonpolitical John Paxton."
Caught in the Crossfire: Adrian Scott and the Politics of Americanism in 1940s Hollywood 2007
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Acquiescing to Obama's plan will take America off the hook for its own actions and that is not a signal that is healthy for that nation or for the world.
Responding to Response Lindsay Stewart 2009
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Acquiescing to India has now become politically problematic, say analysts.
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Acquiescing to Bush and Cheney's ever morphing goals for Iraq is irrefutable proof that the House and Senate need to be gutted and rebuilt.
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