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Examples
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To think I told all my friends to watch & listen to you as you are not byass and speak only the truth of things, you know that you don't make things up, where has your moral authority went too?
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I have done hundreds of radio phone in programs on climate and climate change and many of them byass the first few callers and start with callers after a certain number; it varies.
Cicerone of NAS Acquiesces in Data Obstruction « Climate Audit 2007
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Complement and friendly Compliance do a little byass and over-sway
The Lives of the Most Famous English Poets (1687) William Winstanley
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For few of Adams children are so happy, as not to be born with some byass in their natural temper, which it is the business of education either to take off, or counterbalance.
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He wrote a Preface to Davenant's Gondibert, where no wonder if Complement and friendly Compliance do a little byass and over-sway Judgment.
The Lives of the Most Famous English Poets Winstanley, William, 1628?-1698 1687
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I suspect this is in response to Geohots (George Hotz) recent revelation that he had managed to byass the Playstations internal security to potentially play copied games.
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I suspect this is in response to Geohots (George Hotz) recent revelation that he had managed to byass the Playstations internal security to potentially play copied games.
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But I confess, that a long exercise, and an often reiterated meditation, is necessary to accustom us to look on all things with that byass: And I beleeve, in this principally consists, the secret of those
A Discourse of a Method for the Well Guiding of Reason and the Discovery of Truth in the Sciences Ren�� Descartes 1623
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Don’t talk about media byass – what about Hollywood.
Think Progress » The Dixie Chicks Ad NBC Doesn’t Want You To See 2006
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The nourishment and education of their children is a charge so incumbent on parents for their children's good, that nothing can absolve them from taking care of it: and though the power of commanding and chastising them go along with it, yet God hath woven into the principles of human nature such a tenderness for their off-spring, that there is little fear that parents should use their power with too much rigour; the excess is seldom on the severe side, the strong byass of nature drawing the other way.
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