Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Plural form of
exclusion .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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The main exclusions on a Mexican auto policy historically have been Vandalism and Partial Theft, but now this coverage can be added back under special endorsements which can be purchased at mexpro. com.
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Second, two potentially applicable exclusions from the phrase “illegal use of drugs” — the use of drugs authorized by state law and the use of drugs taken under the supervision of a licensed health care professional — do not apply here.
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The main exclusions on a Mexican auto policy historically have been Vandalism and Partial Theft, but now this coverage can be added back under special endorsements which can be purchased at mexpro. com.
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Last year English secondary schools issued nearly 308,000 fixed-term exclusions – equivalent to more than 800,000 days of missed education.
Pupil suspensions waste money and don't work – Barnardo's Rachel Williams 2010
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One pupil told researchers he had been given so many fixed-term exclusions he could not remember what they were all for.
Pupil suspensions waste money and don't work – Barnardo's Rachel Williams 2010
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Walzer has so effectively shown, certain exclusions are at the center of toleration.
Romantic Fear 2008
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Stuart Buck raises some questions about puzzling inclusions and exclusions from the Legal Affairs Top 20 list voting.
The Volokh Conspiracy » STUART BUCK ON TOP 20 THINKERS: 2004
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The figures, which were based on matching Ministry of Justice MoJ records with those from the national pupil database held by the Department for Education, showed 36% of young people - some 139 10-17-year-olds - appearing before the courts over the violence and looting had received one or more fixed-term exclusions in 2009/10, compared with just 5.6% of all pupils aged 15.
Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph Telegraph Staff 2011
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The figures, which were based on matching Ministry of Justice MoJ records with those from the national pupil database held by the Department for Education, showed 36% of young people - some 139 10-17-year-olds - appearing before the courts over the violence and looting had received one or more fixed-term exclusions in 2009/10, compared with just 5.6% of all pupils aged 15.
Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph Telegraph Staff 2011
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Too many schools are in the bottom quarter for performance and fixed-term exclusions are increasing.
WalesOnline - Home WalesOnline 2012
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