conceptualisation in A Sentence

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    Unicef provided technical support in Conceptualisation, planning, advocacy, monitoring, supportive supervision and overall guidance to the project.

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    He adds that cost of displacement and poor Conceptualisation has made the Bagmati project completely worthless.

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    It was a long journey of around two decades that started with the Conceptualisation of the dream in 1930 to its actual realization in 1950.

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    This is a problem because there is good evidence that differences between languages go hand-in-hand with differences in Conceptualisation of the world and even perception of it.

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    The learning projects were being evaluated using a developmental, ethnographic and participatory learning framework aimed at capturing local Conceptualisations of resilience alongside common learning points across all three sites.

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    Conceptualisation of the plan of setting up a special school can be very easy, but fulfilling the further formalities to comply with the regulations can be an arduous task to execute.

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    Todd Landman, nevertheless, draws our attention to the fact that democracy and human rights are two different concepts and that"there must be greater specificity in the Conceptualisation and operationalization of democracy and human rights".

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    Todd Landman, nevertheless, draws our attention to the fact that democracy and human rights are two different concepts and that"there must be greater specificity in the Conceptualisation and operationalisation of democracy and human rights".

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    9

    This particular Conceptualisation of people and environment comes from various cultural levels of local knowledge about species and place, resource management systems using local experience, social institutions with their rules and codes of behaviour, and a world view through religion, ethics and broadly defined belief systems.

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    10

    Meanwhile, Conceptualisations of existing human rights law have not kept up with the modern and changing communications surveillance capabilities of the State, the ability of the State to combine and organize information gained from different surveillance techniques, or the increased sensitivity of the information available to be accessed.”.

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