normalisation in A Sentence

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    Normalisation of tonus was facilitated.

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    The Normalisation Committee started its task.

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    Normalisation of ties between Turkey and Israel: a‘win-win' situation?

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    Toner said:"We want to see closer relations and a Normalisation of relations, frankly, between India and Pakistan.".

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    The Pakistani film producers and exhibitors have also announced they will not import more Indian films till Normalisation of relations between India and Pakistan.

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    Advertising has been frequently proposed as a significant mechanism of gambling Normalisation including new social media channels(see Dr. Sally Gainsbury and colleagues 2016 research in the Journal of Gambling Studies).

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    In his speech, he said that India looks forward to consolidating the process of Normalisation of relations with Pakistan, not only to ensure durable peace, but to promote beneficial bilateral co-operation.

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    This Normalisation and engagement meant that having an atypical experience of reality no longer sundered the interviewees from society, but offered a different role where that experience had a part to play.

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    Insisting that peace and Normalisation between Pakistan and India cannot be achieved without a resolution of the Kashmir dispute, Sharif made a number of allegations about the unrest in the Kashmir Valley.

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    Further, a potential increase in financial market volatility due to global developments, including the unwinding of the balance sheet by the Fed and the possibility of Normalisation by the ECB, are also major concerns.

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    Insisting that peace and Normalisation between Pakistan and India cannot be achieved without a resolution of the Kashmir dispute, Sharif made a number of allegations with regard to the current unrest in the valley.

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    For the time being, the Fed and the Bank of Canada are leaning towards Normalisation, albeit at a slow pace, while the ECB and the Bank of Japan are dangerously heading towards a continuation in a way or another of the debt monetisation experiment.

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    13

    Normalisation of climate change in everyday Pacific life notwithstanding, for some indigenous people climate change is an existential threat to their culture, identity and connections to land and sea, a risk to their self-determination and indigenous rights, and some individuals cannot countenance life without a homeland to live in or return to.

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