Voluntary organizations are sometimes characterized as highly adaptive but so too are for-profits. [adjective]
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The EU is planning voluntary cooperation among its military, not coercion. [adjective]
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Her confession was voluntary, disinterested, distinct, consistent with itself, and with all the other known circumstances of the case. [adjective]
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He attempted to argue mildly with them, but his voluntary ally, Mrs. [adjective]
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"Our land," said Lady Margaret, drawing herself up with dignity, "has always furnished to the muster eight men, cousin Gilbertscleugh, and often a voluntary aid of thrice the number." [adjective]
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Thus they refuse the voluntary payment of taxes, because taxes are spent on deeds of violence--on the pay of men of violence--soldiers, on the construction of prisons, fortresses, and cannons. [adjective]
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--why are not voluntary absence and confessed idleness as good grounds for dispossession as involuntary absence, ignorance, or apathy. [adjective]
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They manifested, however, their admiration and esteem by voluntary contributions, which Jackson told me, one week with another, amounted to eighteen pence. [adjective]
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Its second condition is, that it be voluntary; that is, that the parties act freely and openly. [adjective]
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If the human person is sacred, its whole nature is sacred; and particularly its interior actions, its feelings, its thoughts, its voluntary decisions. [adjective]
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Our writer claims that militarism can never become such a power in America as abroad, since it is voluntary with us, while compulsory in the Old World. [adjective]
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