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someone who studies or is an expert in sociology start learning
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Sociologists have studied and described it.
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to end something by force: start learning
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I could barely suppress my anger. Stress also suppresses the generation of new nerve cells in the brain,
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expressing disapproval, or suggesting that something is not good or is of no importance: start learning
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Make sure students realize that "fat" is a pejorative word. Put pejoratively, they are stupider.
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People who are ... are poor and unsuccessful and have the lowest position in society. start learning
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at the bottom of the heap the poor are at the bottom of the social heap as well as the financial one
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an informal social system in which some people or groups know they are more or less important than others: start learning
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he started as a clerk but gradually he rose in the pecking order. it may not be necessary to look any further than their place in the pecking order to explain what Dr Evans and Dr Schamberg have discovered in their research into the children of the poor.
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someone who has done something wrong: start learning
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Police hope the public will help them to find the culprits was identified by Martha Farah in her study conducted three years ago. The culprit that causes the diminution of memory among children of the poor...
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making or having the nature of a declaration start learning
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Entry into the working memory is also a prerequisite for something to be learnt permanently as part of declarative memory—
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start learning
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diastolic and systolic blood pressure;
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start learning
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diastolic and systolic blood pressure;
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start learning
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Most significantly of all, it shrinks the volume of the prefrontal cortex
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to do something to punish someone or show them that you are angry; Pol. spuszczać, zesłać (coś) na kogoś start learning
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It is not surprising that they do less well at school, end up poor as adults and often visit the same circumstances on their own children.
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someone who takes a job or position previously held by someone else start learning
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Sir Michael Marmot and his intellectual successors have shown repeatedly that people at the bottom of social hierarchies experience much more stress in their daily lives than those at the top.
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