Their message is loud and clear: fix the broken food aid system.
2
However, without a clear structure or focus such resolutions are easily broken.
3
Last year, I made fixing our broken housing market my personal mission.
4
However a number of windows had been broken in the unoccupied house.
5
She'd probably readily agree; the past days had broken down her defenses.
1
The U.S. military deeply regrets this case of mistaken fire, said Matthews.
2
Still, let me say it: Trump is mistaken about the stock market.
3
He was mistaken, of course, although he knew it only years later.
4
These matters of mistaken identity happen all the time, especially among Jews.
5
Seeking calmness within, Chani simply said to the doctors, You are mistaken.
1
Any bill which doesn't deal clearly with this issue will be defective.
2
Background: Contemporary theories and evidence implicate defective emotion regulation in violent behaviour.
3
Measurements and main results: IDO was defective in murine and human CF.
4
This led to R800 billion worth of defective banknotes going into circulation.
5
It was picketed by 30 doctors protesting defective current auto safety design.
1
It's often very difficult to alter that faulty type of thought process.
2
The flight was not perfect -a faulty backup system caused problems.
3
McAfee confirmed it had pushed the faulty update to users earlier today.
4
Then I risk proceeding on faulty information, thereby compromising some secret operation.
5
Now, however, it appears that poorly monitored faulty equipment was to blame.
1
Some of the sharpest men in argument are notoriously unsound in judgment.
2
It was late in the winter, and the ice had become unsound.
3
The British Columbia Civil Liberties Association called the bill unsound and counterproductive.
4
These men seem to be a little unsound in the upper regions.
5
You feel that his objection is unsound; that he is exaggerating caution.
Theological censure of a proposition which contradicts only a certain (certa) theological conclusion or truth clearly deduced from two premises, one an article of faith, the other naturally certain.