The award gave me vindication.
China suffered little, claiming vindication.
Berman asks what the actual conclusion of the Vindication is.
NOT for the first time, Armenians sense a moment of vindication in their struggle for the acknowledgment of the tragedy that befell their forebears during the first world war.
A Vindication of the Rights of Men (1790) was almost certainly the first of many responses Burke's Reflections elicited.
"This is a vindication for Marvin Roffman, but it is also a vindication for the investing public," said Scott L.
The confirmation was also a vindication of the bare-knuckled strategy of Senate Republicans, who refused even to consider President Barack Obama’s Supreme Court pick, Judge Merrick B.
Harding in 1920 was considered a vindication of the Lodge position, and with enhanced prestige he went on to serve as one of four U.S. delegates to the Washington Conference on the Limitation of Armaments (1921).
Logical empiricism lavished great attention on the problem of exposing the structure of scientific theories because solving that problem seemed crucial to the vindication of the theoretical vocabulary employed by the sciences.
It’s also likely to be cited by government critics as a vindication of their long-held argument that suppressing freedoms, jailing opponents and cracking down on civil society does not, as the pro-government media insists, help in the war against terror.
Responding to the WTO appeal, a beIN Sports spokesperson said: "Having spent the past six weeks telling the world how the WTO ruling was a complete vindication of the kingdom, curiously Saudi Arabia is now appealing a case they say they emphatically won.
Last week, a slew of right-leaning sources cited Gervais’s “just jokes” liberal-bating Golden Globes set as vindication of a populist backlash against political correctness, investing its harmless waspish jibes with a political dimension they didn’t really have.
This decision to let the CEO go could be seen as a vindication after months of ongoing pressure from traditional landowners, other Aboriginal groups and shareholders who refused to stand for the destruction of one of Australia's most important archaeological sites.
White House chief of staff Mark Meadows has been focused extensively on the Flynn situation and has discussed it regularly with Mr Trump, seeing it as vindication of his long-held skepticism toward the Russia probe, according to two senior administration officials.
Snowden, who fled to Russia in the aftermath of the 2013 disclosures and still faces US espionage charges, said on Twitter that the ruling was a vindication of his decision to go public with evidence of the National Security Agency’s domestic eavesdropping operation.
Democrats said the US president’s conversation with Volodymyr Zelenskiy, detailed in the five-page rough “transcript” was a devastating betrayal of his country that merited their investigation, while Republicans claimed it showed no quid pro quo and offered complete vindication.
The Trump administration is claiming “resounding vindication” from an independent commission's report on the coronavirus crisis in nursing homes, but some panel members say that’s a misinterpretation of their conclusion that much remains to be done to safeguard vulnerable residents.
After Trump tweeted the video, White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham released a statement saying "the sham impeachment attempt concocted by Democrats ended in the full vindication and exoneration" of Trump and decrying the impeachment as a "witch hunt" "based on a series of lies."
If the standards of practical reasoning are fundamental to all human reasoning, then any vindication of these standards is either circular (since it uses those very standards) or a failure (since it is not a vindication in terms of the standards that are said to be fundamental).
Richard Price’s Discourse on the Love of Our Country (1789) was answered by Edmund Burke’s conservative Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790) and by Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication of the Rights of Men (1790) and A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792), the latter of which is an important early statement of feminist issues that gained greater recognition in the next century.
vindication
noun act
- the act of vindicating or defending against criticism or censure etc.
Example: friends provided a vindication of his position
noun communication
- the justification for some act or belief
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Richard Prices Discourse on the Love of Our Country 1789 was answered by Edmund Burkes conservative Reflections on the Revolution in France 1790 and by Wollstonecrafts A Vindication of the Rights of Men 1790 and A Vindication of the Rights of Woman 1792 the latter of which is an important early statement of feminist issues that gained greater recognition in the next century