What's the difference between pomp and stateless?

Pomp


Definition:

  • (n.) A procession distinguished by ostentation and splendor; a pageant.
  • (n.) Show of magnificence; parade; display; power.
  • (v. i.) To make a pompons display; to conduct.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Using a simple fluorometric assay for alpha-glucosidase activity of cultured amniotic cells, we have monitored two pregnancies from families at risk for Pompe's disease.
  • (2) In two infants with Pompe's disease, intralysosomal glycogen was identified in the adrenal cortex and medulla, thyroid gland, parathyroid glands, pancreatic islets, and pituitary gland.
  • (3) He has chosen to live in a modest Vatican hotel room instead of the grandeur of the apostolic palace; and he has dropped some of the papal pomp, while preaching the Roman Catholic church's need to identify with the world's poor.
  • (4) Here, too, Capote displayed uncanny journalistic skills, capturing even the most languid and enigmatic of subjects – Brando in his pomp – and eliciting the kinds of confidences that left the actor reflecting ruefully on his "unutterable foolishness".
  • (5) In contrast, it is highly unlikely China's leader could find fault with the welcome laid out by the Obama administration: a private White House dinner tonight to be followed later in the week by a full state banquet, a 21-gun salute and all the pomp and circumstance of a review of the troops.
  • (6) There is a case to be made, and Francis made it, but as the bills come in one might recall that in her pomp the Thatcher government stopped the funeral grants paid to poor families if it emerged that any of the family members were striking miners.
  • (7) "For the most part the rewards for acquiescing to GOC demands are risible: pomp-full dinners and meetings and, for the most pliant, a photo op with one of the Castro brothers.
  • (8) Nothing in the brief statement justified the huge pomp and circumstance that surrounded it.
  • (9) Evans was in his pomp as Radio 1's breakfast DJ, listened to daily by 7.5 million people.
  • (10) From January 1985 to January 1990, measurements of acid alpha-D-glucosidase activity in amniocytes or chorionic villus samplings were done for 24 pregnant mothers who were carriers of Pompe's disease.
  • (11) Its practicality has been demonstrated in Pompe's disease in which there is a deficiency of acid alpha-1,4-glucosidase (E.C.3.2.1.20).
  • (12) Two-stage gel studies demonstrated an estimated 90% reduction of this protein in Pompe's disease.
  • (13) Helicopters buzzed overhead, tanks thundered past, and fighter jets snaked into the sky during Burma's annual Armed Forces Day celebration on Wednesday, where one unexpected guest sat watching the pomp and ceremony from a front-row seat: opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi .
  • (14) The pH-activity profile of the enzyme from urine of patients with late-onset Pompe's disease can not be distinguished from that of the normal urinary enzyme.
  • (15) Staining techniques for demonstration of various stored materials include: 1) toluidine blue at pH 2.8 for acid mucopolysaccharide in skeletal muscle fibers in Pompe's glycogenesis 2, 2) one-step trichrome stain for nemaline myopathy and for abnormal mitochondria in X-linked infantile cardiomyopathy, 3) periodic acid-methenamine silver stain for glycolipid-containing lysosomes in I-cell disease (mucolipidosis 2), 4) Sudan black B stain for lipid in skeletal muscle fibers in Reye's syndrome, infantile lactic acidosis, Leigh's infantile subacute necrotizing encephalopathy and Jansky-Bielschowsky late infantile ceroid lipofuscinosis, 5) iron stain for iron in cardiac and skeletal muscle fibers in thalassemia with advanced hemosiderosis, and 6) autofluorescence for "ceroid" in skeletal muscle fibers in Jansky-Bielschowsky disease.
  • (16) As he repeats that plea Frazier slips into an impersonation which sounds less like Ali in his fast-talking pomp than his old foe after Parkinson's disease had made his speech slurred and halting.
  • (17) Pompe's disease is characterised by an absence of lysosomal alpha-glucosidase, but this enzyme is also inhibited by Castanospermum australe seeds.
  • (18) "I love that a country capable of extraordinary pomp and ceremony can still retain a spiky irreverence towards its establishment.
  • (19) Her pulmonary hypertension resulted from respiratory muscular atrophy and alveolar hypoventilation caused by Pompe's disease.
  • (20) On Thursday a commentary carried by the official Xinhua news agency described Obama’s visit "a carefully calculated scheme to cage the rapidly developing Asian giant”, adding that "the pomp and circumstance Obama receives … cannot conceal the fact that Tokyo has become a growing liability to Washington's pursuit of long-term interests”.

Stateless


Definition:

  • (a.) Without state or pomp.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) These “temporary exclusion orders” appear to be a neat solution; by offering suspected jihadi fighters strict conditions on return, the government is upholding its primary duty to protect the public while maintaining its commitments in international law which say it must not create stateless beings.
  • (2) At the time of the Lords defeat, Pannick said: "There are regrettably all too many dictators around the world willing to use the creation of statelessness as a weapon.
  • (3) France's civil code says a person must have another nationality in order to give up French citizenship because it is forbidden to be stateless.
  • (4) They’re stateless dogs.” “Pistol and Boo have had their lives threatened by the actions of Mr Depp.” countdown Depp and his wife Amber Heard are preparing to leave the Gold Coast, where Depp is filming the fifth Pirates of the Caribbean movie, on Friday night.
  • (5) There was no warning about other political groups, but next to an image of the anarchist emblem, the City of Westminster police's "counter terrorist focus desk" called for anti-anarchist whistleblowers stating: "Anarchism is a political philosophy which considers the state undesirable, unnecessary, and harmful, and instead promotes a stateless society, or anarchy.
  • (6) I would work as a porter without payment.” Burma’s 1.1 million Muslim Rohingya are a stateless people.
  • (7) There is no intention to strip citizenship from second-generation Australians … nor is there any intention to leave anyone stateless,” Cash told a Senate estimates committee hearing.
  • (8) Besides, he was stateless, and there was nowhere to where he could be sent.
  • (9) Dutton dismissed reports there was significant cabinet opposition to the plan, and said no Australian would be rendered stateless as a result.
  • (10) He acknowledged the international concern that multinationals are using Ireland to lower their tax bills, and said he would bring in changes to the finance mill to stop Irish companies being 'stateless'.
  • (11) The plan, agreed after months of Whitehall talks, has been cleared by government law officers and devised to minimise legal claims that the British government will be rendering citizens stateless by barring them from the UK.
  • (12) If there’s a level of confidentiality needed for certain information that Asio [the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation] has that the minister has based his or her decision on, the principle remains that it should be reviewable because the courts can hold in-camera [private] proceedings where there’s a higher level of confidentiality.” Dutton reaffirmed that the government would not render people stateless and that a dual national whose Australian citizenship was revoked would be able to apply for a judicial review “through the federal court all the way up to the high court”.
  • (13) A departmental officer found he was “stateless” and had a “well-founded fear of persecution” in Iran.
  • (14) Yet concerns over fairness were raised ahead of election day, with an estimated 4 million Burmese living abroad unable to vote and the exclusion of around a million Rohingya Muslims , a stateless and persecuted minority.
  • (15) They’re stateless dogs.” The Department of Agriculture was tipped off about an “illegal animal importation” on Tuesday, around the same time groomers posted on social media that they had attended to the stars’ pets.
  • (16) Instead, Burmese authorities are trying to coerce Rohingya, the world’s largest stateless population within any single country’s borders, to identify as Bengali, a crude strategy to erase the Rohingya ethnic identity.
  • (17) It will be a new form of statelessness, when we physically lose the state.” This article was amended on 17 May 2016 to correct the name of the head of the IOM to William Lacy Swing
  • (18) The government of Burma does not recognise the roughly 1.1 million Muslim Rohingya as citizens, creating a stateless people.
  • (19) Downing Street initially floated the idea of banning radical Islamist fighters from coming back to Britain , but the proposal was dropped when it emerged that it would be illegal to make people stateless.
  • (20) In his March 2014 report to the prime minister, Walker canvassed consideration of the immigration minister having the power to revoke Australian citizenship by ministerial discretion, where to do so would not render people stateless.

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