Word: oughtness
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Leaving aside the large sums of money at stake, he said that the real issue about tabloid journalism that has been raised in recent months is whether or not public officials and celebrities "ought to have some zone of privacy...
...with individual expression, and as such has no place under the banner of free speech. Term paper companies point out that a large portion of their business consists not of students but of other businesses seeking to have research done for them. If this is the case, they ought not be so worried about losing that portion of their market composed of student cheaters...
...wacky content, the film has strangely subdued feel; the lack of energy is palpable to the viewer. Brian Tufano's camera, which was so sharp and dynamic in Trainspotting and so creepily sedate in Shallow Grave is only able to capture flat, washed out images. Setups that ought to be bold and striking are rendered as drab and sluggish...
...only thing I can say about that, [is that] as a social value, we ought to say that the college teachers of the future ought to get their degrees at the institution that prepares them most appropriately...
Some critics argue that with cable and other channels eroding viewership, the networks ought to be banding together rather than scrapping over who is No. 1; cannibalizing one another's audiences hurts everyone. CBS has moved in on ABC's Friday bloc aimed at children and teens, and NBC has scheduled four female-oriented sitcoms on Monday night, going head-to-head against CBS's almost identical fare. NBC's Monday comedies are probably more similar than any four shows that have ever appeared in succession in the history of television. Suddenly Susan, Fired Up, Caroline in the City...