| 11. | A person who adheres to the idea of cosmopolitanism in any of its forms is called a cosmopolitan or cosmopolite.
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| 12. | The variety of subjects he wrote about represented the wide range of topics in which a cosmopolite might reasonably take an interest.
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| 13. | This pattern can seem, at first glance, like the ancient distinction throughout the world between liberal cosmopolites and traditionalist farmers.
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| 14. | E�a, a cosmopolite widely read in English literature, was not enamoured of English society, but he was fascinated by its oddity.
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| 15. | Unlike many other oreodonts, who were restricted to certain habitats and places, " Mesoreodon " seemed to have been a cosmopolite.
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| 16. | The big promotional displays in record stores are for the long-dead cosmopolite Maria Callas, not for the vital young Roman Ms . Bartoli.
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| 17. | These predatory histerid beetles have been introduced in some countries for the control of the Banana Weevil borer ( " Cosmopolites sordidus " ).
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| 18. | Catering to the impatient cosmopolite or nerd was the whole point of starting Greenberg's half of the store, the side with the antiquarian books.
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| 19. | I am now an Australasian and I suppose a cosmopolite . . . . Yet I languish for my old home,'Yr Hen Wlad . '"
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| 20. | With no insult intended to that fair city, it seems an out-of-the-way place for this ultimate musical cosmopolite to take his leave.
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