Warrant Sentence Examples

warrant
  • They find Scripture warrant for this belief in Matt.

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  • If your Dad is feeling bad enough to warrant medical attention, he needs to see a doctor, not a nurse.

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  • The judges of Amiens, however, pursued him with a warrant for his arrest, which took place in Brumaire of the year II.

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  • Until he does something to warrant police action, I'd say he has every right to stay.

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  • Agent Osborn, is there an outstanding warrant on him?

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  • In some cases the exchanges are connected together directly; but when the volume of traffic is not sufficient to warrant the adoption of such a course connexions between two exchanges are made through junction centres to which both are connected.

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  • I remembered a judge had tossed out a search warrant obtained only on the basis of our tip.

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  • No judge would sign a search warrant on the place where he lived in California either.

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  • They believe that an experience of more than 250 years gives ample warrant for the belief that Christ did not command them as a perpetual outward ordinance; on the contrary, they hold that it was alien to His method to lay down minute, outward rules for all time, but that He enunciated principles which His Church should, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, apply to the varying needs of the day.

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  • The columns vary somewhat in diameter (more than even the difference caused by fluting would warrant) and three different types of capital are noticeable.

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  • He signed the death warrant.

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  • After the fall of Struensee (the warrant for whose arrest he signed with indifference), for the last six-and-twenty years of his reign, he was only nominally king.

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  • We do not warrant the accuracy or completeness of such information.

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  • He cautioned, looking far more serious than the situation to warrant.

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  • In fact, after the flight of the king and the subsequent suppression of the riots, a warrant was issued for his arrest; and he had barely time to escape to Weimar, where Liszt was at that moment engaged in preparing Tannhauser for performance, before the storm burst upon him with alarming violence.

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  • You also warrant that any " moral rights " in posted materials have been irrevocably waived by the appropriate authors.

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  • The measure is akin to an arrest warrant rather than a court hearing, so the Minister 's argument is somewhat specious.

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  • Although Mexico is usually described as a nonmanufacturing country, its industrial development under President Porfirio Diaz will warrant some modification of this characterization.

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  • The resemblance, however, is not sufficiently close to warrant the deduction that either the Gospel of the Egyptians or the Gospel from which the citation in 2 Clement is taken (if these two are distinct) is the source from which our fragment is derived.

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  • They established the rule that no official should put in execution any royal warrant " against the statutes and common form of law."

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  • About this week must have occurred the interview in the garden at the Douglas's house of Whittingehame, between Morton, Bothwell and Lethington, when Morton refused to be active in Darnley's murder, unless he had a written warrant from the queen.

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  • Traquhair, as royal commissioner, prorogued parliament; negotiations with the king in London had no result; and in 1640 the prorogation was contemned, and though opposed by Montrose, the parliament constituted itself, with no royal warrant.

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  • Especially, induction to universals is the warrant and measure of deduction from universals.

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  • The kind of warrant that intelligence can give to specific principles falls short of infallibility.

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  • There is too much textual warrant for this interpretation of Kant's meaning.

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  • It must be observed, however, that the agreement is rather more perfect than the comparative roughness of the method would appear to warrant.

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  • At the peace in 1815, however, only four were spared, namely, Frankfort, Bremen, Hamburg and Lubeck, these being practically the only ones still in a sufficiently flourishing and economically independent position to warrant such preferential treatment.

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  • It was a matter of course that saints' days and church festivals were abolished as having no warrant in Scripture; Sunday alone remained, as the principal day of preaching.

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  • Some years previously (perhaps about 1594), he had begun to be employed by her in crown affairs, and he gradually acquired the standing of one of the learned counsel, though he had no commission or warrant, and received no salary.

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  • In fact, while the king confirmed in their situations those who had held crown offices under Elizabeth, Bacon, not holding his post by warrant, was practically omitted.

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  • In several cases entire "Separate" churches reached the conviction that the baptism of infants was not only without Scriptural warrant but was a chief corner-stone of state-churchism, and transformed themselves into Baptist churches.

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  • The first Bela, son of Beor, is often identified with Balaam, but the traditions of the Exodus are not precise enough to warrant the assumption that the seer was the king of a hostile land in Num.

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  • Lake San Martin lies in a crooked deeply cut passage through the Andes, and the divide between its southern extremity (Laguna Tar) and Lake Viedma, which discharges through the Santa Cruz river into the Atlantic, is so slight as to warrant the hypothesis that this was once a strait between the two oceans.

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  • Whenever the trade of southern Bolivia becomes important enough to warrant the expense of opening a navigable channel in the Pilcomayo, direct river communication with Buenos Aires and Montevideo will be possible.

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  • Claiming jurisdiction over New Jersey by the terms of his commission, he issued a proclamation in March 1680 ordering Philip Carteret and his " pretended " officers to cease exercising jurisdiction within the duke's dominions unless he could show warrant.

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  • Enraged at this defeat, Gilpin's enemies laid their complaint before Bonner, bishop of London, who secured a royal warrant for his apprehension.

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  • But we must also grant that those from whom the " written " Hebrew text proceeds allowed themselves to fill up and to repeat without any sufficient warrant.

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  • But there is no warrant for restricting the term to any special mode of approaching the problems indicated; and as these form the central subject of metaphysical inquiry, no valid distinction can be drawn between natural theology and general metaphysics.

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  • It gave rise to a literary controversy, however, of great bitterness and violence, the author having ventured without warrant to claim for it an historical character, appealing to an imaginary "manuscript in Florence."

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  • Oliver Cromwell spent some days here on his way to Ireland, and his original warrant to the mayor and council for the demolition of the castle is still preserved in the council chamber.

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  • But the facts do not warrant this opinion.

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  • The children of the sovereign other than his eldest son, though by courtesy " princes " and " princesses, " need a royal warrant to raise them de jure above the common herd; and even then, though they be dubbed " Royal Highness " in their cradles, they remain " commoners " till raised to the peerage.

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  • Settled labour, the warrant of real wealth, was unacceptable to those who lived by promoting its insecurity.

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  • In one of these attempts, the affair at Belfort, Buchez was gravely compromised, although the jury which tried him did not find the evidence sufficient to warrant his condemnation.

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  • All that it could do would be to warrant a cause of some sort, but not this or that reality as the cause.

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  • This inquest was made by the writ Quo Warranto, by which each landholder was invited to show the charter or warrant in which his claims rested.

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  • The increasing estrangement between him and the nation made him averse from the natural remedy of a parliament, and he reverted to the absolute practices of the middle ages, in order that he might strain them far beyond the warrant of precedent to levy a tax under the name of ship-money, first on the port towns and then on the whole of England.

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  • Indeed, the evidences, so far as they have been examined, appear to warrant the conclusion that the region of the western Tian-shan, from Lake Issyk-kul southwards, was in great part the scene of probably five successive glacial periods, each being less severe than the period which immediately preceded it.

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  • For his opposition in 1820 to a law by which any person might be arrested and detained on a warrant signed by three ministers, he was summoned before a court of assize, but acquitted.

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  • In February 1792 an allusion in debate by Toler (afterwards earl of Norbury), the attorney-general, to Tandy's personal ugliness, provoked him into sending a challenge; this was treated by the House of Commons as a breach of privilege, and a Speaker's warrant was issued for his arrest, which however he managed to elude till its validity expired on the prorogation of parliament.

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  • It is true that stone implements of palaeolithic and neolithic types are found sporadically in the Nile valley, Somaliland, on the Zambezi, in Cape Colony and the northern portions of the Congo Free State, as well as in Algeria and Tunisia; but the localities are far too few and too widely separated to warrant the inference that they are to be in any way connected.

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  • They suggested candidates for office for the royal selection, often appointed office-holders, and, by royal warrant, supported or condemned them.

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  • Since the Frankish monarchy was now in their power some of, them tried to reestablish the unity of that monarchy in all its integrity, together with the superiority of the State over the Church; others, faithless to the idea of unity, saw in the disintegration of the state and the supremacy of the nobles a warrant for their own independence.

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  • In the disordered state of society official stability was a valuable warrant of peace, and the administrative hierarchy, lay or spiritual, thus formed a mould for the hierarchy of feudalism.

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  • The evidence does not seem to warrant more than two classes, (a) the audientes, who were in the initial stages of their training, (b) the competentes, who were qualified for baptism.

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  • He still appears to think that experience does warrant the employment of such notions, and when there is taken into account his correspondence with Lambert during the next few years, one would be inclined to say that the Architektonik of the latter represents most completely Kant's idea of philosophy.

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  • The only possible answer, drawn from the premises laid down, must be that there is no warrant for such an assumption.

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  • Your Sheriff has an iffy reputation with some of my guys down there and they think they can round up a judge to get a search warrant.

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  • The wanted to conduct the raid while it was still dark but there was a problem with the search warrant.

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  • You'll look around when you get a search warrant, or hell freezes over—whichever comes first!

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  • Even where a warrant for possession is issued, the parties can still negotiate a compromise to prevent eviction.

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  • Local Authorities use private bailiffs to execute the warrant.

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  • Duty faith tries to lay on men an obligation to believe when they cannot, and a warrant to believe when they cannot, and a warrant to believe what they know not.

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  • Under considerable pressure from Parliament, the King signed the Earl of Strafford's death warrant, thus betraying his key adviser.

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  • Might be the bench warrant friday gets quot bob competing at the.

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  • This entitles the claimant to apply for a warrant to have the defendant evicted.

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  • The warrant also authorizes a police constable to open locked premises.

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  • In 1661, the judges who had signed the death warrant of Charles I of England were pursued by Charles II.

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  • In October 1984 Sinclair Research unwittingly signed its own death warrant.

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  • In certain circumstances other matters not listed above may also be considered serious enough to warrant summary dismissal.

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  • Under no circumstances could an agency electronically eavesdrop on a person within the United States without such a warrant.

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  • A warrant has been issued for his arrest because he has allegedly embezzled $ 120 million.

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  • There can be no warrant for the cold-blooded execution of a surrendered terrorist.

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  • The team also identified two measures of the capability of MCCs to carry out warrant execution.

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  • Causes 1 to 3 are easily fixed and do not warrant further discussion.

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  • In Europe research accounts for between 2-4% of GDP, a figure large enough to warrant government policy initiatives.

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  • Like Clash Nitro, however, his efforts were considered insufficient to warrant further attention and money being spent on him.

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  • The Secretary of State may issue a warrant authorizing the interception of communications on any telecommunications system (public or private ).

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  • Over the next few years numerous mediocre routes were climbed which do not warrant special mention.

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  • There are vivid accounts of harsh sentences meted out for crimes that today would warrant no more than a caution.

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  • We hereby warrant that all statements made are true and that we have not misstated any material facts.

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  • Warrant to deliver certain parcels of stuff to Tho.

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  • Certainly nothing to warrant the almost phobic warnings of the terrible fate which would befall me.

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  • However, these associations are not sufficiently pronounced to warrant dose adjustment.

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  • Police had initially entered the property on a drugs search warrant and found small amounts of heroin and cannabis.

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  • The measure is akin to an arrest warrant rather than a court hearing, so the Minister's argument is somewhat specious.

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  • If you ignore the summons, a warrant can be issued for your arrest.

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  • However, the actions of circus troupe Cirque du Soleil do, I feel, warrant this sidestep.

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  • There must have been serious textual variants between the texts to warrant such action.

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  • If accepted, this will suspend the warrant so long as you keep up-to-date with the agreed payments.

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  • Cohen filed a motion to vacate the arrest warrant, citing the threat to human life.

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  • To see him arrested again on an extradition warrant beggars belief.

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  • Even with a search warrant, they still cannot forcibly enter your house.

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  • Bent's account of the Ruined Cities of Mashonaland, but the popularity of that work disseminated a romance concerning their age and origin which was only dispelled when scientific investigations undertaken in 1905 showed it to be wholly without historical warrant.

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  • A second theory is contended for by Principal Campbell in his treatise on the eldership, and by others also, that there is no warrant in Scripture for the eldership as it exists in the Presbyterian Church; that the ruling elder is not, and is not designed to be, a counterpart of the New Testament elder; in other words, that he is not a presbyter, but only a layman chosen to represent the laity in the church courts and permitted to assist in the government of the church.

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  • The leader in speculative philosophy is Immanuel Kant, though he includes many agnostic elements, and draws the inference (which some things in the letter of Butler might seem to warrant) that the essence of Christianity is an ethical theism.

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  • The fauna of Siberia is closely akin to that of central Europe; and the Ural Mountains, although the habitat of a few species which warrant the naturalist in regarding the southern Urals as a separate region,, are not so important a boundary zoologically as they are botanically.

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  • These statements do not warrant us in supposing that they rejected i and 2 Peter, though other Greek sources allege it.

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  • Finding themselves without warrant in a region beyond their patent, and threatened with the desertion of disaffected members of their company (probably all servants or men of the " lesser " sort) unless concessions were made to these, they drew up and signed before landing a democratic compact of government which is accounted the earliest written constitution in history.'

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  • By far the most notable of Harris's converts was William Williams (1717-1791), Panty Celyn, the great hymn-writer of Wales, who while listening to the revivalist preaching on a tombstone in the graveyard of Talgarth, heard the " voice of heaven," and was " apprehended as by a warrant from on high."

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  • She wished Paulet would manage the business on his own account, and when at last her signature was extorted she made a scapegoat of her secretary Davison who had the warrant executed.

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  • Although ancestor-worship, or, more broadly, the cult of the dead, has in many cases overshadowed other cults or even extinguished them, we have no warrant, even in these cases, for asserting its priority, but rather the reverse; not only so, but in the majority of cases the pantheon is made up by a multitude of spirits in human, sometimes in animal form, which bear no signs of ever having been incarnate; sun gods and moon goddesses, gods of fire, wind and water, gods of the sea, and above all gods of the sky, show no signs of having been ghost gods at any period in their history.

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  • But this error in an astrological detail would not warrant us in assigning to the poet the blunder about Jacob and Laban in the same tale (see above).

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  • For example, it was ruled by Lord Chancellor Jeffreys, as steward at the trial of Lord Delamere, that, in trials of peers which take place during the recess of parliament in the steward's court, the steward is the judge of the court, the court is held before him, his warrant convenes the prisoner to the bar, his,summons convenes the peers for the trial, and he to determine by his sole authority all questions of law that arise in the course of the trial, but that he is to give no vote upon the issue of guilty or not guilty; during a session of parliament, on the contrary, all the peers are both triers and judges, and the steward is only as chairman of the court and gives his vote together with the other lords.

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  • Reasonable force may be used in pursuance of the warrant.

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  • Drawing satirical cartoons of Mohammed will get you a death warrant.

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  • Getting a search warrant is expensive and lots of hassle, and they need some initial evidence to get one of these anyway.

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  • Do they not warrant a full investigation of how he died, following the intervention of three NHS Trusts?

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  • If he issues a warrant of execution, the bailiff cannot levy on tools of the trade or on the van.

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  • While you still may find occasions that warrant a trip to your local toy store, pleasing your little one with new playthings is actually easy and relatively inexpensive.

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  • In addition, new parents can find running out of clean diapers a frustrating enough thought to warrant at least having disposables as a back-up.

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  • Regulators and managers actually determine which investors have the funds and have the investment experience to warrant their investment in the funds.

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  • Most people do not discover the activity until they learn of a warrant for their arrest.

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  • Contact the court system to see if you can get a warrant for his arrest.

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  • The court has the flexibility to order an amount that is higher or lower than what is specified in the guidelines if circumstances warrant a different level of support.

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  • If the child's standard of living or schooling costs warrant an increase to the statutorily prescribed amount, the court may legally increase the payment amount.

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  • We stand behind the quality and warrant to the original purchaser that our furniture [and] all of its parts and components are free of material and workmanship defects for two years.

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  • Of course, it could also very well be that the products simply don't sell well enough to warrant being produced anymore.

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  • I usually don't get dark enough to warrant purchasing a new foundation altogether; that seems a useless purchase as I wouldn't use it for long.

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  • Certain changes in your skiing style, age, weight or boot sole length may warrant an adjustment of your DIN settings.

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  • Humor is great for your health, and if you can learn to take things a little less seriously you can deal with situations that might not actually warrant anger.

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  • Does anyone remember the video for Warrant's Cherry Pie?

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  • The warrant was based on a formal request based on a diplomatic note from the government of Mexico."

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  • Not only has Whitney Houston, his wife of 14 years, filed for a legal separation, but now there is another warrant for Bobby's arrest in his home state of Massachusetts.

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  • In what has now become all too common with the on-again, off-again New Edition member, a judge in Massachussetts has issued a warrant for Bobby Brown's arrest if he even steps a big toe within state lines.

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  • The warrant is for failing to appear before the judge on allegations that Brown is late, by two months and $11,000, on his child support payments to ex-girlfriend Kim Ward.

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  • Bobby Brown was nabbed at his daughter's cheerleading competition on a warrant for failing to appear at a child support hearing in October 2006.

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  • In October 2006, a warrant for his arrest was issued after he missed the child support hearing.

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  • This outstanding warrant led to his February 2007 arrest.

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  • The extent of Bianca's mother's injuries was severe enough to warrant an airlift to the nearest hospital.

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  • A warrant, however, has been issued for her arrest.

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  • Word is that Massachusetts police have issued a bench warrant for his arrest because he hasn't paid for the financial support of his children in almost a year.

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  • What is known about the case is that Gary Coleman's domestic violence arrest stems from a previous warrant and he is begin held in a Utah county jail.

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  • Many individuals who have not purchased enough items from certain stores to warrant the best coupon codes will rifle through online coupon banks to acquire these valuable codes.

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  • A university may offer dozens of minors, each with its own small department and staff, but in most cases, the courses offered in the minor topic aren't varied, diverse, or advanced enough to warrant a major course of study.

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  • Japanese guitars were wildly popular in the 1980s when heavy metal bands like Winger, Warrant, Whitesnake and Badlands were playing brands like Kramer, Charvel, Jackson, and Ibanez.

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  • Those who don't recommend it state the primary reason being that it doesn't produce enough heat to warrant the appliance's price tag.

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  • Some events still do warrant traditional dress, and fashion standards do tend to swing back, so it's good to be prepared.

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  • You may be on a budget or you may not go to formal occasions enough to warrant spending a lot of money on a dress.

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  • When considering whether playing revenge pranks is a good idea, first look at whether the other person's actions really warrant the prank.

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  • A minor transgression that the other person may not even remember is probably not important enough to warrant a full-blown revenge prank.

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  • Hot flashes cause you to perspire enough to warrant a change of pajamas.

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  • These cramps are not usually a sign of a serious condition, though they can be painful enough to warrant a visit to your doctor.

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  • This means that it's an improvement upon the last model, but not different enough to warrant a new number.

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  • In 2009, the Lindberg eyewear won quite prestigious recognition, the Royal Warrant of Appointment.

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  • Check to see if you are a member to any particular group that might warrant a discount in ticket pricing.

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  • While I found the controls okay and the graphics okay, that's not enough to warrant an outright purchase.

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  • The physics alone make it one of the most fun games that I've ever played, and is enough to warrant a second play-through by itself.

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  • Not only are there no goals, no stages, no enemies and no puzzles, but there's really not much here to warrant the label "game".

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  • If you can warrant Fifty Bucks just for that, go ahead, but I recommend spending considerably less at Blockbuster to learn whether you can put up with the flaws.

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  • Despite the stir at an American actress playing a decidedly British role, the movie won enough sales to warrant a sequel.

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  • Cosmetic damage and repairs, such as painting, may seem like a small problem and one that should not warrant concern.

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  • The following are common cell phone issues that warrant recalls.

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  • Several other treatments are possible if the croup is severe enough to warrant the child's being seen by a physician.

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  • Behaviors that warrant grief counseling or therapy are unresolved anger and hostility, not expressing grief at all or minimally, or depression or anxiety that interferes with daily activities that lasts for weeks or months.

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  • Problematic peer relations are associated with both present and future maladjustment of children and warrant serious attention from parents and professionals working with children.

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  • Labored breathing or general feelings of sluggishness and lack of energy may warrant examination by a physician and testing of cholesterol.

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  • More severe symptoms may warrant a CT or MRI scan, along with a thorough neurological and physical exam.

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  • Indomethicin (Indocin), not recommended for children under the age of 14 except in circumstances that warrant the risk.

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  • A veteran could apply for a bounty and if approved, would receive a land warrant.

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  • The veteran could use the warrant to apply for a land patent, giving him ownership of a parcel of land.

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  • Applications for a bounty land warrant contain similar information as a pension, such as military service information, marriage licenses, and death information.

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  • If this is the case, your contractions warrant calling your practitioner right away, especially if they are five minutes apart or fewer.

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  • We mentioned UjENA Swimwear previously, and because this company produces some of the most high-quality and beautiful swimsuits available today, they really warrant further investigation.

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  • Well, these board shorts look as if someone who did sat in on an SU meeting, took note of the preppy styles they were wearing and decided to re-fashion their clothing preferences in a way that would certainly warrant a demerit.

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  • Sometimes nutritional deficiencies arise despite all efforts to eat a balanced diet, or certain health conditions might warrant a larger dosage of fiber than could be obtained from diet alone.

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  • A sweater coat has its own purpose, and is better suited to wear on those days when it's pretty cold, but not quite enough to warrant wearing that heavy winter coat.

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  • A date night in late May, for example, may be slightly breezy and crisp, yet not exactly cold enough to warrant an actual sweater.

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  • Once the ideas are narrowed down to several that each person can agree are cool enough to warrant this effort, take a vote!

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  • Having an occasional argument over dinner plans or driving habits does not necessarily warrant seeking outside counseling or advice.

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  • It's not just women, but men, who have quickly acquired enough small electronics and devices to warrant their very own carry-all.

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  • At the very least, you have enough of a possibility to warrant a paranormal investigation.

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  • Nevertheless, unless you're a professional or a highly competitive softball player, you probably won't warrant an $80 pair of cleats.

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  • Though it may seem that wearing fur lined boots during wintertime should be essential, it really is not necessary until conditions become harsh enough to warrant that extra layer of warmth.

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  • If you buy a pair that feels a bit tight, but not tight enough to warrant going up a whole or half size, check the reviews on that particular pair.

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  • Over time the site graduated to warrant its own domain name and paid hosting - and grew to include quizzes, a recipe section and message board.

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  • Women should always assert themselves when possible and seek help if their tattoo (or any other physical feature) begins to warrant threats, slurs, or other forms of vulgar behavior.

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  • That depends on how well you handle pain, and it's a subjective question that will warrant a different response from each person you ask.

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  • Although it's a long and painful process, the results are thought to be beautiful and meaningful enough to warrant the pain and patience involved.

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  • While some children without autism may display some transient signs of the disorder, a number of behaviors are red flags that warrant further investigation.

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  • Treating the vendor company rep or owner with respect will warrant you the same treatment.

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  • The tires warrant an inspection themselves.

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  • These are just a few of the many ways a team can be successful and pull off an amazing routine that will warrant them a place in the cheerleading records.

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  • While it might warrant some explaining, dressing as enemies from historical tales could make for some very smart costumes - particularly if your school is able to give prizes to reward the originality of the costumes at a pep rally.

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  • There are several situations that warrant a fitting.

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  • While it's true that the sleeves on this gown hit at about the elbow, the fact that its spun from Supima cotton helps it to warrant a second look.

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  • Unfortunately, despite the unique styling and beauty of Japanese lingerie, the marketing professionals have determined that American interest is too minimal to warrant sales in this country.

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  • Unfortunately, this album didn't match the success of their debut album, but they attracted enough attention to warrant a world tour.

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  • Weddings, graduations, christenings, memorials and cultural holidays are just a few occasions that warrant a traditional invitation card.

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  • Beyond those once-in-a-lifetime occasions, there are other events that warrant invitations and announcements.

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  • With competition such as Richard Hatch and Jonny Fairplay, it's clear that Russell must be extremely devious to warrant such a label.Russell's strategy involves making everyone around him miserable.

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  • The determined alien had stowed away for safety, but the quick-thinking warrant officer manages to make it into a pressure suit before blowing the intruder out of the airlock, along with all of the shuttle's atmosphere.

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  • The sole survivor of Alien, Warrant Officer Ellen Ripley (played with panache by Sigourney Weaver) was last seen entering hypersleep for her trip back to inhabited space.

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  • Another factor to look into is whether or not you want to start small with a free hosting site, or perhaps a dedicated hosting company or whether your company, church or minstry is large enough to warrant a dedicated server.

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  • There's a new term floating around; crystal ball search warrant.

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  • Do you want to swear out a warrant?

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  • Franklin was seized and imprisoned, under a warrant from the State Supreme Court.

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  • Their form, however, is not sufficiently characteristic to warrant this identification, though it may be noted that the nearest approximation to phallic worship is found amongst the most typical of African peoples, viz.

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  • The evidence for the rite among the Greeks is sufficient to warrant the conclusion of its introduction at a very early period and its persistence to a late day.

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  • After the affair of the Champ de Mars (July 17th, 1791) a warrant was issued for his arrest, and he went into hiding.

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  • In March 1679 a new parliament hostile to Danby was returned, and he was forced to resign the treasurership; but he received a pardon from the king under the Great Seal, and a warrant for a marquessate.

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  • In some cases the closest examination has failed to detect any distinction that may be called specific between the members of their avifauna; but in most it is possible to discover just sufficient difference to warrant a separation of the subjects.

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  • The conclusions of such a work are of wider significance than the assumptions we attribute to the author would warrant.

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  • In that month, however, such a request was dangerous; there was excitement in the city over the presentation of the petition, and the private attacks to which Desmoulins had often been subject were now followed by a warrant for the arrest of himself and Danton.

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  • On the 31st the warrant of arrest was signed and executed, and on the 3rd, 4th and 5th of April the trial took place before the Revolutionary Tribunal.

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  • There is much to be said in favour of the view entertained by some entomologists that the structural and developmental characteristics of may-flies are sufficiently peculiar to warrant the formation for them of a special order of insects, for which the names Agnatha, Plectoptera and Ephemeroptera have been proposed.

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  • It was also a distributory tax (impot de repartition); every year the king in his council fixed the total sum which the taille was to produce in the following year; he drew up and signed the brevet de la taille (warrant), and the contribution of the individual taxpayer was arrived at in the last analysis by a series of subdivisions.

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  • Hallam maintains that the only overt act of treason proved against Russell was his concurrence in the project of a rising at Taunton, which he denied, and which, Ramsay being the only witness, was not sufficient to warrant a conviction.

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  • In other cases it has been assumed without due warrant.

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  • The conflict between Saduceeism and the sopherim was hardly so intense in his days as to warrant the supposition that he omitted the name of Ezra intentionally.

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  • The book was condemned (June loth, 1734), the copies seized and burnt, a warrant issued against the author and his dwelling searched.

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  • The mistake is often made of sinking large and expensive shafts, or driving costly tunnels, before it is fully proved that the deposit can be worked on a scale to warrant such developments, and, indeed, too often before it is known that the deposit can be worked at all; and in too many cases large amounts of money are thus unnecessarily lost by over-sanguine mine managers.

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  • The deputy receives and opens in the sheriff's name all writs, the return or execution of which belongs to the bailiff of the liberty, and issues to the bailiff the warrant required for the due execution of such writs.

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  • The development of manufacturing in Delaware has not been so extensive as its favourable situation relative to the other states, the facilities for water and railway transportation, and the proximity of the coal and iron fields of Pennsylvania, would seem to warrant.

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  • By the reformed Churches, including the Church of England, the festival is not observed, having been rejected at the Reformation as being neither primitive nor founded upon any "certain warrant of Holy Scripture."

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  • His industry in every department was great, and though we find in his system many of those gaps which are characteristic of scholastic philosophy, yet the protracted study of Aristotle gave him a great power of systematic thought and exposition, and the results of that study, as left to us, by no means warrant the contemptuous title sometimes given him - the "Ape of Aristotle."

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  • The conduct of France and Germany seemed to warrant this action, for Charles VII.

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  • Constans as minister of the interior, had been quietly taking its measures for bringing a prosecution against him, and within two months a warrant was signed for his arrest.

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  • Vinegar, however, which contains about 5% acetic acid, is frequently taken as a cure for obesity, but there is no warrant for this application.

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  • The marble and graphite, as well as some other indirect evidence of life less susceptible of brief statement, have been thought by many geologists sufficient to warrant the inference that life existed before the close of the era when the Archean rocks were formed.

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  • The present state of evidence, however, seems to afford no warrant for the conclusion that man existed in the United States before the end of the glacial period.

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  • The peculiar resemblances of two MSS., though not sufficient to warrant the derivation of either from the other, may be sufficient to establish some connexion between them.

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  • The first three of these services were abolished in 1859 by royal warrant - that is to say by the exercise of the same authority which had instituted them.

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  • The fourth form of service was retained in its old shape till 1901, when a new form, or rather new forms of service, having been prepared by Convocation, were authorized by royal warrant on the 9th of November.

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  • They rejected animal sacrifice as well as marriage; the oil with which priests and kings were anointed they accounted unclean; and the condemnation of oaths and the community of goods were unmistakable innovations for which they found no hint or warrant in the old Hebrew writings.

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  • Before burial takes place the clergyman or other person conducting the funeral or religious service must have the registrar's certificate that the death of the deceased person has been duly registered, or else a coroner's order or warrant.

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  • In modern times, however, by certain regulations, made in 1823, and repeated and enlarged in 1855, not only is it provided that the sovereign's permission by royal warrant shall be necessary for the reception by a British subject of any foreign order of knighthood, but further that such permission shall not authorize " the assumption of any style, appellation, rank, precedence, or privilege appertaining to a knight bachelor of the United Kingdom."

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  • The numbers are limited to 475, of whom 250 belong to the home and 225 to the civil services of the colonies and protectorates (Royal Warrant, June 1909).

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  • The sovereign's permission by royal warrant is necessary before a British subject can receive a foreign order of knighthood.

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  • The arrest of the offender had to be by warrant signed by at least six knights, and during the process of charge and trial he remained not in prison but dans l'aimable compagnie du dit ordre.

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  • With care, however, such a garment lasts sufficiently long to warrant the present outlay.

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  • The modern revival, in certain churches of an "advanced" type, of the ceremonies of blessing the palms and carrying them in procession has no official warrant, and is therefore without any significance as illustrating the authoritative point of view of the Church of England.

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  • For Philo lays stress upon the weakness of the analogical argument, points out that the demand for an ultimate cause is no more satisfied by thought than by nature itself, shows that the argument from design cannot warrant the inference of a perfect or infinite or even of a single deity, and finally, carrying out his principles to the full extent, maintains that, as we have no experience of the origin of the world, no argument from experience can carry us to its origin, and that the apparent marks of design in the structure of animals are only results from the conditions of their actual existence.

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  • This treaty proved to be a great mistake on Denmark's part, but circumstances seemed at the time to warrant it.

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  • A comparison between the Essenes and the Neopythagoreans shows a parallel so striking as to warrant the theory that the Essenes were profoundly influenced by Neopythagoreanism.

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  • The subsequent process, the warrant directing a messenger-at-arms to charge the debtor to pay or perform in terms of the letters, was called "letters of horning."

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  • There appears to be little either in the development or in the structure of the Haplodrili to warrant the view held by Hatschek and Fraipont that Polygordius and Protodrilus are exceedingly primitive forms, ancestral to the whole group of seta-bearing Annelids (Oligochaeta, Polychaeta, Hirudinea and Echiuroidea).

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  • There are two Evangelical and two Roman Catholic churches, a gymnasium, schools for warrant officers and engineers and other naval educational institutions.

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  • The insect inhabitants of Ecuador, like the birds, include a large number of genera and species, but no complete entomological survey of the country has ever been made, and our knowledge in this respect is insufficient to warrant a detailed description.

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  • He was convicted by the Queen's Bench on the 21st of May 1 593, and hanged on the 29th at the unusual hour of 4 p.m., the signature of his old enemy Whitgift being the first of those affixed to the warrant.

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  • The meanest of the fancies of the mind and the most casual of its whims he regarded as a better warrant for the being of God than any single object of nature.

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  • It may have been that the sophists' preference of seeming to reality, of success to truth, had a mischievous effect upon the morality of the time; but it is clear that they had no common theory of ethics, and there is no warrant for the assumption that a sophist, as such, specially interested himself in ethical questions.

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  • Indeed, the author of this article finds in the writings of Plato a grave and discriminating study of the several forms of sophistry, and no trace whatsoever of that blind hostility which should warrant us in neglecting his clear and precise evidence.

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  • Pollock, there is no warrant for it in English common law.

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  • The language of the Magyars is FinnoUgric and most nearly allied to the speech of the Ostiaks now found on the east of the Ural, but we have no warrant for assuming that the Huns, and still less that the Ephthalites and Hunas, spoke the same language.

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  • He felt, too, that even if the plan were as successful as Conrad claimed it would be, its effect on the general course of the war would not be sufficiently important to warrant the risk taken in detaching a strong German force for the enterprise itself, or for replacing Austro-Hungarian divisions in the east if the actual attack should be left to Germany's ally.

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  • These disorders, and especially complaints against the Jerseys as centres of illegal trade, were brought to the attention of King William and his lawyers contended that as only the king could convey powers of government those exercised by the Jersey proprietors, derived as they were from the duke of York, were without sufficient warrant.

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  • The volume of business they can generate from the FHA market is simply deemed insufficient to warrant their time and money.

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  • He was a member of the commission for ecclesiastical causes, and although afterwards he claimed that he had used all his influence to dissuade James from removing the tests, and in other ways illegally favouring the Roman Catholics, he signed the warrant for the committal of the seven bishops, and appeared as a witness against them.

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  • He often prided himself on his absolute consistency, and we have Chaptal's warrant for the statement that, after the time of the Consulate, his habit of following his own opinions and rejecting all advice, even when he had asked for it, became more and more pronounced.

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  • His duties are described in detail by the king's regulations, but may be summed up as consisting of seeing that the charges are in order, pointing out any informalities or defects in the charges or in the constitution of the court, seeing that any witness required by prosecutor or prisoner is summoned, keeping the minutes of the proceedings, advising on matters of law which arise at any time after the warrant for the courtmartial is issued, drawing up the findings and sentence, and forwarding the minutes when completed to the admiralty.

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  • In April 1799 a warrant was issued for his arrest, but was not executed; and in 1800 and the following year he travelled on the continent of Europe, where he entered into relations with the leaders of the United Irishmen, exiled since the rebellion of 1798, who were planning a fresh outbreak in Ireland in expectation of support from France.

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  • There is no more evidence to warrant the wholly erroneous statement sometimes made that emancipation was an economic set-back to Cuba than could be gathered to support a similar statement regarding the United States.

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  • These works, however, warrant the inference.

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  • But even at the time when union was most important, this statement went further than the facts would warrant, and in the course of the following century it became less and less true.

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  • Gladstone found that purchase existed only by royal sanction, and advised the queen to issue a royal warrant cancelling, on and after the 1st of November following, all regulations authorizing the purchase of commissions.

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  • According to the narrative of Sir Thomas More, Sir Robert Brackenbury, the constable of the Tower, refused to obey Richard's command to put the young princes to death; but he complied with a warrant ordering him to give up his keys for one night to Sir James Tyrell, who had arranged for the assassination.

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  • Thus mutual oversight and care are among the duties of the members of Christ's body; while their collective inspiration, enabling them to " try the gifts of godliness " of specially endowed fellow-members, is the divine warrant in election to church office.

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  • Paulet, with loyal and regretful indignation, declined the disgrace proposed to him in a suggestion "to shed blood without law or warrant"; and on the 7th of February the earls of Shrewsbury and Kent arrived at Fotheringay with the commission of the council for execution of the sentence given against his prisoner.

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  • The government, therefore (Badeni having resigned), had to proclaim the necessary measures by imperial warrant.

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  • These arrangements in Hungary received the sanction of the parliament; but this could not be procured in Austria, and they were, therefore, proclaimed by imperial warrant; first of all, on.

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  • It could, however, try any case in any province by special warrant of the high commissioner.

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  • Native courts were established by warrant at all the chief native towns with varying powers.

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  • In 1908 there were 140 British warrant and non-commissioned officers.

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  • Only they can't get a search warrant and no owners, no permission.

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  • We cannot call attention to ourselves until our numbers warrant our attack.

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  • The manganese ores of the Bathurst district of New South Wales often contain a small percentage of cobalt - sufficient, indeed, to warrant further attempts to work them.

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  • The elevated is used where the traffic is so light as not to warrant the expensive underground construction, or where the construction of an elevated line is of no serious detriment to the adjoining property.

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  • Precipitation is largely confined to local showers, often of such violence as to warrant the name "cloud bursts," commonly applied to the heavy down-pours of this desert region.

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  • At Dalmahoy Castle, near Ratho (pop. 1946), the seat of the earl of Morton, are preserved the only extant copy of the bible of the Scottish parliament and the original warrant for committing Queen Mary to Lochleven Castle in Kinross-shire.

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  • Damian would never kill his brother, Jule, but if the woman was dangerous enough to warrant a Watcher's attention, he couldn't look the other way.

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  • Without resorting to this exaggeration, Mommsen can speak with perfect truth of the " enormous space occupied by the burial vaults of Christian Rome, not surpassed even by the cloacae or sewers of Republican Rome," but the data are too vague to warrant any attempt to define their dimensions.

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  • However, should the husband neglect to sue for the recovery of any separate property of his wife she may, with the permission of the court, sue for it in her own name; or should the husband refuse to support his wife and educate her children as her fortune would warrant, the county court may in answer to her complaint require a fixed portion of the proceeds from her property to be paid to her.

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  • The evidence, however, is not sufficiently strong to warrant a universal conclusion, the diffusion of cholera appearing to be largely dependent upon other factors than soil states.

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  • Such an absolute continuity is sometimes assumed without warrant; but Descartes already recognized that the world was no continuous process, " Tria mirabilia fecit Dominus; res ex nihilo, liberum arbitrium et hominem Deum."

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  • I think that I may warrant you one worm to every three sods you turn up, if you look well in among the roots of the grass, as if you were weeding.

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  • It was a small cavity under ten feet of water; but I think that I can warrant the pond not to need soldering till they find a worse leak than that.

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  • You'll look around when you get a search warrant, or hell freezes over—whichever comes first!

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