Disciplinary Sentence Examples

disciplinary
  • No decisions of a general nature, whether dogmatic or disciplinary, could be made without his consent.

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  • For this third period, the most important and most considerable of the canonical texts is the body of disciplinary decrees of the council of Trent (1545-1563).

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  • It is much less certain that the disciplinary reforms which the council, following the example of its predecessors, re-enacted, owed anything to Protestantism, unless indeed the council would have shown itself less intolerant in respect to such innovations as the use of the vernacular in the services had this not smacked of evangelicalism.

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  • From 1787 onwards, colonial bishops and metropolitans were appointed by letters patent which purported to give them jurisdiction for disciplinary purposes.

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  • African troops, entirely European and normally consisting of 606 officers time when it would have been impolitic to ask openly for more cavalry, they were little by little trained in real cavalry work, then combined in provisional regiments for disciplinary purposes and at last frankly classed as cavalry.

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  • In closest connexion with the church is the group of buildings appropriated to the monastic life and its daily requirements - the refectory for eating, the dormitory for sleeping, the common room for social intercourse, the chapter-house for religious and disciplinary conference.

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  • This congregation was very much occupied, being empowered to deal with all disciplinary matters concerning both the secular and regular clergy, whether in the form of consultations or of contentious suits; it had further the exclusive right to regulate the discipline of the religious orders and congregations bound by the simple vows, the statutes of which it examined, corrected and approved; finally it judged disputes and controversies between the secular and regular clergy.

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  • The great Sokol union has a membership of over 300,000 in all, and the programme includes not only physical but also moral and disciplinary training, aiming at the production of citizens of character and patriotism.

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  • With the reservation of those questions, especially of a dogmatic character, which belong to the Holy Office, and of purely ritual questions, which come under the Congregation of Rites, this Congregation brings under one authority all disciplinary questions concerning the sacraments, which were formerly distributed among several Congregations and offices.

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  • Rarely has a man been able to carry out his system so completely, though perhaps in these first years he had to take more disciplinary measures than he had intended against the Reds, and granted more favours than was fitting to the Catholics, his allies in December 1848 and December 1858.

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  • The bishop has acquired control of the sacraments, presbyters and deacons acting only under his orders; the episcopate appears as a unit, bishops being bound to respect one another's disciplinary decrees.

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  • Article 17 maintained the independence of the ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in spiritual and disciplinary matters, but reserved for the state the exclusive right to carry out coercive measures.

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  • But in all cases the disciplinary authority is evidently the same; we need only note that acts concerning individuals do not claim the force of general law; the legal decisions serve at most to settle matters of jurisprudence, like the judgments of all sovereign courts.

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  • If, as a result of the dope testing, the presence of a banned substance is detected then disciplinary action will be taken.

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  • Don't let managers rush you into a disciplinary hearing.

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  • The employers subsequently agreed to arbitration but then repudiated the agreement reached at ACAS and insisted on continuing the disciplinary action.

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  • Cullen would have to walk the disciplinary tightrope for at least 80 minutes as referee Taylor cautioned him for the challenge.

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  • To that end the case will be referred to the Church in Wales ' disciplinary tribunal.

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  • The idea is to make the member look a twerp " Let's roll out a disciplinary board for Clare Short.

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  • The written warning should accurately record the warning given at the disciplinary interview.

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  • Even in unorganized workplaces, it is acknowledged good practice to consult with employees over ways in which disciplinary and grievance matters are handled.

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  • The organization of the metropolitan troops by regiments is (a) 163 regiments of line infantry, some of which are affected to regional duties and do not enter into the composition of their army corps for war, 31 battalions of chasseurs a pied, mostly stationed in the Alps and the Vosges, 4 regiments of Zouaves, 4 regiments of Algerian tirailleurs (natives, often called Turcosi), i foreign legion regiments, 5 battalions of African light infantry (disciplinary regiments), &c.; (b) 12

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  • Elders are rulers; their function also is spiritual, though practical and disciplinary.

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  • The Employment Department have Consultants that are fully trained to hold a disciplinary, grievance or appeal on behalf of a Company.

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  • The headquarters troop provides the internal administrative, disciplinary, training, and security support functions for the squadron headquarters.

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  • They have been ordered to stay in the local hospital pending a disciplinary hearing scheduled for Wednesday.

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  • You have the right to take a trade union representative or fellow worker into a disciplinary or grievance hearing.

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  • Progressive disciplinary action was taken in the case of continued noncompliance.

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  • Dialog and debate between competing perspectives should be encouraged and attempts to define a disciplinary orthodoxy avoided.

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  • The University regards deliberate plagiarism as a serious disciplinary offense, and if discovered it is penalized severely.

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  • The Manager will have to deal with disciplinary procedures from time to time.

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  • Company officers only hold authority, e.g. the power to institute disciplinary proceedings, within their remit.

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  • Failure to make a prompt report may count against them in the event of disciplinary proceedings.

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  • The standard of proof now demanded for the police is broadly the same standard faced by other public servants in disciplinary charges.

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  • He subsequently received a public reprimand without a formal disciplinary hearing.

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  • This case demonstrated that unwarranted demotion and disciplinary sanctions would amount to constructive dismissal should the employe resign.

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  • They opposed all arrangement for the orderly distribution of travelling ministers to different localities, and even for the payment of their expenses (see above); they also strongly objected to any disciplinary power being entrusted to the women's separate meetings for business, which had become of considerable importance after the Plague (1665) and the Fire of London (1666) in consequence of the need for poor relief.

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  • The right of the archbishop to exercise a certain disciplinary power over the regular orders is possessed by him, not as archbishop, but as the delegate ad hoc of the pope.

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  • Both regular and secular clergy (those at least in major orders) are under the obligation of celibacy, which, by cutting them off from the most intimate common interests of the people, has proved a most powerful disciplinary force in the hands of the popes (see Celibacy).

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  • In the highest rank must be placed Christ and the Apostles, whose dispositions for the constitution and government of the Church are contained in the New Testament, completed by tradition; for the Church did not accept the disciplinary and ritual provisions of the Old Testament as binding upon her (see Acts xi., xv.).

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  • Soon after came the council in Trullo (692), also called the Quinisextum, because it was considered as complementary to the two councils (5th and 6th ecumenical) of Constantinople (553 and 680), which had not made any disciplinary canons.

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  • A spokesman yesterday refused to comment on whether there were any disciplinary issues involving Mr Murray.

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  • The idea is to make the member look a twerp Let 's roll out a disciplinary board for Clare Short.

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  • Individuals who make malicious or vexatious allegations may be liable to disciplinary action.

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  • As part of the university's early childhood research, there will be a study on the effectiveness of rebuking as a disciplinary action.

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  • Be sure to check your attorney's disciplinary record before asking him to represent you.

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  • This can result in low grades or disciplinary action by a teacher.

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  • This can cause someone with anxiety disorder to start to default on work duties and subsequently receive disciplinary actions or firing.

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  • In addition to disciplinary action, other personal consequences exist.

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  • If you are uncertain, you should ask someone in charge and make sure your diploma won't be held or other disciplinary action will be taken.

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  • Students must also have clean community college records that are free of suspension or other drastic disciplinary action.

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  • Prong collars can be hazardous, and should never be left on an unattended animal or used for disciplinary purposes.

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  • Elementary school students may be sufficiently chastised with a few harsh words, but middle school students who engage in unsafe bus behavior may need harsher disciplinary measures to enforce the necessity for safe buses.

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  • Exact disciplinary measures vary between public and private schools as well as grade level, and concerned parents should contact their child's school for details on bus safety and discipline.

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  • Carefully outlined safety procedures that all operators are expected to adhere to, with harsh disciplinary measures for safety failures.

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  • Child abusers were often abused as children themselves and do not realize that abuse is not an appropriate disciplinary technique.

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  • There are several reasons why children may not behave properly, including a lack of effective disciplinary measures.

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  • There is also research suggesting that harsh disciplinary measures may actually increase poor behavior.

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  • Disciplinary techniques that are most effective take place in the context of a loving and secure relationship between parent and child.

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  • Because of this range in form and severity, the use of corporal punishment as a disciplinary method is controversial.

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  • Timeouts and consequences continue to be effective disciplinary measures in this age group.

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  • When teens do break rules, taking away some of their privileges seems to be the most effective type of disciplinary measure.

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  • It may prove helpful for parents to regularly communicate regarding their child's behavior and decide ahead of time what disciplinary methods are to be used.

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  • Parents may be worried that the disciplinary methods they have decided are appropriate for their child may not be respected or followed by teachers and other adult caregivers.

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  • Family discord, physical or sexual abuse, and an upcoming legal or disciplinary crisis are also commonly associated with completed and attempted suicide.

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  • Mental health professionals agree, and rising rates of serious school disciplinary problems, delinquency, and violent crime indicate, that antisocial behavior in general is increasing.

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  • Any disciplinary measures should be explained as a simple consequence to the child's aggression.

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  • Verify the professional's license and other credentials, including whether or not they have any disciplinary action or reprimands in their records.

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  • However, people who voluntarily quit their jobs or who are fired for performance or disciplinary reasons are not eligible to receive benefits.

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  • You should check to make sure that your Fresno mortgage lender has a valid license and has not had any disciplinary action taken against them.

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  • It is easy to determine if a home inspector is licensed in Illinois and if there have been any disciplinary actions against the inspector.

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  • He currently is listed on Attorney Register and Disciplinary Commission website for Illinois as unauthorized to practice law.

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  • The new prison was designated as the Pacific Branch, U.S. Disciplinary Barracks for the U.S. Army.

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  • What this movement will do is help you further reinforce your natural-born disciplinary skills.

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  • Other school districts soon followed and reported similar decreases in disciplinary actions.

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  • More and more, school officials who argue for uniforms in their schools do so because they believe that school uniforms lead to a safer campus with fewer disciplinary problems.

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  • Company's who take advantage of these programs also see an increase in employee productivity, reduction in attrition, fewer grievances filed, and less disciplinary problems.

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  • Junior high school cheerleaders are expected to be role models for the other students, and disciplinary problems do not work well within a squad.

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  • Those people who use MySpace from work may be in the position of potential disciplinary measures for misuse of internet privileges, and such sites can be helpful for that purpose.

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  • Since there is no example of the archbishop of York exercising or being reputed to have such disciplinary jurisdiction over his suffragans,' and this right could, according to the canon law cited above, in the middle ages only be exercised normally in concert with the provincial synod, it would seem to be a survival of the special jurisdiction enjoyed by the pre-Reformation archbishop as legatus natus of the pope.

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  • The disciplinary question of clerical marriage is not of the same primary importance as the doctrinal questions involved in the restoration of the cup to the laity, or discussed in the subsequent article on the mass.

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  • In disciplinary matters no emperor since Augustus had been able to keep so strong a control over the troops.

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  • The tone of the passage when compared with the disciplinary methods of the synagogue indicates that its purpose was to introduce elements of reason and moral suasion in place of sterner methods.

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  • It is clear from these illustrations that within the New Testament there is development from spontaneous towards strictly regulated methods; also that the use of excommunication is chiefly for disciplinary and protective rather than punitive purposes.

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  • Thus " we ought," as Lindsay says, " to see in the disciplinary powers and punishments of the Consistory of Geneva not an exhibition of the working of the Church organized on the principles of Calvin, but the ordinary procedure of the town council of a medieval city.

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  • The judicial power consists of a Supreme Court of Justice of seven members located in the national capital, which exercises supervisory and disciplinary authority over all the law courts of the republic; six courts of appeal, in Tacna, Serena, Valparaiso, Santiago, Talca and Concepcion; tribunals of first instance in the department capitals; and minor courts, or justices of the peace, in the subdelegacies and districts.

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  • This grade has since been merged in that of chief constable, of whom there are four exercising powers of disciplinary supervision in the metropolitan districts, and a fifth who is assistant in the branch of criminal investigation.

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  • But the expression is most frequently used to designate disciplinary laws, in which case canons are distinguished from dogmatic definitions.

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  • Peter, whose legislative and disciplinary power, by a process of centralization, underwent a slow but uninterrupted development.

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  • In consequence he was summoned before a disciplinary court, and, together with Haupt and Jahn, dismissed from his professorship.

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  • The garrison consists of between 3000 and 4000 men, inclusive of a disciplinary corps of military convicts.

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  • This edict, it is essential to observe, the responsibility for which rests with a disciplinary congregation in no sense representing the church, was never confirmed by the pope, and was virtually repealed in 1757 under Benedict XIV.

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  • The result seems to be a rather conventional disciplinary hierarchy in which history provides the context which English uses to inform its literary analysis.

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  • In the West, in the 6th and 7th centuries, besides the original functions of their office, archdeacons had certain well-defined rights of visitation and supervision, being responsible for the good order of the lower clergy, the upkeep of ecclesiastical buildings and the safe-guarding of the church furniture - functions which involved a considerable disciplinary power.

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  • The severity of the disciplinary measures which followed procured a reaction under which Farel and Calvin were banished the city in 1538.

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  • Then came a theological and disciplinary controversy with Virgil, the Irish bishop of Salzburg, who held, among other heresies, that there were other worlds than ours.

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  • This is why, besides the disciplinary measures which regulated the elections, the celebration of divine service, the periodical holding of diocesan synods and provincial councils, are found also decrees aimed at some of the "rights" by which the popes had extended their power, and helped out their finances at the expense of the local churches.

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  • The reason of this measure was no doubt partly disciplinary, Bologna itself having in 1506 passed under the dominion of the papacy.

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  • The penitentials (q.v.), or early collections of disciplinary canons, gave much attention to sacrilege.

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  • The disciplinary powers of the archbishop, on the other hand, can scarcely be said to survive.

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  • The working of collieries in the United Kingdom is subject to the provisions of the Coal Mines Regulation Act 1887, as amended by several minor acts, administered by inspectors appointed by the Home Office, and forming a complete disciplinary code in all matters connected with coal-mining.

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  • In 1896 Peters was condemned by a disciplinary court for a misuse of official power, and lost his commission.

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  • The colonial office (under the direction of a secretary of state) is divided into (i.) a civil department; (ii.) a military department; (iii.) a disciplinary court.

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  • They demanded from the Liberal Minister of Education, Marchet, that disciplinary measures should be used against him.

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