Put in Sentence Examples
You're the person he wanted to put in the house.
She continued to type while I put in the call.
I'd forgotten all about the bags I put in his trunk.
We have to question Julie about exactly how much detail she put in her entry.
You know, when Mary put in her untimely appearance.
Philip Carteret first observed this settlement in May 1767, and on account of the hostility of the Spaniards preferred to put in at Masa-Fuera.
He was put in command of its naval forces when Franklin Buchanan resigned after he was wounded in the action with the Federal squadron in Hampton Roads.
Several books of proverbs or instructions were put in circulation during the Middle Kingdom.
You'll have everything of Evelyn's put in your name and lock her in her bathroom or something.
It's difficult to put in words, but if he were to leave, he'd do it up front—he'd never just sneak away.
AdvertisementSeveral days ago she had ordered a goat stanchion to put in the barn.
The question you should be asking is whether or not I put in enough for instant death or if I want you to die slowly.
The faith which he put in the Chinese made him turn a deaf ear to the warnings which he received of the threatening Boxer movement in 1900.
The contract for building the railway was put in the hands of Thomas Brassey; English navvies were largely employed on the work, and a number of English engine-drivers were employed when traffic was begun in 1843.
If there was no son capable, the state put in a locum tenens, but granted one-third to the wife to maintain herself and children.
AdvertisementAn exchange is a central station to which wires are brought from the various subscribers in its neighbourhood, any two of whom can be put in telephonic communication with each other when the proper pairs of wires are joined together in the exchange.
The telephone was switched out of circuit when not in use and the bell put in its place, a key being used for throwing the battery into circuit to make the signal.
Urban VIII., however, put in a claim to Ferrara, which, it will be remembered, had been recognized a papal fief in 1530.
Canterbury, York, Armagh, Dublin, Cashel and Tuam are put in the place of Rome.
The law against blasphemy has practically ceased to be put in active operation.
AdvertisementPot off tender annuals, and cuttings of half-hardy greenhouse plants put in during February to get them well established for use in the flower garden.
Three other candidates, however, Andrew Jackson, John Quincy Adams, and Henry Clay, were otherwise put in the field.
Local Veto and Disestablishment of the Welsh Church were put in the forefront of the party programme, but the government was already to all appearances riding for a fall, when on the 24th of June 1895 it was beaten upon an adverse vote in the Commons in regard to a question of the supply and reserve of small arms ammunition.
In the meantime other ships had arrived from Syria, which were put in quarantine.
I put in vegetable scraps and added some lobworms from my local tackle shop (they did n't have tiger worms).
AdvertisementHe scampered across the lab to a fridge that held cold tools and bottles of mysterious serums, everything except what a normal person put in a fridge.
The plant association is sometimes referred to in technical nguage;3 the termination -etum is added to the stem of the meric name, and the specific name is put in the genitive.
Three of them express in the strongest language the orthodox faith of the church in opposition to the Arian heresy, and these three put in unmistakable language the procession of the Holy Spirit from both Father and Son.
In English practice where a spark-arrester is put in it usually takes the form of a wire-netting dividing the smoke-box horizontally into two parts at a level just above the top row of tubes, or arranged to form a continuous connexion between the blast-pipe and the chimney.
A trench was first excavated to the proper depth, then the side walls and arched roof of brick were put in place, earth was filled in behind and over the arch, and the surface of the ground restored, either by paving where streets were followed, or by actually being built over with houses where the lines passed under private property.
In the United States the common law of England was largely followed, and in most of the states, also, statutes were enacted against the offence, but, as in England, the law is practically never put in force.
Although the rise of the Hebrew state, at an age when the great powers were quiescent and when such a people as the Philistines is known to have appeared upon the scene, is entirely intelligible, it is not improbable that legends of Saul and David, the heroic founders of the two kingdoms, have been put in a historical setting with the help of later historical tradition.
Louis Charles was then separated from his mother and aunt to be put in his father's charge, except for a few hours daily, but was restored to the women when Louis was isolated from his family at the beginning of his trial in December.
Two days after the departure of the Simons the prisoner is said by the Restoration historians to have been put in a dark room which was barricaded like the cage of a wild animal.
General du Teil, younger brother of the baron, had recently published a work, L' Usage de l'artillerie nouvelle; and it is now known that Bonaparte derived from this work and from those of Guibert and Bourcet that leading principle, concentration of effort against one point of the enemy's line, which he had advocated at Toulon and which he everywhere put in force in his campaigns.
The names of pretenders not generally acknowledged are put in brackets.
Prince Louis of Battenberg, a most patriotic and capable sailor, unjustly attacked because of his German origin, tendered his resignation as First Sea Lord, and Mr. Churchill put in his place the indefatigable veteran, Lord Fisher.
In the Malay Peninsula the blood of a murdered man must be put in a bottle and prayers said over; after seven days of this worship a sound is heard and the operator puts his finger into the bottle for the polong, as the demon is called, to suck; it will fly through the air in the shape of an exceedingly diminutive female figure, and is always preceded by its pet, the pelesit, in the shape of a grasshopper.
On the better farms this is done with a spirit-level or compass from time to time and hillside ditches put in at the proper places.
This act provided for the disarmament of natives, and had The already been put in force successfully among some "Sun" of the Kaffir tribes on the Cape eastern frontier.
Few are found to observe the law concerning the Five Hours of Prayer, and many fail to put in an appearance at the Friday congregational services in the mosques.
But Hood, who had been put in command as a fighting general, was soon ready to attack afresh.
After having previously roasted the tube and copper oxide, and reduced the copper spiral a, the weighed calcium chloride tube and potash bulbs are put in position, the boat containing the substance is inserted (in the case of a difficultly combustible substance it is desirable to mix it with cupric oxide or lead chromate), the copper spiral (d) replaced, and the air and oxygen supply connected up. The apparatus is then tested for leaks.
He was continually employed on diplomatic errands until 1455, when, owing apparently to ill-health, he received apartments in the palace of the counts of Hainaut at Salle-le-Comte, Valenciennes, with a con siderable pension, on condition that the recipient should put in writing "choses nouvelles et morales," and a chronicle of notable events.
The Poetelian law (326 B.C.) restricted the creditor's lien (by virtue of a nexum) to the goods of his debtor, and enacted that for the future no debtor should be put in chains; but we hear of debtors addicti to their creditors by the tribunals long after - even in the time of the Punic Wars.
But the French had just before bombarded Algiers and Tripoli, even menacing Chios (Scio), where some pirates had put in with French captives; and the mediation of France was not very actively exercised.
In 1884 another treaty was signed by the king, confirming and extending French influence, and reducing the royal authority to a shadow, but in view of the discontent aroused by it, its provisions were not put in force till several years later.
An entirely new project was an international survey of the Mediterranean and adjacent seas, from the fishery and oceanographical standpoints, by France, Italy, Spain and Portugal, but in 1921 no definite programme had been put in operation.
The royal vault in the Chapel Royal, which had fallen into a dilapidated condition, has been put in order; Clockmill House and grounds have been added to the area of the parade ground, and the abbey precincts generally and the approaches to the King's Park have been improved.
It corresponds to the form by which, e.g., a Roman official was put in possession of his magistracy.
On 1st January 1900 a new criminal code, thoroughly modern in spirit, was put in force; and in 1901 a Civil Code Bill, to replace the old Hungarian customary system, was introduced.
This, is all put in the latter half of the 7th century B.C. Herodotus says that the Scyths ruled Media for twenty-eight years, and were then massacred or expelled.
At the beginning of the 20th century several important local widenings of streets were put in hand, as for example between Sloane Street and Hyde Park Corner, in the Strand and at the Marble Arch (1908).
The construction of large storage reservoirs was recommended, and this work was put in hand jointly by the New River, West Middlesex and Grand Junction companies at Staines on the Thames.
At the end of a shift the ore-skip is lifted from the shaft track - the hoisting rope being uncoupled - and the man-car put in its place and attached to the rope.
The same principles as those which had been so successfully applied during the evacuation of the northern areas, were put in force at Helles.
Metternich especially ascribed this mainly to the "weakness" of the ministry, and when in 1819 the political elections still further illustrated this trend, notably by the election of the celebrated Abbe Gregoire, it began to be debated whether the time had not come to put in force the terms of the secret treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle.
The convention was to be ratified on the 1st of August 1890, and was to be put in force on the 1st of September 1891.
After being pared off the turf is allowed to dry for a fortnight or so and is then placed in small heaps a yard or two wide at the base, a little straw or wood being put in the middle of each heap, which is then lighted.
A fresh charge is then put in at once, the muffles being cleared only after three successive distillations.
Together with his brother Thomas he was put in prison for heresy in 1611.
Only four volumes had been published at the time of his death, but he left a mass of papers and manuscripts which the government has put in the hands of the Geographical Society of Lima for publication.
The metal slips are so placed that, as the disk revolves, the middle brush, connected to one terminal of the condenser C, is alternately put in conductive connexion with first one and then the other outside brush, which are joined respectively to the battery B and galvanometer G terminals.
A light field-railway from Remilly to Pont Mousson (14 m.) was also put in hand, but progress on this was very slow.
When they all went, in October-December 1568, to York and London to accuse their queen - and before that, in their proclamations - they contradicted themselves freely and frequently; they put in a list of dates which made Mary's authorship of Letter II.
In 1753 he and William Hunter were put in charge of the post service of the colonies, which he brought in the next ten years to a high state of efficiency and made a financial success; this position he held until 1774.
Iquitos was put in wireless telegraphic communication with Puerto Bermudez on the 8th of July 1908, whence a land line runs across the Andes to Lima.
The idea of an Incarnation of God is absurd; why should the human race think itself so superior to bees, ants and elephants as to be put in this unique relation to its maker?
Small pieces of cork put in the jar will be found to dance about during the continuance of the sound; water or spirits of wine poured into the glass will, under the same circumstances, exhibit a ruffled surface.
But there is always leakage of energy either through friction or through wave-emission, so that the vibration only increases up to the point at which the leakage of energy balances the energy put in by the applied force.
If one prong of each fork be furnished with a small plain mirror, and a beam of light from a luminous point be reflected successively by the two mirrors, so as to form an image on a distinct screen, when one fork alone is put in vibration, the image will move on the screen and be seen as a line of a certain length.
He was taken from the Federal service in Washington to New York City by a reform mayor and put in charge of the police, because he had shown both physical and moral courage in fighting corruption of all sorts; and the New York police force at that time was thoroughly tainted with corruption, not in its rank and file, but among its superior officers, who used the power in their hands to extort money bribes chiefly from saloonkeepers, liquor-dealers, gamblers and prostitutes.
This would have led to an introduction of the national divisions into the central administration, and if similar claims were put in by other nations the principle of a purely objective Government transcending nationality would have been done away with.
Even the shoulder-blades are said to be put in requisition for cutting grass."
The best Italian Latin is but an echo and an imitation; like the painted glass which we put in our churches, it is an anachronism.
Poynting may also be mentioned, in which the tangential component of the thrust of obliquely incident radiation is separately put in evidence, by the torsion produced in an arrangement which is not sensitive to the normal component or to the radiometer-pressure of the residual gas.
Sometimes a little loose earth or sand is put in to the depth of about I in., and the bulbs laid singly thereon, the holes being closed by the dibber and the whole raked over.
But the Federal armaments were not on such a scale as to enable the government to cope with a "nation in arms," and the first call for volunteers was followed by more and more, until in the end the Federals had more than a million men under arms. At first the troops on both sides were voluntarily enlisted, but the South quickly, the North later, put in force conscription acts.
In the closing months of the year Grant's brilliant cavalry commander Sheridan had been put in command of an army to operate against Early in the Valley.
Hood was put in command on the understanding that he should "fight."
The use of masses was never put in practice more sternly than by Grant in 1864.
The Diatessaron appears to have been the usual form in which the gospels were read until the beginning of the 5th century, when the Peshito was put in its place, and a systematic destruction of copies of the Diatessaron was undertaken.
Evelyn put in a plea for afforestation, and besides producing a valuable work on arboriculture, he was able to assert in his preface to the king that he had really induced landowners to plant many millions of trees.
As to the different employments of capital, the quantity of productive labour put in motion by an equal amount varies extremely according as that amount is employed - (i) in the improvement of lands, mines or fisheries, (2) in manufactures, (3) in wholesale or (4) retail trade.
The city had been put in an efficient state of defence by the marquess of Ormonde, then lord-lieutenant; but in the following year, to prevent it falling into the hands of the Irish, he surrendered it on conditions to Colonel Jones, commander of the Parliamentary forces.
There is a tradition that the first settlement of Martha's Vineyard was made in 1632, at or near the present site of Edgartown village, by several English families forming part of a company bound for Virginia, their ship having put in at this harbour on account of heavy weather.
The simple offering of food or shedding of blood at the grave develops into an elaborate system of sacrifice; even where ancestor-worship is not found, the desire to provide the dead with comforts in the future life may lead to the sacrifice of wives, slaves, animals, &c., to the breaking or burning of objects at the grave or to the provision of the ferryman's toll, a coin put in the mouth of the corpse to pay the travelling expenses of the soul.
The needles are put in place one by one against the raised frames, or trestles, by a derrick on a barge lifting them by their ring, whilst a man on the foot-bridge, taking hold of the eye at the top, arranges them in position close together.
While the new machinery of state was thus being put in operation other large questions presented themselves.
The silver kettle, which fits on a ring near the top of the outer covering, has a cup-like cover in which rice is placed with a little water; the ginseng is put in the inner vessel with water, a cover is placed over the whole, and the apparatus is put on the fire.
The whole Prussian army would be put in motion, and all Europe would resound with the alarm of the danger to be apprehended from the Jacobins in France."
The silk is then partly dried in a hydro-extractor, and afterwards put in rooms heated by steam-pipes, where the drying is completed.
Such a limitation of the area of hostilities is not only feasible, but it was actually put in practice by the British government during the Boer War.3 In the course of the Russo-Japanese War the question came up again, being raised this time by Great Britain.
Soon afterwards he was put in command of a frigate squadron for the protection of Levantine commerce, and in 1797 he was given the "Zealous" (74), in which he was present at Nelson's unsuccessful attack on Santa Cruz.
The captain, of the "Mars" was mortally wounded early in the fight, and died as the sword of the French captain was being put in his hand.
The pope-elect was then put in possession of the episcopal house, and after waiting till the next Sunday his consecration was proceeded with.
After the death of Peter (November 25, 3 11), he was received into communion by Peter's successor, Achillas, elevated to the presbytery, and put in charge of one of the great city churches, Baucalis, where he continued to discharge his duties with apparent faithfulness and industry after the accession of Alexander.
It was not till 1709-1710 that the works were again put in a state of defence.
The Gurkhas, after becoming masters of Nepal, were anxious to renew the profitable traffic in coin, and in this view sent a deputation to Lhasa with a quantity of coin to be put in circulation.
This arrangement lasted until 1565, when the burgesses put in a claim to their right of election, and it was decided that out of four burgesses nominated by the lord of the manor the jury of the court leet should select the mayor.
The various pot plants should now be put in their winter quarters.
Plant evergreens; lay and put in cuttings of most of the hard-wooded sorts of shrubby plants October Kitchen Garden.
Sweep and roll the lawns, and put in repair the gravel-walks, keeping the surface frequently rolled.
Tender plants will require to be put in the greenhouse or housed in some way towards the end of this month; but be careful to keep them as cool as possible during the day.
Sow seeds of sweet alyssum, candytuft, daisies, mignonette, pansies, &c. Visit the roadsides and woods for interesting plants to put in the hardy borders.
If two Leyden jars L, L were hung upon the conductors which supported the combs, with their outer coatings put in connexion with one another by M, a series of strong spark discharges passed between the discharge balls.
The Viennese have been particularly successful, and their method has been to dye the skins a good brown and then not put in the dark stripes, which exist in sable and mink, until the garment or article is finished, thus obtaining as perfectly symmetrical effects as if the articles were made of small skins instead of large ones.
Small quantities of good beaver are dyed in Russia occasionally, and white hairs put in so well that an effect similar to sea otter is obtained.
Meanwhile, the elector of Bavaria had come forward and disputed Maria Theresas right to the succession, and the elector of Saxony had also put in a -.
Great hindrances were put in the way of the elections, but, as the Prussian and Austrian governments were too much occupied with their immediate difficulties to resist to the uttermost, the parliament was at last chosen, and met at Frankfort on the I8th May.
After 1878 a heightening of racial feeling began among the Radicals, and in 1881 all the German parties in opposition joined together in a club called the United Left, and in their programme put in a prominent place the defence of the position of the Germans as the condition for the existence of the state, and demanded that German should be expressly recognized as the official language.
The statement of the case and the evidence were frequently ordered to be put in writing.
The virtual will of a high priest of Ammon under the XXIInd Dynasty is put in the form of a decree of the god himself.
The public accounts had been put in order, and the abuses in the collection of the land tax removed.
The experiment of Engelmann referred to deserves to be mentioned here, if only in illustration .of the use to which algae have been put in the study of physiological problems. Engelmann observed that certain bacteria were motile only in the presence of oxygen, and that they retained their motility in a microscopic preparation in the neighbourhood of an algal filament when they had come to rest elsewhere on account of the exhaustion of oxygen.
It resists the action of water, salt or fresh, very well, and is therefore useful in situations where the work is likely to be submerged immediately after it has been put in place.
After the Eleventh and Twelfth Corps were united as the Twentieth he was put in command of a Corps of Instruction at Nashville, and saw no more active service except in the last months of the war.
In this department Schurz put in force his theories in regard to merit in the Civil Service, permitting no removals except for cause, and requiring competitive examinations for candidates for clerkships; he reformed the Indian Bureau and successfully opposed a bill transferring it to theWar Department; and he prosecuted land thieves and attracted public attention to the necessity of forest preservation.
They established the rule that no official should put in execution any royal warrant " against the statutes and common form of law."
The castle of Edinburgh was surrendered by Gordon, and Balcarres was put in that prison where, according to legend, he was visited by the wraith of Dundee, on the night of the battle of Killiecrankie.
The Marrow men put in protests, and were clearly on the way to secession from the kirk.
So important is this position in Buddhism that it is put in the forefront of Buddhist expositions of Buddhism.
As a poet, his fame has undergone many vicissitudes since his death, ranging from the indifference of the "Young German" school to the enthusiastic admiration of the closing decades of the 19th century - an enthusiasm to which we owe the Weimar Goethe-Gesellschaft (founded in 1885) and a vast literature dealing with the poet's life and work; but the fact of his being Germany's greatest poet and the master of her classical literature has never been seriously put in question.
This constitution was never put in force, as Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman's Ministry determined that they would risk the grant of responsible government at once.
The Berbers rose in revolt, slaughtered the unfortunate governor, and put in his place the former governor Mahommed b.
Hisham, whom he had whi p ped and put in prison.
Sahl was defeated, and Abu`l-Saraya, no longer content to play a second part, poisoned his chief, Ibn Tabataba, and put in his place another of the family of Ali, Mahommed b.
Mamun had found out also that the general uneasiness was largely due to his treatment of Harthama and Tahir, the latter having been put in a rebellious country without the men and the money to maintain his authority.
His son Mahommed was put in his place till 851, when all the members of the family were arrested.
When the latter died in the year 891, his son Abu 1.-`Abbas, al-Mo`tadid (" he who seeks his support in God"), was put in his place.
These lots are put in a heap, and an outsider is called in who throws one lot or kaivel upon each heap of fish.
In 1919 he was put in command of the Central Department, with headquarters at Chicago.
Schofield was put in charge, and under his authority a constitutional Convention was summoned which bestowed the suffrage upon the former slaves, who, led by a small group of whites, who had come into the state with the invading armies, ratified the 14th and 15th amendments to the Federal Constitution and governed the community until 1869.
It is convenient to have a notation which shall put in evidence the reciprocal character.
The disposition of the Greeks to look to the west for the centres of religious feeling appears in the mention of Dodona and the Dodonaean Zeus, put in the mouth of the Thessalian Achilles.
Although not actually repealed, the penal laws were seldom put in force, and mass was openly celebrated in London and elsewhere.
In 1861 he became professor of mathematics in the United States navy, and was put in charge of the great 26-in.
The scheme met with keen opposition from the Mussulman governing classes and the ulema, or privileged religious teachers, and was but partially put in force, especially in the remoter parts of the empire; and more than one conspiracy was formed against the sultan's life on account of it.
To further the prosperity of the town a most liberal charter was granted to it, and in addition the trade of the port was artificially fostered by a decree requiring that every vessel navigating within sight of its lights should put in there.
When Congress, after the fights at Lexington and Concord, resolved that the colonies ought to be put in a position of defence, the first practical step was the unanimous selection (June I 5), on motion of John Adams of Massachusetts, of Washington as commander-in-chief of the armed forces of the United Colonies.
Subsequently the streets were cleansed and repaved, an improved sewer system was put in operation, and the water supply was obtained from artesian wells.
What the other judges thought is not definitely known, but Bacon appears to have been unable to put in operation the plan he had devised for swaying Coke's judgment,' or if he did attempt it, he was unsuccessful, for Coke finally gave an opinion consistent with what he seems to have held at first, that the book was not treasonable, as it did not disable the king's title.
Good roads are maintained connecting the more important towns, and when the harbour at Famagusta was undertaken the construction of a railway from that port to Nicosia was also put in hand.
For Edward, Henry III.'s son and heir, who had been created earl of Chester by his father and put in possession of all the royal claims in Wales, was generally credited with a strong determination to crush for ever Welsh independence, should a fitting opportunity to do so present itself.
The verb does not agree with its subject unless the latter is a personal pronoun; when the subject is a noun the verb is put in the third person singular; thus carant, " they love," can take a pronominal subject - carant hwy, " they love "; but " the men love " is car y dynion (not carant y dynion, which can only mean " they love the men ").
But many difficulties were put in the way of return.
He was commissioned commodore on the 6th of February 1898, and on the 24th of March, although lowest on the list of commodores, he was put in command of the "flying squadron," with the "Brooklyn" as his flagship, for service in the war with Spain.
In November 1899 he was put in command of the South Atlantic Station, and in October 1901 he retired from active service upon reaching the age limit.
Unlike John Frederick of Saxony, Philip divined, or partly divined, the emperor's intentions, and urged repeatedly that the forces of the league should be put in order.
The children, too, he put in mind of going often to church, and taught them to be obedient and dutiful to their parents.
The attraction between the two plates was balanced by a weight put in the opposite pan.
A weight is put in the opposite scale pan and a measured charge of electricity is given to the disk C just sufficient to tip over the balance.
Knox himself had a short time before put in writing a larger claim for the historic future, "What I have been to my country, though this unthankful age will not know, yet the ages to come will be compelled to bear witness to the truth."
In July 1896 the Conversion Act was put in force, a dollar of 18d.
Frederick, whose authoritative temper was at once offended by the independent tone of the Arnoldist party, concluded with the pope a treaty of alliance (October 16, 1152) of such a nature that the Arnoldists were at once put in a minority in the Roman government; and when the second successor of Eugenius III., the energetic and austere Adrian IV.(the Englishman, Nicholas Breakspear), placed Rome under an interdict, the senate, already rudely shaken, submitted, and Arnold was forced to fly into Campania (1155).
Such, presumably, was the construction put in after times on his earnest endeavour to unite Christians on the footing of the " pure gospel."
The twist or surface-shear being proportional to the torque, the horse-power can be calculated if the modulus of rigidity of the steel employed is known or if the amount of twist corresponding to a given power has previously been ascertained by direct experiment on the shaft before it has been put in place.
Jevons's general theory of induction was a revival of the theory laid down by Whewell and criticized by Mill; but it was put in a new form, and was free from -some of the non-essential adjuncts which rendered Whewell's exposition open to attack.
The sets may be put in 6 in.
Assistance with money and supplies was immediately given by the nation and by foreign countries, a committee of the Red Cross Society being put in charge of its administration.
He was put in charge of a trustworthy governor, Nikita Panin, and of competent tutors.
He also exerted himself to get measures put in execution for restraining the vandalistic fury against the monuments of art, extended his protection to artists and men of letters, and devoted much of his attention to the reorganization of the public libraries, the establishment of botanic gardens, and the improvement of technical education.
A few weeks later (22nd August 1812) he was made brigadier-general in the regular U.S. army, and soon afterwards was put in command of all the troops in the north-west, and on the 2nd of March 1813 he was promoted to the rank of major-general.
In the summer of 1774 the captain of the ship " Greyhound," bound for Philadelphia with a cargo of tea, on account of the state of opinion in that city, put in at Greenwich and stored his tea there in a cellar.
As has already been mentioned when dealing with county councils, if a district council make default in providing hospital accommodation, the county council may put in operation the Isolation Hospitals Act.
Powers of compulsory purchase of lands are also given under the Lands Clauses Acts, but before these can be put in operation certain conditions must be observed.
This act extended over Alaska the laws of the state of Oregon so far as they should be applicable, created the judicial district and a land district, put in force the mining laws of the United States, and in general gave the administrative system the organization it retained up to the reforms of 1899-1900.
The remaining five days in the year, termed Pagmen or Quaggimi (six in leap-year, the extra day being named Kadis Yohannis), are put in at the end and treated as holidays.
The Europeans, although detained as prisoners, were not at first unkindly treated; but in the end of June they were sent to Magdala, where they were soon afterwards put in chains.
No sooner had he put in writing his theological lectures (apparently the Introductio ad Theologiam that has come down to us), than his adversaries fell foul of his rationalistic interpretation of the Trinitarian dogma.
To this accumulation of inflammatory materials a spark was put in 1857 by an act of almost incredible folly on the part of the military authorities in India.
Returning to Milan with his law-suits ended in 1511, Leonardo might have looked forward to an old age of contented labour, the chief task of which, had he had his will, would undoubtedly have been to put in order the vast mass of observations and speculations accumulated in his note-books, and to prepare some of them for publication.
And, the question being put in this form, the attempt has been made in some cases to explain away any peculiarity in the emotions by analysing them into simpler elements, such as primitive organic pleasures and prolonged associations of usefulness or fitness.
In 1867 he was put in charge of the chemistry classes at Grenoble, and three years later he succeeded to the chair of chemistry, which he held until his death on the 1st of April 1901.
He preferred to put in a nominee of his own who should be entirely dependent on him.
An alternative arrangement consists in providing two loose pulleys on the counter-shaft, driven by open and crossed belts respectively, and arranging two clutches on the shaft, so that by the movement of a sliding block, controlled by hand, one or other of the clutches can be put in gear.
Simon de Montfort and his friends were put in an awkward position by this decision, to which they had so unwisely committed themselves.
She had no near relatives, and more than a dozen ScOttish or Anglo-Scottish nobles, distantly related, to the royal line, put in a claim to the crown, or at least to a part of the royal heritage.
Scotland, Winchelsea was put in disgrace, and ultimately exiled.
He never put himself in the position of those who were to suffer by its being put in force.
The Unionist party in the country had, meanwhile, been recovering from the Tariff Reform divisions of 1903, and was once more solid under Mr Balfour in favor of its new and imperial policy; but the campaign against the House of Lords started by Mr Lloyd George and the Liberal leaders, who put in the forefront the necessity of obtaining statutory guarantees for the passing into law of measures deliberately adopted by the elected Chamber, resulted in the return of Mr Asquiths government to office at the election of January 1910.
The gas will always completely fill the region, however small the quantity put in.
The solubility of naphthalene by various oils has led some engineers to put in naphthalene washers, in which gas is brought into contact with a heavy tar oil or certain fractions distilled from it, the latter being previously mixed with some volatile hydrocarbon to replace in the gas those illuminating vapours which the oil dissolves out; and by fractional distillation of the washing oil the naphthalene and volatile hydrocarbons are afterwards recovered.
Berkeley was called to England in 1677 ostensibly to report on the condition of affairs in the colony, and a lieutenant-governor (Herbert Jeffreys) was put in his place.
And if any man was to be put in the preposterous position of a secular Bible, no writer was fitter for it than Aristotle.
It might be put in this way - a really Divine personality, a really human experience.
An insurrection against Enciso in December 1510 put in command Vasco Nunez de Balboa, who had accompanied Rodrigo de Bastidas in the voyage of 1501.
The trade of the city has been unfavourably affected by the political events which have converted former provinces of the Turkish empire into autonomous states, by the development of business at other ports of the empire, owing to the opening up of the interior country through the construction of railroads, and by the difficulties which the government, with the view of preventing political agitation, has put in the way of easy intercourse by natives between the capital and the provinces.
A typical member is nitric oxide; carbon monoxide and nitrous oxide may also be put in this class, but it must be remembered that these oxides may be regarded, in some measure at least, as the anhydrides of formic and hyponitrous acid, although, at the same time, it is impossible to obtain these acids by simple hydration of these oxides.
Springfield was a strong abolition centre before the Civil War, and from here active plans were put in operation for sending material aid in the form of men and arms to the "free state" party in Kansas.
In consequence of Rumania's opposition, the proposed Commission Mixte was never formed, and these regulations have never been put in force.
The word investiture (from vestire, to put in possession) is later than the 9th century; the thing itself was an outcome of feudal society.
After Constantine the emperors of the East in the 4th century merely put in an occasional appearance at Rome; they resided at Milan.
Not that Richelieu was hostile to them in principle; but he was obliged at all hazards to find money for the upkeep of the army, and the provincial states were a slow and heavy machine to put in motion.
Then, in 1891, they denounced all the treaties of commerce which contained clauses stipulating mostfavoured-nation treatment, and they prepared and put in force in February 1892 a protectionist tariff which completely reversed the moderate free-trade policy which had been so beneficial to the foreign commerce of Spain from 1868 to 1892.
In his own words, he went in front of the Unionist army as a pioneer, and if his army was attacked he would go back to it; in no conceivable circumstances would he allow himself to be put in any sort of competition, direct or indirect, with Mr Balfour, his friend and leader, whom he meant to follow (October 6).
But from the purely party point of view he was entitled to say that he followed the path of loyalty to Mr Balfour which he had marked out from the moment of his resignation, and that he persistently refused to be put in competition with him as leader.
These results may be put in another way, viz.
In March 1916 he was put in command of the punitive expedition into Mexico against Francisco Villa, and the same year was made major-general.
Below the analyser G a plate H of selenite or mica may be put in the course of the rays.
On this occasion he restored the system of uninominal constituencies, resisted the socialist agitation, and pressed, though in vain, for the adoption of drastic measures against the false bank-notes put in circulation by the Roman bank.
In short, if the difficulty be put in its ultimate form, no existence thought as a distinct individual can transcend itself, or imply relation to any other existence.
Peada, the eldest son of Penda, was allowed to govern the part south of the Trent, while north Mercia was put in charge of Northumbrian officials.
Pete said a freight wagon the size of theirs would normally only travel ten to twelve miles a day, but the seats he had put in for the riders reduced the weight they could carry.
He had contacted the department of forestry about having the bear removed and put in a more remote area on Hobbs Estate.
There's no reason why they couldn't put in the obituary that the deceased was a forty-two long.
It's difficult to put in words, but if he were to leave, he'd do it up front—he'd never just sneak away.
Blood from whatever the vamps had put in it already pooled on the floor.
Operation Fortitude, put in place to combat alcohol-fuelled violence, has had a real impact.
I extended gratitude for the work they put in.
In the mean time, alternative routes will need to be put in place by the agency in order to avoid a hiatus.
We put in place short-term measures to reduce the amount of watering we are doing.
The boss put in a brief appearance this morning.
Finally the fuses were put in and we checked the digital ammeter on the control unit.
Frazer Richardson did put in a decent cross for Spring's equalizer but was otherwise totally anonymous - almost as much as Ian Moore.
Alam just put in a brief appearance this morning.
He said the government had put in money to pay off some of the workers ' wage arrears.
A center with high attrition will constantly be hiring new recruits, whatever performance gains are put in place.
The b usiness of a Special General Meeting shall b usiness of a Special General Meeting shall be constrained to the matter or matters put in the request.
Some of these products are even pasteurized, pressurized and served as keg beer or even bottled or put in cans.
There's bramble jelly to be made and bramble jelly to be made and bramble and apple crumble to put in the freezer.
The new teaching and learning strategy put in place at the University gained particular commendation.
Pressure from the unions had won a concession saying that a third of the money being put in would go toward that.
When the oil is hot, put in the mustard seeds and chana dal.
The playgrounds were made of compacted earth until 1933 when drains were put in and they were asphalted.
The recently enacted regulation put in place for pet travel to the European Union has been modified.
Sin got people excommunicated from the Church and put in fear of God.
I now know what spices etc. to put in to make tasty fajitas, although I'm still buying premade salsa.
I ordered some cotton diapers which you fold and put in a Velcro fastened waterproof cover with optional flushable liners.
Mr Hayman spoke of facilities being put in place to obtain feedback from the public.
In June 1999, it was put in an automatic PID loop to control the cement fineness by adjusting the separator speed.
They serve to put in motion several thrashing and corn-mills, and a small one erected some years ago for spinning flax.
The people who rob or con or harm our old folk should be put in the stocks in Kirkby Town Center.
She put in a really gutsy effort and was rewarded with the biggest cheer of the day, which was well deserved.
Callers will be put in touch with qualified medical herbalists who will provide expert guidance on herbal health matters.
To make up for this several hornets put in an appearance at the traps to liven up the evening's proceedings.
We will put in place 24-hour security at ports to prevent illegal immigration.
A number of performance improvements were put in place during March.
Two put in more than half the money (yes, a key investor will trigger the herd instinct ).
Some faced jeers and flogging, while still others were chained and put in prison.
The forecast was giving lots of Easterly so we housed the topmast, put in two reefs and set the storm jib.
Can provide is on the way policies says Larry to put in.
You may have to have an extra double socket put in for this additional ambient lighting.
Lifting the lid We invited Mail online readers to tell us what they put in their child's lunchbox.
Pack a punch What would you put in your child's school lunchbox?
Stoppers have been put in one manhole and the other manhole filled with water.
The hotel said that he had gone off his head and developed a religious mania; he was put in an asylum.
Add a drop of red food coloring in a bowl and put in the remaining pink marzipan.
The library mezzanine floor was put in by our vendors; we'll have a cast iron spiral staircase joining the two.
The one that stands out in my mind is the seemingly mindless drive to have people put in fear of their lives.
Without doubt it can be established that security measures can be put in place to prevent minors from viewing.
I even put in little suprises, in the form of pools of buffalo mozzarella.
I remember my great nan paying for us to have a phone put in in around 1980.
You only have your hen night once, why risk it, put in the hands of the Hen night specialists, the Dreamboys.
You might not work nine-to-five, but you put in a huge amount of time.
They can sound quite noisy, despite the soundproofing material that is put in under the laminate.
Those doing unpaid overtime put in an extra 8 hours 12 minutes in a week.
These were intended to put in place the key components of seed supply such as processing plants, stores and quality control facilities.
Like the other dead polecats it was put in a freezer and then sent off to the Vincent Wildlife Trust who positively verified it.
Don't put in the fried salt pork; throw it away.
Event organizer Jackie Williams said stringent safety precautions had been put in place for the event.
What is impresses us is the thought that Chris has put in to make this a family friendly pub.
What I've just found out is that someone who came with me from Earth has been put in an ethical quandary.
In the clubâs own archives it is noted that in the 1920s a bed for playing quoits was âto be put in orderâ .
Arrange these and the bananas alternately in a glass dish, then put in a layer of broken ratafias and macaroons.
Yet, despite weighing some eight tons, tyrannosaurus Rex could put in short dashes at 30mph.
Rhino conservation helps to conserve other African species which also benefit from the anti-poaching measures put in place to try and protect black rhino conservation helps to conserve other African species which also benefit from the anti-poaching measures put in place to try and protect black rhinos.
I can't help feeling that these people have been put in place in order to deliberately sabotage the country.
I put in vegetable scraps and added some lobworms from my local tackle shop (they didn't have tiger worms ).
The result should have been a 5 meter scrum with our put-in.
Perhaps the poor widow who put in her mite exercised more self-denial than they have in giving thousands.
We had eight large recycled skylights to put in the roof.
They had to come out to put in the new stanchions.
It concludes that there is an urgent need to put in place a well-resourced alcohol harm reduction strategy.
Such a load command may be put in an init string.
With your house created you must now buy stuff to put in it.
The shares were put in an " offshore vehicle " totally unconnected with the parent company.
If we stay put in deed and word our rap will gradually unravel and in time reweave us more deeply into place.
Having shown good behavior in the workshop he was put in the gang at work at the new warders ' houses.
His success has become the unofficial yardstick for any overseas executive put in charge of a local firm in trouble.
When Guillaume du Bellay went to Piedmont, Jean was put in charge of the negotiations with the German Protestants, principally through the humanist Johann Sturm and the historian Johann Sleidan.
Avicenna was put in charge of a tutor, and his precocity soon made him the marvel of his neighbours, - as a boy of ten who knew by rote the Koran and much Arabic poetry besides.
In 1869 and 1871 commissions were appointed to inquire into prison discipline, and as a consequence of the report of the last commission, issued in 1874, the principle of cellular confinement was put in operation the following year.
Throughout the 16th and 17th centuries the rapidly accumulating store of facts as to the extent, outline and mountain and river systems of the lands of the earth were put in order by the generation of cartographers of which Mercator was the chief; but the writings of Apian and Munster held the field for a hundred years without a serious rival, unless the many annotated editions of Ptolemy might be so considered.
Having discovered that Peter, who had reached the age of seventeen, was thinking of taking the administration into his own hands, she conspired against him with the commander of the stryeltsi and some of his maternal relations; but she was circumvented by the rival faction and interned in a convent, and Peter's mother was put in her place.
In some cases the gauge is laid a little wider than the standard, and there are varying amounts of superelevation of the outer rail; but the most formidable factor in the production of resistance is the guard-rail, which is sometimes put in with the object of guiding the wheel which runs on the inner rail of the curve on the inside of the flange.
On the contrary, the premisses of arithmetic can be put in other forms, and, furthermore, an indefinite number of propositions of arithmetic can be proved directly from logical principles without mentioning them.
Having thus made a clean sweep of nearly the whole of the dogmatic medicine, what did Paracelsus put in its place?
Here also, c. 460, was founded by the consular Studius the famous monastery of the Studium, which was put in the hands of the Acoemeti and became their chief house, so that they were sometimes called Studites.
The governors put in office at this time by the crown were not of conciliatory temperaments, and the measures instituted in parliament (see United States) served to increase bitterness of feeling.
This " papal aggression " caused great excitement at the time, and an Ecclesiastical Titles Act was passed in 1851, though never put in force, forbidding Roman Catholic prelates to assume territorial designations.5 2 They were described in the first draft of the bill as " Protesting Catholic Dissenters," but this was changed, in deference to the strenuous remonstrances of the vicars-apostolic, into " Roman Catholics."
The American consul is necessarily brought much into touch with the trade and commerce of the country to which he is assigned through the system of consular invoices (see AD Valorem); in his ordinary reports he is not confined to one stereotyped form, and when preparing special reports (a valuable feature of the United States consular service) he is liberally treated as regards any expense to which he has been put in obtaining information.
The primitive philosophy to which these conceptions belong has to a great degree been discredited by modern science; yet the clear survivals of such ancient and savage rites may still be seen in Europe, where the Bretons leave the remains of the All Souls' supper on the table for the ghosts of the dead kinsfolk to partake of, and Russian peasants set out cakes for the ancestral manes on the ledge which supports the holy pictures, and make dough ladders to assist the ghosts of the dead to ascend out of their graves and start on their journey for the future world; while other provision for the same spiritual journey is made when the coin is still put in the hand of the corpse at an Irish wake.
Once in a while I get broken up some, but I am easily repaired and put in good order again.
They also put in some bread and meat and other food, enough for several weeks.
At present, they win hands down on "less expensive" and put in a decent showing on a couple more factors.
Her astonishment, when she felt the tiny creature inside, cannot be put in a letter.
She will insist on having her hair put in curl papers when she is so sleepy she can scarcely stand.
I must put in an appearance there, said the prince.
Drain the blood from men's veins and put in water instead, then there will be no more war!
It was pitiful to see them, boys, put in the dancer.
That's just what I said to him, put in Nicholas, who fancied he really had said it.
We have put in place short-term measures to reduce the amount of watering we are doing.
What I 've just found out is that someone who came with me from Earth has been put in an ethical quandary.
Check the last quinquennial inspection to ensure all recommended works have been put in hand.
In the clubâs own archives it is noted that in the 1920s a bed for playing quoits was âto be put in orderâ.
Speed restrictions were also put in place on the M1.
I think the newspapers should rethink what they put in.
Yet, despite weighing some eight tons, tyrannosaurus rex could put in short dashes at 30mph.
Rhino conservation helps to conserve other African species which also benefit from the anti-poaching measures put in place to try and protect black rhinos.
Slice round the top of tomatoes and set aside; scoop out all pulp and put in a bowl.
Drying room even has box of scrunched up re-used newspaper to put in boots.
Add the seasoning - do n't put in too much salt, or you'll be sorry.
Boucard, who started the game, was taken off after sixty-nine minutes having put in a relatively good display.
She has to be picked up to be put in there, and she'll wiggle and squirm just like the cat.
Chris Ringham lost the toss as stand-in skipper and March were put in to bat.
They were then put in the back of a van and taken to the swan sanctuary in Egham to be cleaned and rehabilitated.
Any spare money could be put in a tax-free mini cash ISA.
The club would like to thank Tom Orton for the work that he has put in during his first season as team manager.
During this work ancient beams were exposed and a time capsule put in place.
Much store was also put in the administration refusal to grant the CIA 's request to officially allow torture of prisoners.
The unpaid bill put in by the police relates to four matches at Vetch field.
He controlled this department until last year when he was put in charge of Department 423 to produce men 's welted shoes.
Iâm told the cricket was alive when it was put in the lolly â yuck.
Antifreeze is put in a car's radiator to act as a coolant.
Timmy was put in time out because his mother heard about how he batted at his friends at recess.
A woman was recently put in jail for child neglect, after leaving her children alone for days.
You must put in place the proper infrastructure to have a larger company; this requires new people, new processes and usually, new money.
The US Consumer Product Safety Commission publishes guidelines pertaining not only to the distance between the slats of a crib, but also regarding what to put in the baby crib, and what to avoid placing in your baby's bed.
If you can afford it, you might also want to purchase a small swing set or even an adorable playhouse to put in your yard.
Not sure what to put in a gift basket, or where to order online?
Need to know what to put in a gift basket for a baby girl?
Choosing what to put in the monogram is important as well.
Instead, save a newspaper from the day to put in the baby book.
Find a large stuffed ladybug to put in the corner of the room, just waiting for a little one to play with.
The right wording makes a good impression on your guests and provides a piece of sentimental memorabilia for the expectant parents to put in the baby book.
Another way to stay within your budget is to put in some handmade or secondhand items.
Don't forget that the little princess may have to kiss a frog to find her prince, and put in a cute stuffed frog toy.