But he severely strained his Achilles tendons when the staff exercised him too hard. |
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Obviously, caution should be exercised when walking on tinder dry moorlands. |
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It's hard to get too exercised about capital gains, however, or any of the other issues that are present now. |
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If only people would get so exercised about the effect of all this waste on the environment. |
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A newspaper account mentioned that some men are exercised about the predominance of pink in her wardrobe. |
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But a recent flier suggests that the publisher might finally be a little exercised about the competition. |
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The admission of irrelevant evidence wastes time, of course, but parties rarely become exercised over the possibility that time might be wasted. |
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The theme of the artist and his almost magical powers is one that exercised him greatly throughout his career. |
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And it's clear that everybody was very exercised about the way they were conducted. |
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It's rural people who are most removed from New York and DC who are most exercised about terrorism. |
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Most Southern Baptists were exercised about the possibility but not excited. |
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They are not exercised about these issues, or they might care a little bit, but not very much. |
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A lot of people get exercised about this, and it isn't even the biggest problem that results from property-tax funding of schools. |
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Almost every part of the body is exercised, right down to flexing the toes! |
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The movements are almost geometrical and use parts of the human anatomy not usually exercised in day-to-day activities. |
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To make my workouts enjoyable, I watched TV while I exercised on the treadmill. |
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The authorities exercised reasonable restraint in dealing with the situation. |
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And the spokesperson said furthermore there are strict safeguards in the Bill to ensure the power is properly exercised. |
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So, we would submit that discretion should be exercised in our favour, for that reason. |
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The GMC had been asked for information but inquiry chairman Suzan Matthews decided it would speed the process if she exercised her legal powers. |
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How much control, and what sort of control, was exercised by dynasts over the coinage of polities under their sway? |
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They would have been aware of further misconduct had they exercised due diligence in their supervision. |
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It was disagreeable to me, but I did exercise it, and no other power can be exercised in that Country. |
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The German Luftwaffe exercised their doctrine of joint operations in support of ground forces to great effect. |
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That discipline involves punitive measures, which may be either real or mentally exercised. |
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That discretion, however, must be exercised according to some important principles of public policy. |
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Obviously, government troops deployed at the protest site exercised restraint as they were instructed. |
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But, as the decided cases also make clear, the power of review is one to be sparingly exercised. |
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Even more pressingly, the certiorari jurisdiction can be exercised in cases of error of law on the part of the inferior tribunal. |
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Often such power is exercised more effectively in respect to foreign policy than domestic reforms. |
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You cannot change the way power is exercised in the world simply by exposing a handful of people. |
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It is a recognition for the native title right to possess which can only be exercised in accordance with currently acknowledged laws and customs. |
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The team exercised using bikes and cross-trainers, and also practised climate adaptation techniques including frostnip and frostbite prevention. |
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Blue skies and glorious sunshine greeted the ship's company of HMS Manchester when they exercised the freedom of the namesake city. |
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Only one in five young voters exercised their franchise in the last elections. |
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The decision to dissolve Parliament or appoint Cabinet ministers is formally exercised by the monarch, who acts on the Prime Minister's advice. |
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In arena trials, females that were exercised to exhaustion before courtship mated with smaller males than did control females. |
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Women who exercised either during their reproductive or postmenopausal years had a reduced risk of developing breast cancer. |
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You don't calculate the odds whether unlimited power will be exercised responsibly or irresponsibly. |
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Personal leadership must still be exercised on these most ferocious of battlefields as we face shattered remnants and irregulars. |
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These powers must be exercised on consideration of the likelihood of damage or distress caused by the contravention of the Act. |
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This power, exercised politically for far too long, has added to the public's contempt for the honours that are now made. |
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All these remedies could be exercised at any time or times simultaneously or contemporaneously or successively or not at all. |
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Under international law, the jurisdiction exercised by a state is primarily territorial. |
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A drive that's been idle for a while is powered on and exercised, while its data is checked for integrity. |
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She cut her food intake to 800 calories and exercised for 2 hours a day, 6 days a week. |
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It is very easy to confuse questions as to what is the jurisdiction of a court and how that jurisdiction should be exercised. |
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It remains to be seen whether in practice the discretion is exercised lawfully. |
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Tristen's body and mind, forged like fine steel through countless decades of combats real and exercised, worked in harmonic concert. |
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Societies became marked, first, by feudalism, in which control was exercised through the nobility. |
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So talmudic law in turn exercised great influence on the development of the common law from the eleventh century. |
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Control on the mines was exercised by white compound managers and supervisors through African indunas and isibonda. |
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Through these federated, membership organizations, ordinary people exercised public power. |
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If he really doesn't want to receive bawdy come-ons, he has ways of stopping it that he should have exercised a LOOOOOOONG time ago. |
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He exercised a pervasive influence on European drama by challenging the conventions of naturalism. |
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They have seen the pride of a child who has exercised self-discipline to achieve his personal best. |
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It refers to a degree of power that is recognised in law as power permissibly exercised over the thing. |
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The students exercised in cold water of 68 degrees Fahrenheit and warm water of 91.4 degrees Fahrenheit. |
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It seems to often assume that power is coercive only if exercised by the State. |
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Peter's exercised the discipline and fitness that we have come to expect from them, but were also forced to rely on fortune. |
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It will be unusual for a bank itself to have exercised undue influence, acted unconscionably, or exerted illegitimate pressure. |
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The chancellor has declined to alter the co-determination of company decisions exercised by management and labor jointly. |
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If I had known that this level of codependency existed between them, you better believe I would have exercised more caution. |
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I've owned an American kestrel and a Harris hawk, and I exercised the peregrines at the sanctuary. |
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It will be necessary if only to protect the system from the effects of clientelism exercised from abroad and corruption within. |
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The members of the County Council are exercised about the problem of crime and drunkenness on our streets. |
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Unfortunately, the law is utterly silent on how, why and when this clemency should be exercised. |
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Democracy itself requires that all public power be lawfully conferred and exercised, and of this the courts are the surety. |
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The commanders in chief exercised supreme authority in their respective zones and acted in concert on questions affecting the whole country. |
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I lost 7 pounds in 2 weeks without being hungry because I ate a paleo diet and exercised two hours each day. |
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If there was an option of delinking from America it was never seriously exercised or was overtaken by events. |
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A handful of overmighty subjects exercised a disproportionate influence on the events of the Wars of the Roses. |
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My doctors cautioned me to avoid doing any activity that would overexert my heart, so I rarely exercised. |
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About 89.3 per cent of existing Hutchison shareholders exercised their options to subscribe for HTIL preference shares. |
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The same Articles state that such executive power shall be exercised by the President or Governor through officers subordinate to him. |
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The limitations are those that are considerably exercised in law, and which are clearly outlined here. |
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Since it's eating natural herbage and is well exercised, it just tastes better. |
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They were both cautioned and given their rights as required by statute and he exercised a right of silence, effectively. |
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Consequently we now face a hefty vet's bill and a very unhappy young dog who cannot be exercised. |
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It exercised its option to sell and tried to persuade Time Warner to pay in cash instead of stock. |
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This stranglehold exercised over public information depends upon the control of the media by a handful of corporations. |
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We will be able to gauge the degree of caution that needs to be exercised when each container is opened. |
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Anna was the headmistress of a boarding school, her senses and ability to catch children in the wrong were quite well exercised. |
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These rights and freedoms may in no case be exercised contrary to the purposes and principles of the United Nations. |
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The forces around Attac yearn for a return to a period when national capitalist states exercised broad control over the economy and society. |
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His fear of notoriety and censure may have exercised a good check on his behaviour but it doesn't essentially change anything. |
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They had experienced for some time a strong current of editorial control being exercised by business and political interests. |
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And we will find that audience taking over the responsibilities now exercised by a handful of critics on local dailies or weeklies or monthlies. |
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These viceroys have in fact twice in the last century exercised their vice-regal powers to dismiss elected governments! |
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Unless something changes, he will be the first full-term president in 175 years not to have exercised his Constitutional veto power. |
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Female fitness instructors who exercised an average of 3.8 times per week had lower iron stores than non-active women. |
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Neither Spain nor Guatemala ever exercised effective sovereignty over the area. |
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If a lawmaker has validly exercised his power, the court may give effect to the law validly made. |
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In the coming months, foals would be broken in, stallions exercised to the limit and animals bought and sold. |
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If we are charismatics, we will say it is by the currently active gift of prophecy exercised in the worshiping congregation. |
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He had a bray of a laugh which he exercised at the most inappropriate times. |
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Entering the shady bower of the trees, Jerica sped down the path, pushing all thoughts of dreams and golden eyes away as she exercised. |
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Although he was not a sporting person he admits that he exercised to keep his appearance at its best and satisfy his narcissism. |
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The American masses are perceived as apathetic sluggards, whose votes would be better exercised by enlightened foreign observers. |
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The powers given to a municipal government must be exercised for the purpose for which they are given. |
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In contrast, the men who exercised 60 minutes a day lost less body weight relative to the energy they burned during their workouts. |
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The reason there are prosecutions proceeding is that the statutory checks and controls on that situation cannot be exercised. |
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It had been alleged that a particular dealer had behaved fraudulently and the controller duly exercised the power. |
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Dogs were exercised for 15 minutes twice daily in a paddock and raced 500 m twice weekly. |
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At home he exercised on a trampoline and chinning bar and did roadwork like a prizefighter. |
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Actual power, however, is exercised through a network of security forces held severally, and competitively, at the centre. |
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Each muscle group should be exercised in three sets of eight repetitions each session. |
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It used to be the case that former presidents exercised self-restraint in commenting on the performance of their successors in office. |
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The jury must ask whether he has exercised the degree of self-control to be expected of someone in his situation. |
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Once exercised, the veto not only stopped the offending law, but also broke the Sejm, invalidating the entire legislative programme. |
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Of course there is a right of appeal, which in some cases may not be exercised without prior permission. |
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It is the Secretary of State's policy that the power to sanction should not be exercised too widely. |
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The authority established by the laws of Moses was theocratic and was exercised theocratically for an extended period. |
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Anyone who exercised their right not to be included in the full register will not automatically receive their ballot paper. |
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At the stage of completing the ballot paper the voter has exercised his right to vote in order of preference. |
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They exercised verbal terror against politicians, making them temporize and postpone the solution. |
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Dr Mahathir is especially exercised about the other-worldly teachings of many ulama. |
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The Muscat rulers established trading posts on the Persian coast and also exercised a measure of control over the Makran coast. |
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During the later stages of British rule it had exercised considerable administrative independence. |
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The patient has no history of cardiovascular disease and regularly exercised on cycle and rowing machines. |
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Having exercised his ministry in two of our three archdeaconries, he probably knows the diocese as well as anyone. |
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Care should be exercised in the selection of metal conductors to ensure the integrity of the lightning conductor for an extended period. |
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It seems to me either he is at liberty or he is not, and the imposition of conditions assumes the residue of power is still being exercised. |
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Political rights and liberties are permissive advantages, and their effectiveness depends on how they are exercised. |
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I always said manageable if we continued to pursue policies to promote economic growth and exercised responsible fiscal restraint. |
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Care was exercised not to separate the amniotic sac into its components, the chorion and amnion. |
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Federal rules for regulating professionals have existed for many years, but have been exercised with deference toward state standards. |
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On the day of his death, he returned from work as usual, exercised the dog, and went to sleep in the front bedroom. |
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Titles and badges are exercised as such a weapon, to which you and I look up wistfully. |
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I took advantage of this benefit and exercised three or four days a week, losing 10 pounds in six months. |
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Rather, the motions judge exercised his discretion judicially on proper principles. |
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Zack was reluctant and frowning, but I exercised fatherly priviledge and basically railroaded him into the trip. |
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He became an adept in the cryptologic art, until then almost unknown, and exercised it on behalf of the parliamentary party. |
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If only all priests and mullahs and rabbis exercised the same responsibility and rigour in their pronouncements. |
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There are exercycles which combine rowing with pedalling and those on which the seating position can be adjusted to ensure that specific groups of muscles are exercised. |
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Middle-class women, much like men, believed in and exercised self-mastery. |
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Blair never made the mistake of underestimating Brooks, and his own considerable powers of ingratiation were exercised on her. |
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Distasteful those ads might be, but restrictions on political speech should be exercised with great deliberation and caution. |
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Marchildon starved herself and exercised relentlessly to try to lose the required two centimeters, but to no avail. |
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The decision of the Commissioner to refuse leave is subject to the supervisory jurisdiction of the High Court exercised in judicial review proceedings. |
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For decades since, Britain has exercised its political resentments in the defeatism of the sporting field. |
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This creates a difficulty in relation to powers exercised by local authorities without reference to a court, such as those concerning common lodging-houses. |
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But big brains were exercised in how the stars were produced, directed, scripted, and managed. |
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Now, the power of removal from office at any time in cases other than the case of a Deputy Commissioner or Assistant Commissioner is exercised by the Commissioner. |
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Where the lord of the manor held a court leet, the jurisdiction of the hundred was exercised in that court, and the fines collected were payable to the lord. |
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The political world and her most fervent fans may be exercised about a presidential bid. |
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However, where an administrative body originally exercised the power to deprive people of their liberty, they must have the right to have their case reviewed by a court. |
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If the bank knows that a given sum or item has been appropriated for a specific purpose, the right of set-off cannot be exercised in respect of it. |
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The title of chief was largely a matter of prestige, as authority was exercised by the consensus of those of high status, who would act as arbiters in dispute resolution. |
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The pope's privilege of choosing a name for his tenure in office ought to be exercised more strategically than has been done during the past few centuries. |
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Power has been, at best, exercised by a class against the masses. |
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In the widespread atmosphere of fear about further attacks, the normal sense of self-restraint was not, and did not have to be, exercised by the executive. |
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She was the daughter of a Cheapside mercer and wife of a Lombard Street goldsmith, and exercised great influence over Edward IV by her beauty and wit. |
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That would have been quite inconsistent with the whole nature of a waiver as a discretion to be exercised on the merits of the individual case, and with the Waivers Policy. |
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The Moors infused an exotic orientalism into Spanish culture which exercised a deep influence even after their final expulsion in the 15th century. |
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Where the ground relied on is unconscionable conduct in a foreign court the principle of comity requires that the jurisdiction be exercised only with great caution. |
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She was still rather underweight at 100 pounds, okay, very underweight, but she ate healthily, exercised a normal amount and gained a ton of self-confidence. |
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Perhaps by now the Locum had exercised all my unquiet spirits, I thought. |
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I tried to eat well and exercised when I could fit it into my busy life. |
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In these areas they exercised civil control, did not allow entry to non-military persons without permission, and in various ways antagonized the inhabitants. |
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The effect then is that the discretion conferred by Parliament is exercised, at least in part, by the wrong authority, and the resulting decision is ultra vires and void. |
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Boarding arrangements vary from pasture only to full board, where the horse is stabled, exercised, fed, groomed and even tacked up for the owner to ride. |
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He got exercised talking about the Export-Import Bank, which Congress voted to reauthorize this week after a long battle. |
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The influence of royal wives on their husbands' religious observances suggests the power that women exercised, even within the context of arranged political marriages. |
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Twelve males exercised on treadmills and stationary bikes, and scientists measured the amount of fat they burned during different intensities on both machines. |
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The level of control exercised by the parties was absolutely stifling. |
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He was a pioneer in America of direct carving in stone and wood and in this as well as in his formal austerity he exercised a powerful influence on modern American sculpture. |
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Low-browed individuals were deficient in the faculties that would enable them to feel the subtle attractions exercised by imponderable fluids on the rod. |
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These traditional descriptions did not immediately further the ends of horticulture, but indirectly they exercised an important influence, because of their illustrations. |
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The power would have to be exercised in accordance with the terms and purposes of the trust, the trustees' duty of care and their fiduciary position as trustees. |
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In practice, however, he exercised extraordinary powers and directed the condominium government from Khartoum as if it were a colonial administration. |
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The discretion to deprive a successful litigant of costs is one which must be exercised judicially and upon proper material connected with the case. |
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He exercised his contractural right to demand a trade, but he might opt to return rather than forfeit his existing contract by choosing free agency. |
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We at The Register could perhaps understand people getting exercised about the operating software they run being produced by outfits run by deranged, pop-eyed megalomaniacs. |
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Particularly valuable is his discussion of the lasting power exercised, both in partisan politics and in self-perpetuated county courts, by the landholding gentry. |
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Japanese arts and crafts exercised such a hold over European and American imaginations that in the late 19th century there was a craze for everything from fans to porcelain. |
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Great care was exercised to avoid cross-contamination of pots. |
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If it is set up it will undoubtedly take unto itself many of the powers now exercised by local councils, thus removing local democracy to a distant power base. |
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Working in garrets or cellars, they exercised little control over the enterprise and used rented equipment so as to minimize capital losses if detected. |
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The subversive element inherent in the deconstructive enterprise is another reason that it has exercised such a mesmerizing spell on intellectuals. |
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The results of the study we conducted also indicated that the majority of people exercised because of their health, appearance, and most of all, because it felt good. |
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Usually the circuit is completed twice so that each side of the body is exercised equally, and to enable you to try the second circuit at a higher level. |
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The SNP, as it happens, is exercised about other outrages too. |
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That's why they are so exercised about tiny pieces of evidence today. |
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In his most recent works, the artist negotiates, afresh, the counterpoint between city and landscape, home and world, that has long exercised him. |
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Yet it's hard to get too exercised about the likes of Wilson. |
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Ghent, Bruges, Ypres and the Franc of Bruges formed the Four Members, a form of parliament that exercised considerable power in Flanders. |
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Pakistani troops initially exercised restraint however, responded befittingly when India started heavy firing. |
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Executive power is exercised by the President and Prime Minister who together constitute the government. |
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Government involvement throughout the economy is primarily exercised by HM Treasury, headed by the Chancellor of the Exchequer. |
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William and his barons also exercised tighter control over inheritance of property by widows and daughters, often forcing marriages to Normans. |
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Consular political powers, when exercised conjointly with a consular colleague, were no different from those of the old king. |
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After the rising, responsibility for Scotland lay primarily with the office of the Home Secretary, usually exercised by the Lord Advocate. |
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The Early Middle Ages are characterized by the urban control of bishops and the territorial control exercised by dukes and counts. |
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Plotina exercised influence on both her husband Trajan and his successor Hadrian. |
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Almost all governmental and administrative functions are exercised by authorities and agencies affiliated to the Executive. |
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Its kings exercised an influence over a number of associated tribes more by personal prestige than by coercive settled authority. |
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Power was still exercised by the Communist Party, but it was now devolved mainly to ethnic Albanian communists. |
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Command of deployable assets is exercised by the Fleet Commander of the Naval Service. |
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During the rule of the succeeding Hanoverian dynasty, power was gradually exercised more by parliament and the government. |
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Historically, the British sovereign held and directly exercised all executive authority. |
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In practice, such a figure does not actively exercise executive powers, even though executive authority may be exercised in their name. |
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Although the Governor General can refuse to assent a bill or reserve the bill for the Queen at this stage, this power has never been exercised. |
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Executive authority in Bermuda is vested in the monarch and is exercised on her behalf by the Governor. |
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This Imperial supremacy could be exercised through several statutory measures. |
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However, as mentioned above, in practice the real power was vested in the emperor, who exercised it through his chancellor. |
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However, the possibility that a royal veto might be exercised independently by the monarch remained for at least two further centuries. |
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The most important prerogative still personally exercised by the monarch is the choice of whom to appoint Prime Minister. |
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Pirate fleets exercised hegemony over villages on the coast, collecting revenue by exacting tribute and running extortion rackets. |
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Military alliances like NATO and the Warsaw Pact are another forum through which influence is exercised. |
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Power was exercised by the heads of a few regional dynasties vying with each other for supremacy over the whole island. |
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Diplomats were accredited to the king, but the president exercised the internal functions of a head of state. |
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Northern Ireland, which comprised the remaining six counties, exercised its right under the Treaty to opt out of the new state. |
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According to the Treaty the provision of services is a residual freedom that only applies if no other freedom is being exercised. |
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Turkey, the European Court of Human Rights judged Turkey for having exercised authority in the territory of Northern Cyprus. |
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Ulpian was expressing the idea that the Emperor exercised a rather absolute form of sovereignty, although he did not use the term expressly. |
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During the 1950s and 1960s, many plays were produced in theatre clubs, to evade the censorship then exercised by the Lord Chamberlain's Office. |
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In practice these are always exercised by the monarch on the advice of the Prime Minister and the other ministers of HM Government. |
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As king from 1727, George exercised little control over British domestic policy, which was largely controlled by the Parliament of Great Britain. |
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Mill's On Liberty addresses the nature and limits of the power that can be legitimately exercised by society over the individual. |
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He also exercised a great deal, and at that time wore a great number of clothes to cause himself to perspire. |
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Locke exercised a profound influence on political philosophy, in particular on modern liberalism. |
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The Emperors who succeeded Augustus exercised a vigilant control over the condition of the public highways. |
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Many Wiccans believe in magic, a manipulative force exercised through the practice of witchcraft or sorcery. |
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The size of Vatican City is thus unrelated to the large global reach exercised by the Holy See as an entity quite distinct from the state. |
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The term Holy See refers not to the Vatican state but to the Pope's spiritual and pastoral governance, largely exercised through the Roman Curia. |
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In the hands of a genuinely well-meaning Arts Council, it also means 'power', exercised by some genuinely well-meaning quangocrat. |
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The original jurisdiction formerly exercised by the United States circuit courts is now exercised by the United States district courts. |
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The assizes exercised both civil and criminal jurisdiction, though most of their work was on the criminal side. |
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He also wrote on kingship, arguing that a ruler should be called king only if he obtained and exercised power in a lawful manner. |
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Innocent III exercised more power than any of his predecessors, or his successors. |
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The Court has the discretion to appoint an advisory jury if it so desires, but this power is practically never exercised. |
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It is now well established that it is not the character of the public authority that matters but the character of the power exercised. |
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The electorate has occasionally exercised the power not to retain justices. |
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Although Roosevelt instructed the NWLB not to intrude on jurisdiction exercised by the NLRB, the War Labor Board refused to honor this request. |
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The British exercised power by avoiding interference and adapting to law practices as explained by the local intermediaries. |
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This override power can be exercised for five years, after which time the override must be renewed, or the decision comes into force. |
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The control of the media was exercised directly by the communist party itself, and by state censorship, which was also controlled by the party. |
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Classical jurists held that human reason is a gift from God which should be exercised to its fullest capacity. |
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They exercised this power with regards to some of the MPs involved in the expenses scandal prior to the 2010 General Election. |
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He exercised little control over debate, seemed rather bored, but good humoured throughout. |
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On 3 July, Italeli exercised his reserve powers in ordering Parliament to convene, against the Prime Minister's wishes, on 30 July. |
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The county council assumed the administrative responsibilities previously exercised by the county's justices in quarter sessions. |
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In 1870, the First Vatican Council affirmed the doctrine of papal infallibility when exercised in specifically defined pronouncements. |
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It is an American option, meaning that it may be exercised any time on or before its expiration date. |
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The three estates of feudal lords, clergy and royal officers met in separate chambers, and exercised an advisory role. |
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The most important magistrates were the two consuls, who together exercised executive authority such as imperium, or military command. |
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Today Admiralty jurisdiction is exercised by the United Kingdom's High Court of Justice. |
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Royal supremacy was exercised through the extant legal structures of the church, whose leaders were bishops. |
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The elector authorised a visitation of the church, a power formerly exercised by bishops. |
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Nigeria is a federal republic modelled after the United States, with executive power exercised by the President. |
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He exercised autocratic control over Russia's hereditary nobility and developed a bureaucracy to administer the new territories. |
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In September 2003 Arriva exercised an option to buy the remainder of the company. |
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The khanates exercised control over their affairs via international trade routes between Central Asia and the West. |
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Executive power is exercised solely by the President, who is head of state and head of government. |
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The judicial arm is exercised by the Supreme Court, the Bench and Judges nationwide. |
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All the other difficulties of his reign only exercised without endangering him. |
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The Saudi Arabians could nave exercised their rights on the building at any time, according to executives familiar with the agreement. |
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Executive power is exercised by the Cabinet, selected by the Prime Minister and drawn from his supporters in the House of Assembly. |
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The first saddle was positioned to the back of the camel, and control of the Bactrian camel was exercised by means of a stick. |
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As any limb well and duly exercised, grows stronger, the nerves of the body are corroborated thereby. |
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Alongside these three major rulers were a large number of minor counts, who effectively exercised sovereign power in their own localities. |
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Through her teens and twenties, 35-year-old Dawn Lee exercised compulsively to try to stop the binge-eating, associated with her bulimia. |
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According to the Constitution, executive power is exercised by the President of the Republic and the Government. |
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Tenders closed on Wednesday and were opened in the presence of bidders who exercised the option to be present, TATT said. |
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Those organizations exercised influence in the European unification process, but never in a decisive way. |
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It was among the ruins of the Capitol that I first conceived the idea of a work which has amused and exercised near twenty years of my life. |
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Almost all government powers were exercised by their chief officer, the mayor of the palace. |
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Nonetheless, though Dagobert exercised true authority in his realm, Chlothar maintained ultimate control over the whole Frankish kingdom. |
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This power, however, may only be exercised if there is a quorum of councillors present and within 35 days of the election. |
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Command of the Austrian Armed Forces is exercised by the Minister of Defence, currently Hans Peter Doskozil. |
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The loan meant that Austria passed from an independent state to the control exercised by the League of Nations. |
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However, since 1919, sovereignty has resided with the Nation, exercised by the Grand Duke in accordance with the Constitution and the law. |
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Under the constitution of 1868, executive power is exercised by the Grand Duke and the cabinet, which consists of several other ministers. |
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Its jurisdiction over devolution matters had previously been exercised by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council. |
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She exercised her rights and privileges as feudal overlord of the Isle of Wight. |
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Had she been the mere adroit captivator some-times imagined, she could never have exercised this posthumous ascendency over Petrarch's thoughts. |
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Prior to this, the power to dissolve Parliament was a royal prerogative, exercised by the sovereign on the advice of the prime minister. |
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Control of the county police was to be exercised jointly by the quarter sessions and the county council through a standing joint committee. |
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County borough corporations also exercised these powers, in addition to those of a municipal borough. |
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Stesichorus exercised an important influence on the representation of myth in 6th century art and on the development of Athenian dramatic poetry. |
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The crime pattern involved the theft of credit cards from the lockers of unsuspecting health club members while they exercised. |
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The Executive Power is exercised by the president and a cabinet of 13 ministers. |
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Functions are vested in the council itself, and then exercised usually by committees or subcommittees of the council. |
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The territory over which the king exercised actual control shrank considerably, and was reduced to lands between Normandy and river Loire. |
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Executive power is exercised by the government chaired by the prime minister. |
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The Carolingians exercised controls over the silver coinage of the realm, controlling its composition and value. |
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Legally, the Carolingian emperor exercised the bannum, the right to rule and command, over all of his territories. |
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George exercised the powers of the monarchy, just as Lords Protector had, but the title's republican associations had rendered it distasteful. |
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Obiism and Fanteeism have been exercised in my own presence, and their results proved by the evidence of my own eyes and other senses. |
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Dictation of thought in the absence of all control exercised by reason, outside of all aesthetic and moral preoccupation. |
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Control and restraint were exercised in the use of surface texturing and relief. |
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For example, in a Pentecostal church service, the gift of tongues might be exercised followed by the operation of the gift of interpretation. |
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The federal government has not, as of December 2014, exercised these warrants. |
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In 1882 the NBR were given powers to purchase the bridge, which it never exercised. |
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Services provided at the regional level were those needing greater finance or resources, or best exercised over a wide area. |
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The mental illness of Charles VI of France allowed his power to be exercised by royal princes whose rivalries caused deep divisions in France. |
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The Norman and Angevin kings had traditionally exercised a great deal of power over the church within their territories. |
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His mother, Matilda, played an important role in his early life and exercised influence for many years later. |
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The CPR exercised complete control over the development of land under its ownership. |
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