I have no objection to the US waging a war, provided this country is not involved. |
|
The member of the Board of Directors who blackballed the candidate has finally been convinced to remove his objection. |
|
He took objection to my dealing with interim support because of the shortness of notice. |
|
As before, the facilitator grasped my objection in a trice, and even though I sense that she's inclined to side with the material, she gets it. |
|
I have no objection to this member quoting from our minority report, or indeed from what I said. |
|
Another frequently voiced objection is that many words sound the same but are represented by a different character. |
|
At trial, there was no objection to the breathalyzer results being tendered as evidence. |
|
Although there have been 12 letters of objection to the plan, the two community councils in the area are scenting opportunity. |
|
Now, does anyone have any objection to my doing what I mentioned a few posts back? |
|
One objection that had been raised in the past is that this rate is too slow for motors to cause oscillations at audio frequencies. |
|
No one has ever made a factual objection to anything that appears in my movie or my book, as a matter of fact. |
|
Of course, the major objection would be based on the fact that loggers cut down trees. |
|
The Respondents at the outset took up a preliminary objection that the Petitioner has no locus standi to make this application. |
|
Plans to demolish the listed building, which were submitted by the church itself, prompted a petition and 70 letters of objection. |
|
We would like to thank the 7,500 people who sent objection letters or signed the petition. |
|
His famous objection to the apotheosis of the bald eagle as the new nation's symbol is characteristic. |
|
There have been no letters of objection and the plans are earmarked for approval. |
|
On the face of it, the objection of any surviving relative, however remote, bars any transplant. |
|
But remember, it is not necessary to have a formal religious practice or a belief in God to prove conscientious objection. |
|
So I shall have to take time off work to study the plans, and spend time yet again redoing my objection. |
|
|
Its objection was to accounts which simply blocked any withdrawals whatsoever. |
|
Donnelly, however, sees no objection to streaming students according to ability and interests, within a school or between schools. |
|
But I don't know enough about the public health statistics to know whether this objection actually holds water. |
|
The Crown lawyers know of the Chief Justice's advocacy, and not one of them took objection to the case. |
|
If it is a well-founded objection, then that will bring the proceedings to an end immediately. |
|
If the absolutist wishes to maintain his objection, he must point to some morally relevant difference between positive and negative killing. |
|
On Monday the town council planning committee raised no objection to the new parking area but called for a riverside walk to be provided. |
|
If you say that you will waive rule 6 and allow us to release that information, I will tell the court I have no objection. |
|
As a sign of his objection, he summarily withdrew his ambassador from Doha earlier this month. |
|
I piped up my objection, but it was the canonical term and there was no chance I would succeed in changing it. |
|
Silence or mere lack of objection does not constitute a lawful waiver. |
|
I cannot see any objection to them serving on H.M. ships where they are qualified and needed, or, if their virtues so deserve, rising to Admirals of the Fleet. |
|
This objection has considerable validity, on several counts. |
|
In Britain there was an objection to paying tax in 1753 on the normal date, that is, Lady Day or 25 March, on the grounds that a full year had not elapsed. |
|
Residents in the surrounding areas have also been leafleted about what is proposed for the site and are being urged to write individual letters of objection to the council. |
|
His only objection to Italian fascism was that it wasn't fanatical enough. |
|
But W-R-C reject this objection by breaking away from the classical Ricardian approach which postulates pregiven labour value from the physical production process. |
|
This objection notwithstanding, we seem to be somewhat intellectually path dependent, and not at all tabula rasa, at least not by the age of consent. |
|
In my view, these grounds of objection are not legally tenable. |
|
My larger objection is that directly addressing schoolchildren on most matters is a role for which every president is ill-suited. |
|
|
Poor facilities for refuse storage, a loss of outlook for the houses opposite and loss of privacy have also been flagged up in residents' letters of objection. |
|
I went to watch a Celtic match a couple of years ago and, being a fair old belter of ballads myself, had no objection to a bit of healthy tribalism. |
|
The panic about the far right is less an objection to particular policies than a moral distaste for individuals and ideas deemed to be beyond the pale. |
|
In a letter the procurator fiscal raised no objection to this, but in court the Crown argued, and the sheriff accepted, that the motion was incompetent. |
|
The obvious objection is that the shewbread was eaten only by the priests. |
|
While it sounds great it does also seem a bit far-fetched and of course there is the very real objection that what comes after corrupt monarchies might actually be worse. |
|
I remember grappling with the self-refutation objection back in my undergraduate days in a philosophy of science course under Robert Frederick. |
|
My principal objection is against the compound or derivative tints, given under the denominations of secondaries and tertiaries. |
|
The primary objection is the sanctity of tax policy as a matter of sovereign entitlement. |
|
Brawn had no objection and were reassigned numbers 22 and 23, with 18 and 19 not assigned to anyone. |
|
But I have a decided and insuperable objection to the putting of them to pain without any such view. |
|
Others say that the bride will get on so long as she gets to know the family customs, and have no objection to a Japanese girl marrying in. |
|
The counsel for federation raised the objection that counsel for the petitioner is misguiding the court. |
|
This allowed exemption on production of a certificate of conscientious objection signed by two magistrates. |
|
If you pick up a whiff that a neighbour plans so much as a cat-flap, bung in an objection. |
|
That was weak. As soon as the parents voiced their objection to seeing Cartman nude on stage I knew where they were heading... anvilicious. |
|
No objection could be made to her admission, except on acount of her complexion, and Miss Crandall decided to receive her as a pupil. |
|
You may be sure, in the ply I was now taking, I had no objection to the proposal, and was rather a-tiptoe for its accomplishment. |
|
However, one objection is that it fails to explain why female giraffes also have long necks. |
|
Although the 1992 constitution allows for conscientious objection, no enabling legislation has yet been approved. |
|
|
However, studies of the hybrids readily made by intercrossing teosinte and modern maize suggest this objection is not well founded. |
|
The courts may also interpret a law in such a manner that any objection against it of retrospective operation may be removed. |
|
The court normally requests that an objection be taken as soon as the prejudiced party has knowledge of the bias. |
|
The list is open for inspection for five working days, during which any other elector may raise an objection to an application. |
|
That this purely empirical method of dealing with industrial evils made progress slow is scarcely an objection to it. |
|
If there is an objection, the street works authority can either discontinue, or it can go to the magistrates' court. |
|
This objection was upheld, and the Standing Orders Committee of the House of Lords therefore rejected the Bill. |
|
One of these troops, Lieutenant Charles Paulizza, made friends with Effie, apparently with no objection from Ruskin. |
|
The objection is not that the trust is for a purpose or object per se, but that there is no beneficiary or cestui que trust. |
|
There was much objection to the attempt to legislate the creation of Afrikaans as a new language. |
|
The other is the ethical objection to circumcising healthy babies who cannot consent and also suffer pain from the procedure. |
|
A somewhat similar objection has been made by Locke and others, to the effect that the ordinary demonstrative syllogism is a petitio principii. |
|
They were to be married, but another man, Alfvine, took objection, and challenged Olaf and his men to the Scandinavian duel or holmgang. |
|
Tolkien took issue with this and quickly notified his fans of this objection. |
|
If John is dead set on marrying Catherine, his parents' objection will only provoke a falling out. |
|
To this objection, my answer stands as might be expected, admitting my own major, and denying the minor which the objicient has appended to it. |
|
The majority of early Pentecostal denominations taught pacifism and adopted military service articles that advocated conscientious objection. |
|
My main objection is that some people will have to pay more than others. |
|
He thought the Muslims could have no objection to redrawing provincial boundaries. |
|
Mill anticipates the objection that people desire other things such as virtue. |
|
|
While the opponent here is not identified, the character of his objection strongly suggests that Ibn Sina is dealing with an occasionalist. |
|
One objection to this idea is that it does not specify what degree of differentiation is required. |
|
In Westminster, meanwhile, opposition politicians renewed their objection to the continued presence of British forces in Sierra Leone. |
|
Because of universal jurisdiction, action can be taken against pirates without objection from the flag state of the pirate vessel. |
|
The objection was lodged on the basis that immigration officials believed it would be a marriage of convenience for residency purposes. |
|
At the same time, Jubien's objection under-generalizes once we consider the actualist who identifies possible worlds with uninstantiated maximal properties. |
|
The Church of Scotland does not consider marriage to be a sacrament, and thus not binding forever, and has no moral objection to the remarriage of divorced persons. |
|
As a result, the institution may raise the objection that it cannot honor a local government's sight draft without an order of the bankruptcy court. |
|
Conscientious objection is legally acceptable and those who claim this right are obliged to serve an institutionalised nine months civilian service instead. |
|
The objection to the Ptolemaic mechanism for the longitudinal motion of the superior planets was that the effect of the equant point was not obtained by uniform circularity. |
|
These phases are not without objection from many theorists in the field. |
|
If an objection is not raised and proceedings are allowed to continue without disapproval, it will be held that the party has waived its right to do so. |
|
The British government took no interest in funding the project, but Margaret Thatcher, the prime minister, said she had no objection to a privately funded project. |
|
Britain also raised no objection to a German protectorate over the Marshalls in exchange for German recognition of Britain's rights in the Gilbert and Ellice Islands. |
|
The case of tax resistance highlights the difficulties of drawing a line, in practice, between cases of civil disobedience and conscientious objection. |
|
However, most party members who claimed conscientious objection status did so in the context of their moral and religious beliefs, rather than on political policy. |
|
However, there is a particular objection to the rational defensibility of moral inertia that has to do with the intelligibility of the concept of deflection in general. |
|
The principal objection to validity of Anglican ordinations, according to Pope Leo XIII, was the alleged deficiency of intention and of form of the Anglican ordination rites. |
|
In the end it came to nothing because there were too many voices raised in objection and because James would not be managed by his mother or anyone else. |
|
The objection is that the argument begs the question, meaning that the premise, that God has all the virtues, assumes the conclusion, that God is benevolent. |
|
|
Therefore, it is better that a committee comprising senior lawyers upon whom both the sides have no objection be constituted to resole this matter. |
|
The society said it had no objection to the principle of student accommodation in Newcastle but felt the former Turk's Head Hotel was the wrong location. |
|
Another objection is that it is not always possible to demonstrate falsehood definitively, especially if one is using statistical criteria to evaluate a null hypothesis. |
|
Accordingly, the Liberal leadership expected that after much objection from the Tory peers, the Lords would yield to policy changes wrapped within a budget bill. |
|
When you look at a chair, you are aware of its shape from a particular point of view, but defenders of this objection insist that you are also aware of its chairness. |
|