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By and act
By the end of the third act, the artist is dead but the body lingers on, a shell among other shells.
By a further act of 1541 — which was not repealed until 1845 — artificers, labourers, apprentices, servants and the like were forbidden to play bowls at any time except Christmas, and then only in their master's house and presence.
By this point, standing up and saying ' no ' to the Black Hand was a dangerous act.
By contrast, in civil law jurisdictions ( the legal tradition that prevails in, or is combined with common law in, Europe and most non-Islamic, non-common law countries ), courts lack authority to act where there is no statute, and judicial precedent is given less interpretive weight ( which means that a judge deciding a given case has more freedom to interpret the text of a statute independently, and less predictably ), and scholarly literature is given more.
By far the most successful Euro disco act was ABBA.
By extension, the word for carrying or drawing a beer came to mean the serving of the beer and, in some senses, the act of drinking, or a drink of beer itself, regardless of serving method.
By the time Bramah's beer pumps became popular, the use of the word draught to mean the act of serving beer was well established and transferred easily to beer served via the hand pumps.
By equalizing immigration policies, the act resulted in new immigration from non-European nations, which changed the ethnic make-up of the United States.
By January 1983, Men at Work had the top album and single in both the US and the UK-a feat never achieved previously by an Australian act.
By 1974, the scene's top act, Dr. Feelgood, was paving the way for others such as The Stranglers and Cock Sparrer that would play a role in the punk explosion.
By August 1996, the FDA had not taken action, and the consumer advocacy group Public Citizen filed a petition with the FDA, prompting the agency to act.
By December 1838, he had noted a similarity between the act of breeders selecting traits and a Malthusian Nature selecting among variants thrown up by " chance " so that " every part of newly acquired structure is fully practical and perfected ".
By ‘ extreme ’ utilitarian McCloskey is referring to what later came to be called ‘ act ’ utilitarianism.
By virtue of their high heat capacities, urban surfaces act as a giant reservoir of heat energy.
By the end of the century, at least a third of England's bishops also act as royal judges in secular matters.
* August 15 – By act of the U. S. Congress ( March 3 ), the Alabama Territory is created by splitting the Mississippi Territory in half, on the day the Mississippi constitution is drafted, four months before Mississippi became a State of the United States.
By this act, he creates a permanent schism between the Syrian Orthodox Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church.
* By an act of the Parliament of Great Britain, alien immigrants ( including Huguenots and Jews ) in the colonies receive British nationality.
By the time he was 21, his father's alcoholism threatened the reputation of the family act, so Keaton and his mother, Myra, left for New York, where Buster Keaton's career swiftly moved from vaudeville to film.
* Le Pétomane 1857-1945 a tribute to the unique act which shook and shattered the Moulin-Rouge ( 1967 ), By Jean Nohain and François Caradec-Publisher: Souvenir Press
By dividing the illocutionary act into two subparts, Searle is able to explain that we can understand two meanings from the same utterance all the while knowing which is the correct meaning to respond to.
By submitting one's freedom to someone else, this act removes the freedom of choice almost entirely.
By this definition, evil exists when good men fail to act.
By such considerations Dumezil thinks that the two terms refer in fact to two aspects of the same religious act:
By " performativity " Austin means that the ritual act itself achieves the stated goal.

By and parliament
By autumn 1917, in the power vacuum following the dissolution of parliament and in the absence of a stable government or a Finnish army, such forces began assuming a more military character.
By the time the first national elections were held in the Federal Republic in 1949, Kiesinger had joined the Christian Democratic Union ( CDU ) and won a seat in the Bundestag, the West German parliament.
By early November 1992, a new parliament had been elected, and Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri had formed a cabinet, retaining for himself the finance portfolio.
By the first half of the 19th century, however, the Whig political programme came to encompass not only the supremacy of parliament over the monarch and support for free trade, but Catholic emancipation, the abolition of slavery and expansion of the franchise ( suffrage ).
However the parliament in Ankara rejected any compromise on this issue. By 1920, Van fell under Turkish control again and its remaining Armenian inhabitants were expelled in a final round of ethnic cleansing.
By tradition, the Chancellor has been allowed to drink whatever he or she wishes whilst making the annual Budget Speech to parliament.
By May 2011 however his party had collapsed in several states, including Rhineland-Palatinate and Bremen where they failed to secure the 5 % threshold necessary for a seat in parliament.
By the time the Local Government Bill was introduced to parliament, the county had been named " Avon ".
By virtue of Poynings ' Law, a statute of King Henry VII of England, all proposed Irish legislation had to be submitted to the Privy Council for its approval under the Great Seal of England before being passed by the Irish parliament.
By law Paris is the seat of both houses of parliament ( the national assembly and the senate ), but their joint congresses are held at the palace of Versailles.
By this time the confusion in all the armed forces of the parliament had reached such a height that reforms were at last taken in hand.
By the 1830s and 1840s, nationalist leader Daniel O ' Connell was leading a demand for the Repeal of the Act of Union and the re-establishment of an Irish parliament in Dublin, only this time one to which Catholics could be elected, in contrast with the entirely Anglican assembly that had met in the old Houses of Parliament.
By seeking refuge in France and subsequently invading Ireland, James II had given William III the ideal instrument to convince the English parliament that entry into a major European war was unavoidable.
By which, the Indonesian parliament decided to introduce a sweeping anti-pornography law.
By repute, when he presented his one and only Budget speech to parliament he discovered that he had left the ministerial " Red Box " containing it at home.
By a similar policy he exacted obedience from the O ' Mores, the O ' Tooles and the O ' Conors in Leix and Offaly ; and having conciliated the O ' Briens in the west and the Earl of Desmond in the south, he carried an act in the Irish parliament in Dublin conferring the title of King of Ireland on Henry VIII and his heirs.
By the time new regime had developed into a single-party system, the Supreme Soviet ( successor to the Congress of Soviets ) had been relegated to the role of a rubber-stamp parliament, meeting just once a year to ratify decisions already made at higher levels, in most cases without even a single dissenting vote.
By February, the opposition lords were considering accusing the Duke of York of high treason, which resulted in the king proroguing parliament on 24 February in order to protect his brother.
By the decree of 24 February, the provisional government had solemnly accepted the principle of the " right to work ," and decided to establish " national workshops " for the unemployed ; at the same time a sort of industrial parliament was established at the Luxembourg Palace, under the presidency of < span lang =" fr "> Louis Blanc </ span >, with the object of preparing a scheme for the organization of labour ; and, lastly, by the decree of 8 March, the property qualification for enrolment in the National Guard had been abolished and the workmen were supplied with arms.
By 1697, trade was threatened, and a group of 34 merchants and traders petitioned parliament for powers to take over the navigation.
Chief Constable, Hampshire Constabulary, Sir Douglas Osmond emphasised the peaceful nature of the event in his evidence given to the Stevenson Report, 1971, ( submitted to parliament as evidence in favour of future Isle of Festivals ) "... By the end of the festival the press representatives became almost desperate for material and they seemed a little disappointed that the patrons had been so well behaved.
By Article 80, the President can refuse to assent to any non-money bills passed by the parliament, but send it back for review.
By early 1966, the result was a parliament composed of seventy-four UPC, nine DP, eight KY, and one independent MP.
By 1651 the Scottish Covenantor government had become disillusioned with the English parliament and supported the Royalists instead.

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