Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Bacardi" ¶ 22
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

instance and faced
For instance, the offensive team may be faced with one or two downs left in a possession and still ten or more yards to go to earn a new set of downs.
For instance, the seats directly along the left field line faced the center field and right field fences.
In that instance, J. P. Morgan had extended a $ 4. 8 billion credit line to Exxon, which faced the threat of $ 5 billion in punitive damages for the Exxon Valdez oil spill.
Every day for instance, people are faced with the dilemma of whether or not to lie in a given situation.
For instance, faced with demands from municipal and provincial dumas for the establishment of a national legislative assembly, Nicholas offered only a broadening of the local councils ' authority, insurance for factory workers, and the abolition of censorship.
In these problem plays the situation faced by the protagonist is put forward by the author as a representative instance of a contemporary social problem.
De Gomme faced some criticism over his unorthodox design: for instance when Samuel Pepys visited in 1683 he wrote that " De Gomme hath built very sillily ".
Frequently more detail is recorded, for instance, for a batsman, the number of balls faced and the number of minutes batted.
Networks, however, have the ability to override a station's request ; WIVB-TV, for instance, requested a New England Patriots-Denver Broncos game in December 2011, due to the fact that the hometown Buffalo Bills faced both teams in the upcoming weeks and because of the high-profile showdown between Tim Tebow and Tom Brady ; they instead received a New York Jets-Philadelphia Eagles game.
However, sometimes defense attorneys have found ways to impart this information to juries ; for instance, it is sometimes possible, on cross-examination of an informant who faced similar charges, to ask how much time he was facing.
On several occasions, they do not seem to care even when Homer faced a life-threatening situation ; for instance, upon discovering via a telephone call that Homer had suffered a heart attack, the two continued cutting coupons as though nothing were wrong, expressing more shock at a five cent discount on wax paper.
For instance, at one point, the family was to return home to watch the match in which Serena and Sampras faced off against Venus and Agassi on television.
But chances of winning are low, especially, for instance, that the needed cards are those faced down.
Manuel García, for instance, who had a wide range as a baritenor, " had L ' italiana in Algeri in his repertoire, but faced with the extremely high tessitura and the mainly syllabic writing of ‘ Languir per una bella ’, he transposed the aria down a minor third, performing it in c major instead of e flat ".
For instance, a manager may be faced with the situation of a right-handed reliever facing a strong left-handed bat late in a close game.

instance and legal
For instance, the local charter of the Basque-colonized Ojacastro valley ( now in La Rioja ) allowed the inhabitants to use Basque in legal processes in the 13th and 14th centuries.
In Russian legal history, for instance, comparative method dates back to the sixteenth century.
( For instance, in some elected monarchies only those of certain pedigrees are considered eligible, whereas many hereditary monarchies have legal requirements regarding the religion, age, gender, mental capacity, and other factors that act both as de facto elections and to create situations of rival claimants whose legitimacy is subject to effective election.
For instance, certain political funding practices that are legal in one place may be illegal in another.
For instance, if immigration has become more and more restricted under the law, then the next legal decision on that subject may serve to restrict it further still.
For instance, Sydney Pollack brought a lawsuit against Danish TV after screening his 1975 film Three Days of the Condor in pan-and-scan in 1991 ( The court ruled that the pan scanning conducted by Danish television was a ' mutilation ' of the film and a violation of Pollack's ' Droit Moral ', his legal right as an artist to maintain his reputation by protecting the integrity of his work.
Nevertheless, the Council retained the power to hear legal disputes, either in the first instance or on appeal.
Should a legal distinction be necessary between a ( location ) channel as defined above and a television channel in this sense, the terms " programming service " ( e. g. ) or " programming undertaking " ( for instance, ) may be used instead for the latter definition.
), human life ( at what point from conception to birth is one a legal human being, protected for instance by laws against murder?
If a lawyer wishes to help a client overcome legal obstacles to securing her or his natural rights, he might, for instance, find that assisting in fabricating evidence or committing perjury is more effective than open disobedience.
In appellate review, error typically refers to mistakes made by a trial court or some other court of first instance in applying the law in a particular legal case.
( In the United Kingdom, for instance, it is a legal requirement to use the bulk of the fund to purchase an annuity.
However, the legal proceedings certainly did not have de jure presumption of guilt-for instance, the juror's oath explicitly recommended that the jury did not betray the interests of the defendants, and took attention of the means of defense.
For instance, an NGO such as Oxfam, concerned with poverty alleviation, might provide needy people with the equipment and skills to find food and clean drinking water, whereas an NGO like the FFDA helps through investigation and documentation of human rights violations and provides legal assistance to victims of human rights abuses.
While most drugs are legal to possess, many governments regulate the manufacture, distribution, marketing, and sale of some drugs, for instance through a prescription system.
For instance, the former Robert Allen Zimmerman's legal name has been Robert Dylan ( Bob Dylan ) since he changed it in New York City Supreme Court in August 1962.
According to a report by the United Nations ' Food and Agriculture Organisation, land degradation has been exacerbated where there has been an absence of any land use planning, or of its orderly execution, or the existence of financial or legal incentives that have led to the wrong land use decisions, or one-sided central planning leading to over-utilization of the land resources-for instance for immediate production at all costs.
" For instance, David Souter was appointed in the Supreme Court by President George H. W. Bush in 1990 but in Bush v. Gore case in 2000 vote with minority against President George W. Bush's legal position.
For instance, in all states in the United States the legal drinking age for unsupervised persons is 21 years, because it is argued that people need to be mature enough to make decisions involving the risks of alcohol consumption.
There may be other variations as well, for instance in the way the ball is launched, in the dimensions of the playing area, whether obstacles ( such as trees ) are considered in-bounds or out-of-bounds, and whether it is legal to play balls off of enclosing boards or obstacles.
For instance, some political funding practices that are legal in one place may be illegal in another.
The first recorded instance of veiling for women is recorded in an Assyrian legal text from the 13th century BC, which restricted its use to noble women and forbade prostitutes and common women from adopting it.
In another instance, the document is issued at times when an inferior court is deemed headed towards defeating a legal right.
Mystery fiction can be divided into numerous categories, among them the " traditional mystery ", " legal thriller ", " medical thriller ", " cozy mystery ", " police procedural ", and " hardboiled " ( for instance, Dashiell Hammett's The Maltese Falcon's main detective, Sam Spade ).

instance and ruling
For instance, some argue that modern representative democracy is a realization of political egalitarianism, while in reality, most political power still resides in the hands of a ruling class, rather than in the hands of the people.
For instance, in some state courts the prosecution can lodge an appeal after a defendant is acquitted: although the appellate court cannot set aside a not-guilty verdict due to double jeopardy, it can issue a ruling as to whether a trial court's ruling on a particular issue during the trial was erroneous.
For instance, with the rise of Hasidism, Rabbi Elijah of Vilna declared that his followers must not marry Hasidic Jews ( the ruling was never put into practice ).
It is an instance in which a statement which is neither part of the ruling of the Court, nor part of the opinion of a majority or dissenting minority of the Court has been taken as precedent for subsequent decisions of the Court.
Proposed in 2002, one motivation at least for the controversial draft EU Directive on the Patentability of Computer-Implemented Inventions was to have been to establish common practice for the national courts ; and, in cases of doubt as to its interpretation, to have created a requirement for national courts of last instance to seek a ruling from the European Court of Justice.
A government in exile may also form from widespread belief in the illegitimacy of a ruling government. For instance, the Syrian National Council was formed as a result of the Syrian Civil War, which sought to end the rule of the ruling Ba ' ath Party.
This is not universally accepted-Nadav Na ' aman, for instance, reads it as BTWD, " House of Daodoh ", a local ruling family ; but if Lemaire is correct then this is the earliest evidence of the existence of the Judean kingdom and its Davidic dynasty.
Gomaa argued the decision was due to an earlier ruling by Giza's court of first instance to stop the General Assembly meeting.
For instance, he voted in favor of the Court's ruling that the states could not use religious tests as qualifications for public office in Torcaso v. Watkins.
For instance, the Holy Synod is a ruling body of the Georgian Orthodox and Apostolic Church.
Though Shāfi ' ī thus never in fact postulated the existence of a " stoning verse ", in one particular instance he did acknowledge the probability of " abrogation of wording but not ruling ":
For instance, an inscription dated in 1151 AD., states that a chief named Guli Bachi was ruling Marugerenad in Kaidala near Tumkur.
For instance, Ellis Wasson's Born to Rule: British Political Elites ( 2000 ) shows the ruling class to have been basically open to new members throughout the early modern period.
By the end of 20th century, however, a sort of inverted red tacitism ( as the new variant of black tacitism could be called ) appeared, for example in publications like Woodman's Tacitus reviewed: the new theories described the emperors of the principate no longer as monarchs ruling as autocrats, but as " magistrates " in essence defending a " republican " form of government ( which might excuse some of their rash actions ), very much in line with Graves ' lenient posture regarding crimes committed under the rule of princeps Claudius ( for instance the putting aside of the elder L. Silanus, showing the emperor's lack of conscience according to Tacitus, Ann.

1.629 seconds.