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`` It is a duty '', said Hough, `` not to let pass this opportunity of protesting against the methods of taking and printing testimony in Equity, current in this circuit ( and probably others ), excused if not justified by the rules of the Supreme Court, especially to be found in patent causes, and flagrantly exemplified in this litigation.
from
Brown Corpus
Some Related Sentences
is and duty
Reduced to its simplest terms, it is an assumption of a collective duty to compensate for the inability of individuals to cope with the rigors of the era.
Understanding, as he did, the difficulty of the art of poetry, and believing that the `` only technical criticism worth having in poetry is that of poets '', he felt obliged to insist upon his duty to be hard to please when it came to the review of a book of verse.
An action once universally condemned by all Christian churches and forbidden by the civil law is now not only approved by the overwhelming majority of Protestant denominations, but also deemed, at certain times, to be a positive religious duty.
Altruism is a motivation to provide something of value to a party who must be anyone but oneself, while duty focuses on a moral obligation towards a specific individual ( e. g., a god, a king ), or collective ( e. g., a government ).
An allegiance is a duty of fidelity said to be owed by a subject or a citizen to his / her state or sovereign.
He takes action, prompted by his own code of morals ; he feels that the plague is everybody's responsibility and that everyone should do his or her duty.
For Tarrou, plague is the destructive impulse within every person, the will and the capacity to do harm, and it is everyone's duty to be on guard against this tendency within themselves, lest they infect someone else with it.
; Assault on a constable in the execution of his duty: Section 89 ( 1 ) of the Police Act 1996 provides that it is an offence for a person to assault either:
It is a separate offence to assault on a constable in the execution of his duty, under section 41 of the Police ( Scotland ) Act 1967 which provides that it is an offence for a person to, amongst other things, assault a constable in the execution of his duty or a person assisting a constable in the execution of his duty.
is and said
`` Dear girl '', Walter had finally said, `` he writes me that he is sleeping in the English Gardens ''.
I clapped the big man with the bleached hair on his shoulder and said heartily, hoping it would make an impression on the women: `` This one is the maku Frayne.
`` Amen '', said the Reverend Doran, grabbing his rifle propped up against a tombstone, `` and now my brethren, it would seem that our presence is required elsewhere ''.
`` All right, if you can't do your arithmetic during school hours you can do it after school is out '', Miss Langford said firmly, not smiling.
That is particularly true of sovereignty when it is applied to democratic societies, in which `` popular '' sovereignty is said to exist, and in federal nations, in which the jobs of government are split.
It is said that, even at the present stage of Southern urbanization, such a city as Atlanta is not distinctly unlike Columbus or Trenton.
Even so astute a commentator as Harold Clurman of The Nation has said that `` Waiting For Godot '' is `` the concentrate of the contemporary European mood of despair ''.
Almost nothing is said of Charles' spectacular victories, the central theme being the heroic loyalty of the Swedish people to their idolized king in misfortune and defeat.
`` I may possibly be a greater risk than is the normal person of my age '', the President had said on February 29th of the election year, ignoring the fact that no one of his age had ever lived out another term.
As Sandburg said at the time: `` It is as ancient as the medieval European ballads brought to the Appalachian Mountains, it is as modern as skyscrapers, the Volstead Act, and the latest oil well gusher ''.
When someone in the audience rose and asked how does it feel to be a celebrity, Carl said, `` A celebrity is a fellow who eats celery with celerity ''.
is and Hough
The fundamental difficulty of which the Selden case was `` a striking ( though not singular ) example '', concluded Hough, `` will remain as long as testimony is taken without any authoritative judicial officer present, and responsible for the maintenance of discipline, and the reception or exclusion of testimony ''.
J. N. Hough suggests that Plautus ’ s use of Greek is for artistic purposes and not simply because a Latin phrase will not fit the meter.
The University of Louisiana-Monroe owns a one-hundred acre outdoor classroom, located near Hough Bend, that is used primarily for tree identification.
* Hough's Neck is a northeastern peninsular community named for Atherton Hough, who was granted the land in 1636 for use as a farm and orchard.
Huntersville is served by Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools, with students from Huntersville attending Hough High School ( which opened in the fall of 2010 ), Hopewell High School and North Mecklenburg High School.
'< p >" Over three centuries later, Walter Hough ( 1912 ) wrote: ' There is a great confusion as to the identity of copal, the name, according to some writers, being used to cover a number of gums.
Phillips is presently reported to be in a relationship with US show jumping rider Lauren Hough, at 35 some four months younger than his son.
When the coefficients are separated into their height and latitude components, the height dependence takes the form of propagating or evanescent waves ( depending on conditions ), while the latitude dependence is given by the Hough functions.
The Hough transform () is a feature extraction technique used in image analysis, computer vision, and digital image processing.
This voting procedure is carried out in a parameter space, from which object candidates are obtained as local maxima in a so-called accumulator space that is explicitly constructed by the algorithm for computing the Hough transform.
The Hough transform as it is universally used today was invented by Richard Duda and Peter Hart in 1972, who called it a " generalized Hough transform " after the related 1962 patent of Paul Hough.
The purpose of the Hough transform is to address this problem by making it possible to perform groupings of edge points into object candidates by performing an explicit voting procedure over a set of parameterized image objects ( Shapiro and Stockman, 304 ).
In the Hough transform, a main idea is to consider the characteristics of the straight line not as image points ( x < sub > 1 </ sub >, y < sub > 1 </ sub >), ( x < sub > 2 </ sub >, y < sub > 2 </ sub >), etc., but instead, in terms of its parameters, i. e., the slope parameter m and the intercept parameter b. Based on that fact, the straight line y = mx + b can be represented as a point ( b, m ) in the parameter space.
However, one faces the problem that vertical lines give rise to unbounded values of the parameters m and b. For computational reasons, it is therefore better to use a different pair of parameters, denoted and ( theta ), for the lines in the Hough transform.
The ( r, θ ) plane is sometimes referred to as Hough space for the set of straight lines in two dimensions.
where s is the distance of L from the origin and is the angle the normal vector to L makes with the x axis ( see also Hough space ).
* The Hough transform, when written in a continuous form, is very similar, if not equivalent, to the Radon transform.
Delayed onset muscle soreness was first described in 1902 by Theodore Hough, who concluded that this kind of soreness is " fundamentally the result of ruptures within the muscle ".
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