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Some Related Sentences

title and may
You may do well to take notice, that besides the title to land between the English and the Indians there, there are twelve of the English that have subscribed their names to horrible and detestable blasphemies, who are rather to be judged as blasphemous than they should delude us by winning time under pretence of arbitration ''.
The Attorney General shall assign such officers and employees of the Department of Justice as may be necessary to represent the United States as to any claims of the Government of the United States with respect to which the Commission has jurisdiction under this title.
The office may also be given as an honorary title to a clergyman who is not actually the head of a monastery.
In Greek practice the title or function of Abbot corresponds to a person who actually serves as the head of a monastery, although the title of the Archimandrite may be given to any celibate priest who could serve as the head of a monastery.
* Junior Principal / Partner: Recently made a partner or principal of the firm ; title may include vice president.
There are exceptions to this title ; many private clubs and religious organizations may not be bound by Title III.
It is during this period that Bishop Asser applied to him the unique title of " secundarius ", which may indicate a position akin to that of the Celtic tanist, a recognised successor closely associated with the reigning monarch.
Robert Castleden suggests Plato may have borrowed his title from Hellanicus, and that Hellanicus may have based his work on an earlier work on Atlantis.
This means that the Justice keeps his or her title, and may serve by assignment on panels of the U. S. Courts of Appeals.
As a result, most scholars consider the book of Malachi to be the work of a single author who may or may not have been identified by the title Malachi.
* categorizing and prioritizing rights to property — for example, the same article of property often has a " legal title " and an " equitable title ," and these two groups of ownership rights may be held by different people.
Typically, C-level managers are " higher " than Vice Presidents, although many times a C-level officer may also hold a vice president title, such as Executive Vice President and CFO.
** The CEO may also hold the title of chairman, resulting in an executive chairman.
This title is often concurrently held by the treasurer in a dual position called secretary-treasurer ; both positions may be concurrently held by the CFO.
The Principal title is often used in dual career ladder organizations and may be equivalent to manager or director.
They may on such elevation take a vacant " title " ( a church allotted to a cardinal priest as the Roman church with which he is associated ) or their diaconal church may be temporarily elevated to a cardinal priest's " title " for that occasion.
Branch churches of The Mother Church may take the title of First Church of Christ, Scientist ; Second ; but the article The must not be used, presumably to concede the primacy of the Boston Mother Church.
The title of a map may provide the " needed link " necessary for communicating that message, but the overall design of the map fosters the manner in which the reader interprets it ( Monmonier, 1993, pp. 93 ).

title and refer
Songs and poetry often rely on ambiguous words for artistic effect, as in the song title " Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue " ( where " blue " can refer to the color, or to sadness ).
This title occurs more in those technology companies that make products other than software, but increasingly CTO is used instead now in both software and non-software industries alike to refer to overseeing the development of technology being commercialized.
The first holder of the title was John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough ( 1650 – 1722 ), the noted English general, and indeed an unqualified reference to the Duke of Marlborough in a historical text will almost certainly refer to him.
The Divine Service: This is the title for the liturgy in Lutheran churches and is used by most conservative Lutheran churches to refer to the Eucharist.
" heavenly sovereign "), which is used exclusively to refer to an emperor of Japan, and kōtei ( 皇帝, the title used for Chinese emperors ), which is used primarily to describe non-Japanese emperors.
In an English-speaking context, family names are most often used to refer to a stranger or in a formal setting, and are often used with a title or honorific such as Mr, Mrs, Ms, Miss, Dr, and so on.
" Locksley " becomes Robin Hood's title in the Scott novel, and it has been used ever since to refer to the fictional outlaw, most notably by Tennyson in his poem, " Locksley Hall ".
The disciples referred to him as Jina, which means " the conqueror " and later his followers would use a derivation of this title to refer to themselves as Jains, a follower of the Jina.
" The Funniest Joke in the World " is the title most frequently used for written references to a Monty Python's Flying Circus comedy sketch, which is also known by two other phrases that appear within it, " Joke Warfare " and " Killer Joke ", the latter being the most commonly spoken title used to refer to it.
The title was from the early 3rd century a general term used to refer to all bishops.
While the title of dux could refer to a Consul or Imperator, it usually referred to the commander-in-chief of the limitanei garrisoned within a province.
The " clowns " in the title do not refer to circus clowns.
The song title may also refer to the Hüsker Dü song " 59 Times the Pain ".
Variant spellings capellmeister and capelle, to refer to the orchestra or choir, are sometimes encountered in English language works about composers who held the title.
A person who practices benevolent magic " is not called saahir or sahhaar ( sorcerer, witch ), but is normally referred to as shaikh ( or shaikha for a female ), a title which is normally used to refer to a clergyman or a community notable or elder, and is equal to the English title: ‘ Reverend .’"
Examples include meteorosophist, which roughly translates to " expert in celestial phenomena "; gymnosophist ( or " naked sophist ," a word used to refer to a sect of Indian philosophers, the Gymnosophists ), deipnosophist or " dinner sophist " ( as in the title of Athenaeus's Deipnosophistae ), and iatrosophist, a type of physician in the later Roman period.
The writers of the titled opinion columns tend to refer to themselves by the title ( hence, a sentence in the " Lexington " column might read " Lexington was informed ...").
The relevant Standing Order does not refer to this member by the title " Father of the House ", referring instead to the longest-serving member of the House present who is not a Minister of the Crown ( meaning that if the Father is absent or a government minister, the next person in line presides ).
* generically, prince refers to members of a family that ruled by hereditary right, the title being used to refer either to sovereigns or to cadets of a sovereign's family.
They may refer to a person's occupation, social standing, or title.
The hospital had been casually known by this name since the time of the Civil War, when — in their letters home to loved ones — patients of army hospitals temporarily located on the grounds were reluctant to refer to the institution by its full title.
The term is used both collectively to refer to the entire body of noble titles ( or a subdivision thereof ), and individually to refer to a specific title ( and generally has an initial capital in the former case and not the latter ).

title and Biblical
Its title describes its contents: it contains the history of Biblical judges, divinely inspired leaders whose direct knowledge of Yahweh allows them to act as champions for the Israelites from oppression by foreign rulers, and models of wise and faithful behaviour required of them by their god Yahweh following the exodus from Egypt and conquest of Canaan.
The title of the film and novel is based upon a passage from Biblical book of The Song of Solomon or Song of Songs, Chapter 7: 12: " Let us get up early to the vineyards.
The title is said to be a reference to the Biblical devil, Beelzebub.
During the war, he worked on his last novel, The Struggle with the Angel, the title drawn from the story of the Biblical Jacob.
Baʿal ( Biblical Hebrew,, usually spelled Baal in English ) is a Northwest Semitic title and honorific meaning " master " or " lord " that is used for various gods who were patrons of cities in the Levant and Asia Minor, cognate to Akkadian Bēlu.
In 1977, Word Books, Inc. commissioned Hank Ketcham Enterprises, Inc. to produce a series of ten comic books under the title Dennis and the Bible Kids, with the usual cast of characters reading ( and sometimes partly acting out ) the stories of Joseph, Moses, David, Esther, Jesus, and other Biblical characters.
The " King Solomon " of the book's title is the Biblical king renowned both for his wisdom and for his wealth.
A number of explanations have been proposed: one being that the title of king in the Biblical text refers to his future royal title, when at the time of this account he was likely only a military commander.
* The title refers to the Biblical story of Absalom, a son of David who rebelled against his father ( then King of Kingdom of Israel ) and who was killed by David's general Joab in violation of David's order to deal gently with his son, causing heartbreak to David.
While the title might seem better suited to the former book than the latter, a line from the dedicatory poem ( to " S. A .", possibly Selim Ahmed ) at the start of the book helps explain Lawrence's interpretation of the Biblical " seven pillars " and their relevance to the Arab Revolt:
Note that the title The Book of Enoch attributed to the text of Liber Logaeth is not to be confused with the aprocryphal Biblical The Book of Enoch.
Its title is an appellation originally used for the Biblical book of Deuteronomy, and its subtitle, " Book of the Strong Hand ," derives from its subdivision into fourteen books: the numerical value fourteen, when represented as the Hebrew letters Yod ( 10 ) Dalet ( 4 ), forms the word yad (" hand ").
The title is a reference to the natural phenomenon of the sun breaking through the clouds in visible rays, which in turn is named after the Biblical ladder to heaven on which Jacob saw angels ascending and descending in a vision.
In his novel All Who Came Before, Biblical Scholar Simon Perry takes Bar-Abbas as a title meaning ' son of the father '.
Its more proper Latin title is Liber Antiquitatum Biblicarum, a title generally rendered in English as the Book of Biblical Antiquities.
* Pearl of Great Price, one of the four books of scripture of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints ( Mormons ), whose title is an allusion to the Biblical parable
Tzadikim צדיקים ṣadiqim ) is a title given to personalities in Jewish tradition considered righteous, such as Biblical figures and later spiritual masters.
* Cities of Refuge, the six Biblical places referred to by that title
The title is a reference to the definition of faith from the Biblical Letter to the Hebrews 11: 1.
The timeline was uncertain and, although the title of the booklet was specific, 1975 was not mentioned in the text in relation to Biblical prophecy.
The title is a Biblical reference, quoted on the title page:

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