The sanction of the proposed union by official state-appointed authorities is still a prominent feature of marriages. |
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They had to be punished or sanctioned, so this is the sanction that the judge came up with. |
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Too many franchisors are able to abuse their market power and contractual obligations without any effective sanction under the current law. |
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A further 79 per cent of survey respondents believe the government must sanction plans for a high speed metro rail link to the airport. |
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Yet, as he readily admits, this sanction was used just eight times last year. |
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In Portland, the interaction between treatment and jail sanction also proved a significant contributor to the models of rearrest. |
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Is Article 111 of the Income Tax Act constitutional in stipulating a sanction against tax withholders for violating their legal obligations? |
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Thus popular sanction will legitimate the silencing of redistributionist and egalitarian policy options. |
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In the passage cited above he referred to the defendant's asking the court to sanction his committing a wrongful act. |
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A Loya Jirga, a sort of representative national assembly summoned to sanction a draft new constitution, seemed to have been unimpressed. |
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Unlike clashes between workers which often resulted in disciplinary lay-offs, these cases frequently merited the ultimate sanction of discharge. |
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The company intends to reduce customer response time and sanction loans expeditiously. |
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That does not mean there should be no sanction for misbehaviour or licentious behaviour. |
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To pretend or believe that any or all of this could be done without explicit state and military sanction is the most arrant nonsense. |
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Any severe, firmwide sanction, such as a one-year ban on auditing public companies, could put an accounting firm out of business. |
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If they obstructed the inspections, then the UN might sanction forcing the issue by authorizing an attack. |
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In such circumstances the sanction, or the threat of it, may not in practice be effective. |
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It is a way of recovering penalties by a sanction which is the most serious one known to our law. |
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The problem is that religion provides an ultimate sanction for your actions. |
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The ancients also used oracles to obtain sanction or approval, even though they had already decided on their course of action. |
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Planning had been got and sanction for funding the housing element of the project had just been announced by the Dept of the Environment. |
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With sanction being sought from the Irish Congress of Trade Unions for an all-out picket, the LRC has again stepped in to mediate in the dispute. |
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Her mother had sought court sanction for the operation to stop her daughter's periods and prevent her from getting pregnant. |
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The municipal authorities should not give sanction for construction of houses, with more than 1,000 sq. ft. floor area, without a RWH structure. |
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Sligo County Council still await sanction from the Dept. of the Environment to upgrade the Tubbercurry sewerage treatment facilities. |
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In the case of the South Australian Tribunal, my understanding, your Honour, is that it does not have a power to impose any direct sanction. |
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But the Directive leaves open the powers to the prosecution and sanction to the interpretation of individual states. |
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It was an ecclesiastical sanction that had the effect of closing churches and suspending religious services. |
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It was during the first stage that the regime discovered that it could not officially sanction any one style or movement. |
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Britain has just become the first country to officially sanction genetic testing for insurance purposes. |
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Furthermore, the court may sanction treatment that will shorten the life of a terminally ill child, in order to relieve suffering. |
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The issue of fairness, which remained, was for consideration at the hearing to sanction the scheme. |
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The matters for consideration at this stage concern the jurisdiction of the court to sanction the scheme if it proceeds. |
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This synthetically manufactured fear is used to gain public sanction for further acts of aggression. |
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It is the Secretary of State's policy that the power to sanction should not be exercised too widely. |
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The requirement to resign was replaced by the sanction of a fine to the maximum permitted under the regulations. |
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Thus the incidental killing of women and children has the sanction in the traditions of the Prophet. |
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Right on cue, as if to sanction a visit, ten choristers from the Royal Holloway Choir start to sing. |
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That's a separate question from the issue of whether or not government should sanction, or approve or give some sort of authorization, if you will, to these relationships. |
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Wednesday afternoon, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee will mark up legislation to give aid to Ukraine and sanction Russia. |
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They have urged Laois County Council to seek the immediate sanction of the National Roads Authority for the re-commencement of road words at Park, Stradbally. |
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If the U.S. moves to sanction Putin and his pals next week, Moscow will definitely strike back. |
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I doubt that you would sanction drinking and gambling on such a scale, but there you are as large as life, directly above the club's reception desk. |
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He was the first commander to sanction his men crossing the Irish border on illegal reconnaissance missions into the Republic to recce IRA arms caches. |
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The overarching discretion of the trial judge to take into account the particular circumstances of the offender is essential to the imposition of a fair and just sanction. |
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As a result, more and more medical societies have begun to sanction members with penalties like suspension or revocation of their society membership. |
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You should ratchet up the sanction and make it clear to Iran that they won't get away with it. |
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Secondly, the Constitution does not sanction religion-based reservation. |
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Community pressure remains in practice the only real sanction for enforcing compliance with arbitral awards, or with judgments of the ICJ or other international tribunals. |
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In thus reifying as law what had been done in practice, the Court gave legal sanction to further transgressions against the remaining Native American communities. |
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A Teagasc spokesman said its board had sanctioned a proposed increase in fees but this requires ministerial sanction, which is in the process of being sought. |
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A further argument is that if D renounces before the harm is caused, this may show that the threat of the criminal sanction has had a deterrent effect. |
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A further argument is that if he renounces before the harm is caused, this may show that the threat of the criminal sanction has had a deterrent effect. |
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Similarly, unlike many of their continental European neighbours, the English clung to corporal punishment as a penal sanction until well into the twentieth century. |
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The Siptu national industrial secretary yesterday said the union had already secured sanction from its members for industrial action from tomorrow. |
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The principle of proportionality, which derives from legality concepts, requires that the sanction for an offense be in accordance with its reproachfulness. |
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It would sanction excessive conduct which allowed headstrong, violent people to take the law into their own hands in a way which no civilized society could permit. |
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The seriousness of the offence precipitates a very harsh sanction so that other would-bes could be deterred or discouraged from committing a similar offence. |
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They have to seek budgetary sanction of fund according to the requirement of this class I institution of the country contracting the higher ups in power. |
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Moreover, the actions of individuals who repeat rather than question, watch out for, punish, and sanction transgressions, lend these norms their strength. |
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The pirates of the early eighteenth century, however, were men who acted on their own apart from official political sanction. |
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The purpose of a spoliation sanction is to prevent spoliators from benefiting from their wrongdoing. |
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A sanction could be anything from reducing to terminating participation. |
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The country acted without the sanction of the other nations. |
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By late 1586, she had been persuaded to sanction her trial and execution on the evidence of letters written during the Babington Plot. |
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The impeachment was the first since 1459 without the king's official sanction in the form of a bill of attainder. |
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This was the first expulsion or sanction for corruption in the more than a century the IOC had existed. |
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Since the California 500's return under IndyCar sanction, it has been a night race. |
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Many modern historians hold widely varying opinions of the Crusaders under Papal sanction. |
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In 1839, threats by the imperial court of Qing to sanction opium imports caused diplomatic friction with the British Empire. |
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In this position, they can directly sanction the government by refusing to cooperate, disabling the authority of the rulers. |
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Increasingly, as the value of English became apparent, the prohibition on Irish in schools had the sanction of parents. |
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Four organisations sanction competitive events in the modern American clog dancing world. |
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Professional racing organizations place limitations on the bicycles that can be used in the races that they sanction. |
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Following his father's example, Charles raised loans without Parliament's sanction and imprisoned without trial those who would not pay. |
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For crimes where imprisonment is a sanction, there is a requirement of at least a defence of due diligence. |
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Limitations to freedom of speech may occur through legal sanction or social disapprobation, or both. |
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Of course, differences in relative power will ensure that proposals to sanction the United States and other established nuclear powers will not see the light of day. |
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Although the main sanction is a criminal prosecution, there is also the possibility of consumer redress, either through compensation orders or the new civil sanction pilots. |
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Since the time of the apostles, the term anathema has come to mean a form of extreme religious sanction beyond excommunication, known as major excommunication. |
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From 2004 to 2010, the legitimacy of the 2004 Constitutional amendments had official sanction, both with the Constitutional Court of Ukraine, and most major political parties. |
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The grass roots justification may also be applied to the International Sailing Federation's refusal to sanction events organised by the Kiteboard Pro World Tour. |
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Figuring that the New York State Athletic Commission would not sanction the fight in deference to MSG and Schmeling, Jacobs scheduled the fight for Chicago. |
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It received international sanction in 1960, when it was adopted as an official period of the Paleozoic Era by the International Geological Congress. |
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Highly witty, playful, and sexually wise poetry thus had court sanction. |
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They made terms with him under the sanction of the British name. |
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Rumours spread in England and Scotland that the killings had the king's sanction and that this foreshadowed their own fate if the king's Irish troops landed in Britain. |
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The Samoa international is currently suspended pending the hearing, a sanction imposed by judicial officer Judge Jeff Blackett after Fuimaono-Sapolu failed to attend. |
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While the video above meted 3 Months Jail Term for State of Origin Streaker Wati Holmwood, it wasn't only the New Zealand man who was given a sanction. |
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As editor of The Spectator, Mr Johnson's crime was to sanction publication of an article suggesting that Liverpudlians were, among other things, hooked on grief. |
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