arrogations in a sentence
Examples
- The question, said professor William D . Popkin, a specialist in legislation at Indiana University Law School, is " whether ordinary statutory interpretation can conceivably be called an arrogation of legislative power ."
- However, the key word is " arrogates, " as anarcho-capitalists only support property created by homesteading which they do not see as arrogation but as " earning " through one's labor.
- Be that as it may, Mackenzie was soon after appointed a lieutenant or guardian of Wester Ross in response to Sir Donald Macdonald of Lochalsh's arrogation of the James V for suppressing disorder among the Clan Mackintosh.
- The Satmar view is that only the Jewish Messiah can bring about a new Jewish government in Eretz Israel, and even if a government declaring itself religious would be formed before the Messiah, it would be illegitimate due to its improper arrogation of power.
- This is illustrated by " Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament ", in which it was held that for the court to assume jurisdiction in such areas would be an " exorbitant arrogation of adjudicative power ", as the court could not presume that its ruling would bind other states.
- Republicans will note with approval that the 1974 report concluded that the thrust of past impeachment proceedings " has been on the significant effects of the conduct _ undermining the integrity of office . . . arrogation of power, abuse of the governmental process, adverse impact on the system of government ."
- It happened upon the arrogation [ pride ] of a person who had been his own master, ( sui juris, ) [ of his own right, not under any legal disability ] or upon the emancipation of one who had been under the patria potestas . [ Parental authority ] It left the rights of liberty and citizenship unaltered.
- Their view is informed in large part by H�lo�se's own writings ( as opposed to Abelard's letters to her ), in which she expresses a much more positive attitude toward their past relationship than does Abelard and does not " accept that his love for her could die, even by the horrible act of Abelard s castration . " A more mainstream interpretation of those parts of Abelard's writing like the sentence Waithe finds so troubling is the one given by David Wulstan : " Much of what Abelard says in the Historia Calamitatum does not ring true : his arrogation of blame for the cold seduction of his pupil is hardly fortified by the letters of Heloise; this and various supposed violations seem contrived to build a farrago of supposed guilt which he must expiate by his retreat into monasticism and by distancing himself from his former lover . " In fact, even Waithe herself indicated in a 2009 interview with Karen Warren that she has " softened the position [ she ] took earlier " in light of Mews'subsequent attribution of the " Epistolae Duorum Amantium " to Abelard and H�lo�se ( which Waithe accepts ), though she continues to find the passage troubling.