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How to use peerage in a sentence

Looking for sentences and phrases with the word peerage? Here are some examples.

Sentence Examples
In 1925 Asquith accepted a peerage as Earl of Oxford and Asquith and was created a knight of the garter shortly afterwards.
In 1999 his charity work gained him a knighthood to add to his life peerage from Margaret Thatcher.
In 1941 he was raised to the peerage as Lord Cherwell and in 1942 was appointed paymaster-general.
The spiritual peerage consists of the archbishops and diocesan bishops of the Church of England.
Until the Reformation, the spiritual peerage also included abbots and priors, and spiritual peers formed a majority of the House of Lords.
The fortunes of the family continued to rise and, in 1789, the 7th Earl, James Cecil, was elevated in the peerage to a marquess.
As a Lord, he gets entered into the books of peerage and is entitled to display his coat-of-arms.
Lord Stevenson is of the opinion that candidates for the peerage might range from midwives to tycoons.
He wrote to me to share a little part of the treasure trove of maladdressed mail he has picked up since his elevation to the peerage.
His unsuccessful plea for an upper house based on a hereditary colonial peerage was mocked as a bunyip aristocracy.
From 1766 to 1770 he was master-general of the ordnance, vice-treasurer of Ireland 1781-9, and given a British peerage in 1786 as Baron Carleton.
That was a problem because a duke is a nobleman of the highest hereditary rank and a member of the highest grade of the British peerage.
Labour will table another bill in 2007 proposing the total abolition of the peerage, making the upper house an all-appointed chamber.
As a reward for taking defeat with dignity he was awarded a peerage, becoming Lord Watson of Invergowrie.
But an actual recipient of a peerage is addressed by Lord plus whatever name he chooses at the time of receiving the status.
He was elevated to the peerage of Ireland as Lord Kilmaine, for services to the British Crown.
He was proud to be the first actor to be elevated to the peerage, though he never spoke in the Lords after his maiden speech.
In 1942 Keynes was elevated to the peerage and took his seat in the House of Lords, where he sat on the Liberal benches.
Today the Speaker stands in the order of social precedence immediately after the peerage, ranking higher than any other commoner.
The next thing you know, Michael Forsyth will be jacking in his peerage, and trying to get Stirling back.
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Examples from Classical Literature
And now there had come into Suffolk a rumour that Mr. primero was to have a peerage.
He was succeeded in the peerage by his nephew, who, however, inherits only the viscounty.
Not only is he of the British peerage, but he is also, on dit, a leader of the British metal industries.
In peerage law they were his coheirs, and the inheritance could not descend because not one of them had an exclusive right to it.
The offer of a peerage to Conroy showed that there was good reason to placate him.
No hand had overwritten the label of that book there raising it to the peerage, as it were.
I can only say, sir, that with your principles you would not marry into the peerage.
He had read about her in a peerage at his sister's book-shop the previous day.
His attitude towards a member of the peerage was that of the terrier to the perambulating cat.
She fancied she was getting a hero, with a peerage in the distance.
Mrs Paisley was speaking as she opened a library in Belfast bearing Dr Paisley's peerage title, Lord Bannside.
And I was within an ace of becoming an ornament of the British peerage.
In England the crown saw the peerage diminish with pleasure.
The peerage contributes more four-wheeled affliction than has ever been seen in that neighbourhood.
A peerage, half composed of journalists, philosophers, and authors!
In reward for his fine record his peerage was made a viscounty.
While she was gone to cry her farewells over the pork, I gave that whole peerage away to the servants.
I believe, according to the peerage, it is ten years, but ten years with Monmouth must have been like eternity, with time thrown in.
To the one as well as to the other, she meant election as deputy, resulting, for the noble, in the peerage, for the purveyor, in a receiver-generalship.
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