The gratuitous gossip included claims of domestic violence, adultery, and abusive relationships. |
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Pandosto seizes the infant Fawnia, casts her adrift in an open boat, and tries Bellaria for adultery and treason. |
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As the law of 1580 prescribed a penalty of 50 years of banishment for adulterers, he was apparently convicted of adultery rather than incest. |
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There are a lot of married men who are committing adultery in every new town they are moved to. |
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However, it has been held that the petitioner need not find it intolerable to live with the respondent because of his adultery. |
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She had left him during the period they held the licence, because of his adultery, but had returned to him. |
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Within three years he had tired of Anne Boleyn and she was beheaded in 1536, accused of treason and adultery. |
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Does this mean that a story about a female adulterer is noteworthy because male adultery is commonplace? |
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You could hook up with someone else, but that would be adultery and adultery is wrong. |
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If married, the charge was not rape but adultery, and the case was heard in another court. |
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Husbands and others frequently bring charges of adultery against such wives. |
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The marriage has to be consummated before an extramarital affair becomes adultery. |
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He looks at his wife and his friend who he had so wrongfully accused of adultery 16 years ago. |
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Am I to gather from this that adultery and unfaithfulness are being condoned? |
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Among the seventeen great sins, unbelief is the greatest, more heinous than murder, theft, adultery and so on. |
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At the end of April 1536, Anne was accused of adultery with several men and incest with her brother George. |
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The moral code of the laity rigorously condemns adultery on the part of a woman. |
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Hence, adultery was thought of as sinful for women since it was a violation of the man's property etc. |
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When aiming for this ideal, goodness does not mean aestheticism, nor does knighthood mean adultery. |
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If marriage confers social status and respectability, adultery confers a stigma. |
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Punishment for adultery, incest, rape and carnal knowledge, etc, was death. |
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Intervention by authority was necessary for very serious sins such as adultery, murder, and sacrilege. |
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But I tell you that anyone who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart. |
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Reasons for divorce are often infertility, adultery, unreasonable behaviour, and madness. |
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Hester Prynne, convicted of adultery, is taken from the prison and set on the scaffold in the town square for public humiliation. |
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For most people, the death penalty for adultery sounds too much like Arabic laws that call for stoning scarlet women. |
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She wanted adequate safeguards against dowry, bigamy, adultery, and apostasy in the new legislation. |
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We expect revelations like who was sleeping with whom, who was committing adultery, who was charging the highest black money and so on. |
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As for adultery, it is significant that Santorum suggests it should be treated as a crime. |
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Infringements such as accidental wounding of oneself or others, and adultery, were common causes of the muru being set in operation. |
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But further afield, in New York and Boston, he was attacked for his preoccupation with small-town adultery. |
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Apparently he considered adultery a lesser crime than financial chicanery, and by pleading the one, he avoided the other. |
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His Oxford doctorate in Classics, earned studying Latin ghost stories and adultery tales, is of little relevance to this. |
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There is, for instance, a coarseness in the earl, who delights in speaking of his adultery. |
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She had always felt that, by refusing to implicate him in the crime of adultery, she was saving him from the ruin that she faced every day. |
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Children whose parents are split asunder by adultery have their assumptions about trust, fidelity and commitment greatly damaged. |
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And the handkerchief becomes transformed again, by tragic irony, into a visual argument for Desdemona's adultery. |
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Sometimes midlife crises result in play, like gambling or adultery, which is irrationally risky. |
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After being divorced for adultery in 1916, Adam married the co-respondent, Violet Watson, the mother of his second son, Brian. |
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Children were illegitimate for any number of reasons, including rapes, seductions, adultery, failed courtships, and long-term cohabitation. |
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He had already confessed himself before witnesses to adultery and was commonly known to be a cozener or defrauder of men. |
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Their talk is adultery and fornication, dishonesty, greed and deceit, and easy money. |
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And the consequences of fornication or adultery are not only restricted to the parties involved in these immoral acts. |
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Thus, laws criminalizing acts like adultery, spousal or parental abandonment, bastardy, prostitution, and fornication appeared. |
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Laws against adultery are a natural outgrowth of laws and customs insisting that marriages be monogamous. |
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The accusations could involve prenuptial relations, bridal pregnancy, adultery and severe maltreatment of wives and husbands also. |
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There are no redeeming characters in this morality tale of corruption, adultery, and debauchery. |
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Divorce can be obtained on the bases of adultery, intolerable behavior, desertion, and de facto separation. |
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His adultery could be a constant, desperate search for love, or just an old habit that dies hard. |
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Adapted from an award-winning play, Closer examines the lives of four people who become enmeshed in a tawdry tale of adultery. |
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She is at risk of imminent execution after her death sentence for adultery was upheld by the Supreme Court. |
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Here the intention of the Prophet was not to follow the Torah but to implement from it what was conciliating with the Qur'an. i.e. the Punishment for adultery. |
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Abubakar is expected to sign additional legislation in the coming weeks that expands the use of caning to punish adultery and other crimes, Gelanggang said. |
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Until recently Anglo-Saxon and Gallic societies also saw women as chattels and held that adultery was a crime against property and against honour. |
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I didn't think that adultery was considered a crime, not by common law. |
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Through chastity, as opposed to adultery and harlotry, both spiritual and physical, a person refuses to be made into an instrument and vessel of pleasure. |
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Typically, adultery charges are added to cases where there have been other offenses. |
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It is disproportionally applied as a punishment for women, often as a penalty for adultery. |
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If good and bad are merely what seem good and bad to the individual observer, then how can one claim that stealing or adultery or impiety or murder are somehow wrong? |
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Here was a wife who'd committed adultery, was an adulteress. |
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Legislators stopped short of making adultery illegal but will consider making adulterers liable to compensate their spouses in divorce settlements. |
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Perhaps he had congratulated himself for his self-restraint in avoiding real adultery, real manipulation of women. |
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The majority of people in society may come to regard fornication, adultery and casual sexual relationships with intolerance, indignation and disgust. |
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No longer did spouses have to allege physical or mental cruelty, no longer did private investigators have to spring someone in an act of adultery. |
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The sorcery of his half-sister, the adultery of his wife and best friend, and his incestuously conceived son who becomes his nemesis all play their part in its, and his, doom. |
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According to legend, Hippocrates, the father of modern medicine, testified in the case of a woman accused of adultery. |
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She was guilty of committing adultery by having sexual intercourse. |
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So widespread is the understanding that, when a priest or bishop's adultery or fornication comes to light, clergy and laity are equally scandalized. |
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It never suggests that adultery is a curative for a diseased relationship. |
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Recent storylines have even been promoting adultery and sexual activities. |
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It also contains some clunky passages of adultery, temptations of the flesh, and general sexual awkwardness. |
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It said at least 15 men and women face sentences of death by stoning on charges of adultery. |
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Many too have heard of his marriage to the barren Princess Louise von Stolberg, who bore him no children, blatantly committed adultery and finally separated from him. |
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In such states, adultery remains a viable basis for divorce or separation. |
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For him, adultery is considered a degenerate act, yet so is divorce. |
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Aquariums, like adultery, draw us into a shadowy underworld of unspoken sensual pleasures, an engrossing, exotic environment harboring dangers of mythic proportion. |
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Pounding is charged with one count each of assault, adultery, and conduct unbecoming an officer. |
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Despite allegations by Roman sources of adultery and divorce, the marriage appears to have been happy. |
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He renewed the Lex Iulia de Adulteriis Coercendis, under which adultery was punishable by exile. |
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And when Christ saith, Who marries the divorced commits adultery, it is to be understood, if he had any plot in the divorce. |
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For example, Riasanovsky said that killing the man or the woman in case of adultery is a good illustration. |
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Moctezuma issued new laws that further separated nobles from commoners and instituted the death penalty for adultery and other offenses. |
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The book is rife with adultery, characterized most visibly in Sir Tristan and the Belle Isolde. |
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The only grounds for divorce are adultery or willful abandonment by a spouse. |
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When a husband commits adultery it must be earth-shattering, but to have it broadcast on national television is even more humiliating. |
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We have learned to live with adultery, and with couples living together extramaritally. |
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Execution is still authorized, for example, for adultery, recidivist alcohol use, drug trafficking and drug possession, he said. |
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With great talent, elegance and subtlety, it condones and romanticizes euthanasia, treachery and adultery. |
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Chhiringdorje was in fact in a search of a proof to protest against wife for her indulgement in adultery. |
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Dr Jozajtis said The Simpsons frequently raised moral dilemmas through its satirisation of issues as diverse as teenage drinking and adultery. |
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This is your typical case of adultery, federalism, and chemical weapons. |
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This is the only reason that it is not considered adultery, and the child is not a mamzer. |
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He wants Britain to be brought under Sharia law, with women forced to wear burkas and put to death for adultery. |
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Hustler magazine publisher Larry Flynt has already struck by forcing House leader Robert Livingston to admit adultery. |
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We fiddle taxes, fornicate, enjoy adultery, betray each other, lie cheat, steal. |
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The opera is a dark and passionate tale of adultery and greed. |
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Margaret Beaufort was the great granddaughter of the adultery of John of Gaunt. |
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Whether it was primarily the result of allegations of conspiracy, adultery, or witchcraft remains a matter of debate among historians. |
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Mordred and Agravaine have been scheming to uncover Lancelot and Guinevere's adultery for quite some time. |
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She engaged in adultery because her spouse has a low libido, while hers is very high. |
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You might wrest the caduceus out of my hand to the adultery and spoil of nature. |
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If someone commited adultery and hence broke the Law with such generous begivings they were entitled to harshest punishment to save time. |
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The ancient sources say the charge was adultery, and that Claudius was tricked into issuing the punishment. |
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On August 27, 2002, a Nigerian court ordered the mother of a newborn child, Amina Lawal, to be publicly lapidated for adultery. |
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Rumours of marital violence, adultery with actresses, incest with Augusta Leigh, and sodomy were circulated, assisted by a jealous Lady Caroline. |
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Both of George's parents committed adultery, and in 1694 their marriage was dissolved on the pretext that Sophia had abandoned her husband. |
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Article 88 of Qatar's criminal code declares the punishment for adultery is 100 lashes. |
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Separation from bed and board was allowed in exceptional circumstances, usually adultery. |
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Under the reformed Kirk, divorce was allowed on grounds of adultery, or of desertion. |
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When an unmarried male commits adultery with an unmarried female, they should receive one hundred lashes and banishment for one year. |
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And in case of married male committing adultery with a married female, they shall receive one hundred lashes and be stoned to death. |
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The two exceptions to this rule were a husband discovering his wife committing adultery and a father finding someone buggering his son. |
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The incident comes months after a kangaroo court ordered a woman to be stoned to death on adultery charge in the district. |
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The scholars cite adultery, lying, unrepentance, pride, gluttony, indifference to the poor, inhospitality, etc. |
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The Commandment forbidding adultery corresponds to legal rules that survive in American law only vestigially. |
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The former Blue Peter host was granted a decree nisi at London's Central Family Court on the grounds of her husband's adultery. |
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During an emotional meeting with Mary Crawford, Edmund discovers that Mary does not condemn Henry and Maria's adultery, and regrets only that it was discovered. |
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Sikhs vow to wear the five Ks, which include a dagger, comb and bangle, and to eat only ritually killed meat, refrain from committing adultery or cutting their hair. |
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In 2006, a Filipino woman was sentenced to 100 lashes for adultery. |
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Fearing that exposure of her adultery would ruin her public image, it was ultimately agreed that Blyton would instead file for divorce against Pollock. |
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Divorce legislation introduced in 1857 allowed for a man to divorce his wife for adultery, but a woman could only divorce if adultery were accompanied by cruelty. |
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Anne was also arrested, accused of treasonous adultery and incest. |
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According to the Historia Augusta, a usually unreliable source, he was prosecuted for adultery during this time but the case was ultimately dismissed. |
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In this same book Malory mentions Lancelot and Guinevere's adultery. |
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The Hudood Ordinances promulgated in 1979 equated rape with adultery. |
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In fact, it was not unknown for husbands and wives to collude in the wife's adultery, either to collect a large crim. con. settlement or to secure a divorce. |
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Stoning is a duty laid down in Allah's Book for married men and women who commit adultery when proof is established, or if there is pregnancy, or a confession. |
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Mosaic law also makes idolatry or the worship of other gods a capital offense, along with a host of other crimes, including adultery, cursing one's parents, and sodomy. |
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In R v Singh, the Court of Appeal held that a threat to expose the defendant's adultery would not be sufficient threat to overbear the will of an ordinary person. |
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The legal punishment for adultery is equal for men and women. |
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