Sentence was adjourned for reports after the jury's verdict and the man was granted bail. |
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Sentence was deferred until January 14, 2004, to allow him to attend the care and respect programme. |
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Sentence was deferred for reports until June 5 and they were remanded in custody. |
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Sentence of death by fire was given on October 26th, to be carried into effect on the following day. |
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Sentence was adjourned to June 7 for the executive to produce his companies' accounts. |
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Sentence structure, in particular the placement of verbs, sometimes differs between the two varieties. |
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Sentence weight is adjusted by local high frequency words in each time slot and global high frequency words from all topic sentences. |
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Sentence by sentence, paragraph by paragraph, section by section, Heil connects words and phrases to detect chiasms throughout Hebrews. |
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Effects of Adjective Orientation and Gradability on Sentence Subjectivity. |
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The Liar Paradox can be addressed without any metalinguistic maneuvering simply by saying, with Jean Buridan, that the utterer of a Liar Sentence is speaking falsely. |
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You'll have to excuse my rather bland choice of words in the initial sentence. |
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Her sentence is nonetheless unduly harsh and rather stupidly unimaginative, as well as completely out of kilter with community expectations. |
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The first sentence of paragraph 40 is accordingly to be treated as an admission. |
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The offenders' liberty, in the absence of sentence remission, would actually be restricted for a longer period than if incarcerated. |
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He has apparently been offered remission of his present sentence and immunity from further prosecution if he testifies. |
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Their penalties included forfeiture of the potential remission of sentence otherwise available to them. |
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The trial was postponed to today for argument in mitigation and aggravation of sentence. |
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By volunteering to go, prisoners would win a remission of sentence and efface the stigma of jail. |
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There are free pardons, there are conditional pardons, there is the remission of sentence, there are a range of options. |
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These matters are remitted to the Ontario Court of Justice for the imposition of a sentence warranted in law. |
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However he also showed that linear sentence systems do have independent axiom systems. |
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But the court clerk who read out the official sentence told reporters none of the accused had been sentenced to lashes. |
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Six months ago her sentence was deferred to see if she could stay out of trouble and make a go of her life. |
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But her long harsh sentence is cockeyed, as is Peter Beattie's very disappointing and uncharacteristically maladroit response. |
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In Russian, this sentence is impersonal, without a subject or a predicate, and only Russian case endings indicate the relations between words. |
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This speculation contains three conjectures within the space of one sentence to no purpose. |
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What does it mean to say you are increasing a sentence by reason of or in consideration of evidence that was not given at the trial? |
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He plays with sharp alternations of mood, from the high-spirited to the melancholic in a single sentence or musical cue. |
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In a Khmer text there are no spaces between words, instead spaces indicate the end of a clause or sentence. |
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In passing sentence the judge said that the appellant had an appalling record. |
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The Recorder of Leeds, Judge Norman Jones QC adjourned sentence until next Friday but told Richardson a life sentence was inevitable. |
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The honorary recorder of York, Judge Paul Hoffman, gave her a two-year prison sentence suspended for two years. |
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A council has been blamed for a man's fall into delinquency and crime which led to a life sentence in prison. |
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But, one is never really sure how a single word or sentence out of a whole post can affect the way in which a reader is going to comment. |
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Usually, these delinquent mothers are charged by the police and have to serve a sentence. |
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The arrest resulted in the recovery of over 700 stolen items, and a man receiving a two-year prison sentence. |
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Notice that verbs in three of the families may also stand alone and be the main verb of a sentence. |
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The nearer the main verb is to its subject, the easier the sentence is to understand. |
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The reason they failed was because they didn't have the ability to suitably analyze the original Korean sentence for translation into English. |
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She received the sentence for assaulting a hotel receptionist after trespassing on the property. |
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Trinculo felt like a prisoner about to be released after serving a full life sentence. |
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A typical Ojibwa sentence contains a multipart verb, the core meaning of which is carried by a verb stem, itself composed of meaningful elements. |
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The prosecutor earlier asked the court to sentence David to four years in jail. |
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A non-custodial sentence, by definition, is regarded as something that is imposed when the person is not a serious or recidivist offender. |
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If you read my sentence without the red mist descending you might notice there was no comma after the word grammar. |
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In January, Liberal Democrat MP Malcolm Bruce urged Foreign Office ministers to back Gregory's plea against her sentence. |
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He was committed in custody for sentence to Burnley Crown Court after the bench said the theft merited custody. |
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In a majority decision, the full bench of the Supreme Court quashed the previous suspended sentence. |
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The statistics emerging from the present survey does suggest some attenuation in the level of public dissatisfaction with sentence severity. |
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That single sentence is the only published reference to the Book I've ever seen. |
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No one could fail to be moved by the statements of the family and no sentence I can pass may in any way recompense their loss. |
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It is the view of the Attorney General that the total sentence of twelve years was, in all the circumstances, unduly lenient. |
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The Attorney General applies for leave to refer the sentence to this Court and we hereby grant that leave. |
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The final sentence, however, rests with the judge and Beaney may still be put behind bars. |
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When the Home Secretary reprieved Edmunds's death sentence on ground of insanity many believed he based this decision on her gender and class. |
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The last half of the sentence was said with a rage so great that the room shook violently, nearly throwing everyone off their balance. |
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Both observations could be seen as a reflection or consequence of the cognitive mechanisms underlying sentence processing. |
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That the Home Secretary reprieved Edmunds on ground of insanity rather than simply commuting her death sentence to a life term is intriguing. |
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It is particularly painful to write that sentence, because I had a very large wedge on the horse that came second. |
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If you don't know whether or not to use a colon, a semicolon, or a dash, cut that sentence down! |
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Be ruthless with clutter, write in the active voice, place each idea into a sentence of its own, and lastly, get your punctuation right. |
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If the offence is serious enough to warrant it, the court may consider imposing a community sentence. |
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If foul language could be banned in schools then perhaps we could hear people talking English without hearing the F word in every sentence. |
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Her eyes skimmed the familiar writing and descended knowingly on that one sentence that seemed to haunt her desperately. |
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He received a two-year sentence which he will serve in addition to his current jail term. |
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Well yes, but if I'd written that sentence, I'd have changed the word order. |
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It is as important to the article as the first sentence is to the tabloid journalist. |
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We now have a maximum sentence of 7 years for reckless damage to a computer, 5 years for taking trade secrets, and 2 years for hacking. |
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For discretionary lifers this minimum period is known as the ' relevant part ' of the sentence. |
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After half a life sentence in the rag trade, Tim has now escaped to fool about with old houses. |
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I understand your points, and although my head buzzes trying to take each sentence in, I'm taking it on board. |
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His trial was held in January and sentence was adjourned to Doncaster Crown Court while a pre-sentence report was prepared. |
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Judge Simpson agreed to adjourn sentence for four weeks to allow for a pre-sentence report to be prepared. |
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He had been released from prison last April after serving a sentence for assault and the unauthorised taking of a car. |
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One defendant was jailed for seven years and the other's sentence was adjourned for a pre-sentence report. |
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His counsel said he understood imprisonment was inevitable but asked for sentence to be adjourned so his client could put his affairs in order. |
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Mr. Justice Carney said the only reason he adjourned the sentence and further hearing was because the youth faced a term of detention. |
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Judge Roger Scott heard that he was a man of previous good character and agreed to adjourn his sentence for the preparation of various reports. |
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Judge Charles Wade adjourned sentence to April 22 so the probation service can prepare pre-sentence reports on the teenager. |
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However a judge had to adjourn passing sentence because the defendant must be returned to prison to finish an earlier sentence. |
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The man, of Bideford, Devon, had his bail extended by Judge John Neligan, who adjourned sentence for a pre-sentence report. |
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I was about to finish a sentence with a preposition there, something I never do. |
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The film jumps back and forth between his rise to power and the trial that led to his 25-year sentence. |
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A slight lift in the voice at the end of a sentence changes statement to question. |
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A number of newspapers have jumped on a sentence or two in the report to try to twist it into a condemnation of the administration's policy. |
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The second sentence of paragraph 41 of the Court's judgment is framed in not untypical Delphic terms. |
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His tip-off to police landed Bailey with a five-year jail sentence when he appeared at York Crown Court. |
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Roxanne completed the sentence, trying to wave her hands around in emphasis and succeeding only in whapping Donny in the face. |
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Pardon me, but what possible meaning can the word friend have in that sentence? |
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The government reneged, and he received a sentence of a year and a day at Leavenworth. |
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In our judgment, where a defendant is at risk of being subject to an automatic life sentence, that fact should be properly determined. |
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He will not be entitled to automatic release until May, on the expiry of 30 years of the sentence. |
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We have to get the transmission of a complete sentence down, letter-perfect. |
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He penned a 300-word long sentence without using a verb or an auxiliary on the Washington summit 15 years ago. |
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The judge warned the duo they must not assume the fact he had adjourned sentence for pre-sentence reports meant he was in any way indicating what penalty would follow. |
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In transformational grammar, when parts of a sentence are moved around, an inaudible, invisible trace may be left behind in the original position of the moved constituent. |
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We can sum him up in a single sentence, a single word will probably do. |
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This virus is forcing all of us to look at the way we construct our respective social boundaries, and how we sentence those perceived as transgressors. |
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After the sentence was handed down, the men were led in handcuffs out of the courthouse amid crowds of people. |
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The sentence is dictated by statute and therefore the defendant gets next to no payoff for his guilty plea. |
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She then shouted that she was innocent and that adding another six months to her prison sentence because she refused to answer questions would make no difference. |
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The illegal execution of a guiltless man, whose death sentence the governor of the state had already overturned, however, is truly tragic and nowise sugarcoated in the show. |
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So your submission was directed at the specificity of a percentile discount rather than the entitlement of some allowance in the reduction of the punitive sentence? |
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Otherwise you could scoot right through in the time it takes to read this sentence and be none the wiser. |
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Doesn't the way he respelled this sentence look really messy? |
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The claimant was given an extended sentence and after release, but during the period of licence, he was recalled by the Secretary of State and returned to prison. |
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It means that if a recidivist parolee is given a 10-year sentence by the court, for instance, he or she will actually have to serve a 15-year sentence. |
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He was nearing the end of his sentence, but the woman enlisted Joplin to marry them before he was released. |
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Some people think it is wrong to end a sentence with a preposition, but the construction is quite common in English. |
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Breaking the offending sentence into two sentences is grammatically correct but often rhythmically wrong. |
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My apologies if the tenses in the preceeding sentence are grammatically incorrect. |
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In England and America, branding on the thumb was a standard non-capital sentence for those granted benefit of clergy after conviction for many crimes such as grand larceny. |
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It is a well-formed English sentence with a use in the language. |
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He was standing in front of the firing squad when his sentence was commuted to exile in Siberia. |
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One whole shade of opinion, opposed to the death penalty, argued that his sentence should be commuted to life. |
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Mr Justice Penry-Davey adjourned sentence for reports to be prepared. |
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The judge offered to adjourn sentence to allow the defendant to be with his daughter during that time, but he opted for his case to be dealt with. |
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Note the tautology in the first sentence, the feeble attempt at punnery. |
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In some jurisdictions this is a mandatory sentence of death. |
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Indeed, if my dear husband is reading, the previous sentence does not apply to you, as the regular bestowal of gifts is part of the marriage contract. |
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Hindley claimed to have repented and this is why Longford campaigned against her life sentence, she explains. |
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The sentence has the public, never that trusting of politicians to begin with, wondering how seriously white-collar crime is being taken by the courts. |
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White had been convicted of voluntary manslaughter, the lightest possible sentence for his crime. |
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It was also noted that none of the prisoners had any private law right which he could have pursued, since remission of sentence was not a right but an indulgence. |
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For one thing remission for good behaviour was one third of the sentence. |
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Stiffer sentences should be handed down and a mechanism should be introduced where remission of a percentage of the prison sentence could be attached to the recovery of funds. |
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In a case the state had granted remission on the ground that the accused was implicated in a false case even when his sentence was upheld by the Supreme Court. |
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There are much tighter restrictions on the administrative capacity of prison authorities to grant either some remission of the length of a sentence or to provide release. |
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One youth aged 17, had been released from a four-month custody sentence for a racist attack on a Turkish worker at his Acomb shop only days before the incident. |
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Under it he will serve a five-year jail sentence, plus three years of extra supervision by the probation service during which he can be put back in prison if he reoffends. |
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They were each sentenced to 29 years in prison but were released in 1992 as part of an amnesty granted to political prisoners, having served only five years of their sentence. |
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Dwayne Betts entered prison at 16, haunted by a crime for which he received an 8-year sentence. |
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I hereby sentence you, not to death, but to thirty lashes of the whip. |
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Insofar as each one of the three words underlined above has more than one meaning, the sentence is an amphibology, and one difficult to translate literally. |
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The first sentence is a standard reportorial sentence from a third-person perspective, whereupon follows a direct quotation of Hordubal's thoughts with no quotational signals. |
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They now claim that Amanda actually wielded the knife and struck the deadly blow, increasing her sentence to 28-and-a-half years. |
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Brown became the youngest person on death row, but his sentence was subsequently reduced to life. |
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The attempt was hatched in an effort to have a death sentence on an IRA man commuted, the military pensions archives reveal. |
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And just in case anyone forgot, medical advances have transformed AIDS from a death sentence to something more manageable. |
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Meanwhile, there is not so much as a sentence, or even a clause, about the woebegone state of the episcopate, and its role in hampering the Church's mission. |
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I say this sentence to myself over and over, I visualize it, and I realize that the attraction of the image lies in the life implied by the recumbent reader. |
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Because the sentence in under two years, neither dolce nor Gabbana will actually have to serve jail time. |
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A number of other convictions were for offences of dishonesty, including one for which he received a 4 month prison sentence for handling stolen goods. |
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By the end of her sentence tears have welled up around my reddening eyes. |
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Then he has the nerve to put a exclamation mark after the sentence! |
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He arrived on the Belgravia in 1864, with a 15-year sentence to serve for house-breaking and worked as a woodcutter, sawyer, fencer and general labouring teamster. |
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Yet if the following sentence means anything, it is a squinting toward hypnotism. |
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You'd imagine a 26-year sentence for a brutal murder would be enough to assuage the amour-propre of any police force. |
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Considering the extent of his crimes, he was given a surprisingly short sentence. |
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He will learn June 29 if the judge will sentence him to any of the 10 years in prison the law allows for BUI in Vermont. |
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A HOUSE husband who admitted supplying cannabis narrowly avoided a prison sentence because of the impact a jail term would have on his children. |
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For example, in the sentence the dog did not find its bone, the clause find its bone is the complement of the negated verb did not. |
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Because of the strict SVO syntax, the topic of a sentence generally has to be the grammatical subject of the sentence. |
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Connelly was given a so-called imprisonment for public protection sentence, which carries a minimum term. |
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King Charles II did not keep the promise made to the house but executed the sentence of death on Sir Henry Vane the Younger. |
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Moreover, anyone serving a prison sentence of one year or more is ineligible. |
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It is sometimes noted that John Mandeville also has a sentence on macrophallism. |
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It's a death sentence for the embryo, for there is no way to reimplant it in the uterus. |
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Warwick was also condemned to death, but his life was spared and his sentence reduced to life imprisonment. |
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On 31 July, the appeals court overturned Richards' conviction, and Jagger's sentence was reduced to a conditional discharge. |
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Often, media outlets covering a match will personally score the match, and post their scores as an independent sentence in their report. |
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The bomb was set by Eric Rudolph, an American domestic terrorist, who is currently serving a life sentence for the bombing. |
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Each sentence is like a viper, coiled in on itself and ready to bite. |
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Eight rapists locked up in 2011-12 will be set free after serving just half their sentence. |
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Anyone found with an uncertificated weapon receives a 10-year minimum sentence. |
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Despite this, Elizabeth hesitated to order her execution, even in the face of pressure from the English Parliament to carry out the sentence. |
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Likewise, nonasserted material in a discourse longer than a sentence is not rejected when the main assertion is negated. |
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That's the compelling beginning of Cannon Fodder, which opens with a bang and keeps its action vivid and engrossing from its very first sentence. |
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A sentence set in an oldstyle serif and a similar-weight sans serif at the same point size will appear to be two different sizes. |
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Why is standing out still a death sentence for black kids in America? |
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When a wholly detached expression or sentence is parenthesized, the final stop comes before the last mark of parenthesis. |
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Here the possessor is the logical subject, while the possessed object is the grammatical subject of an equative sentence. |
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Spence admitted three breaches of a restraining order and was given a six-month prison sentence suspended for two years. |
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In Sallust's histories, the founding and early history of Rome is almost reduced to a single sentence. |
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For them, the breast is a tapu area of the body, with a diagnosis of cancer or having a breast amputation akin to a death sentence. |
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This rule only proceeds and takes place when a person can not of common law condemn another by his sentence. |
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The second part is the sentence, which is the judge's pronunciation upon a cause depending between two in controversy. |
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Also, if the object of a preposition was marked in the dative case, a preposition may conceivably be located anywhere in the sentence. |
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However, desu may never come before the end of a sentence, and da is used exclusively to delineate subordinate clauses. |
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Rather than changing a word or using a positive, words like nobody, not, nothing, and never would be used in the same sentence. |
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A death sentence could be carried out on captured pirates at sea without benefit of trial, according to the statute. |
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They may express the equivalent of an entire English sentence in a single word. |
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In these types of languages, a single verb may include information that would require an entire sentence in English. |
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Another way in which languages convey meaning is through the order of words within a sentence. |
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Syntactical rules determine how word order and sentence structure is constrained, and how those constraints contribute to meaning. |
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The general Celtic grammar shows Wackernagel's Rule, so putting the verb at the beginning of the clause or sentence. |
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Sulla and his supporters in the Senate passed a death sentence on Marius, Sulpicius and a few other allies of Marius. |
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Against the sentence of one consul, an appeal could be brought before his colleague, which, if successful, would see the sentence overturned. |
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The sentence was to be carried out in Acla, to show that the conspiracy had its roots in that colony. |
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One of Cubas' first acts after taking office in August was to commute Oviedo's sentence and release him. |
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More than 12,000 people had served a prison sentence in those camps by then, and at least several hundred had died or been killed. |
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He was convicted of murder and sentenced to death, but President Truman commuted his sentence to life. |
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Nahuatl allows all possible orderings of the three basic sentence constituents. |
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Before completing his sentence, Pinto was taken prisoner by invading Tatars. |
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Chinese additionally differs from English in that it forms another kind of sentence by stating a topic and following it by a comment. |
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For example, my very good friend Peter is a phrase that can be used in a sentence as if it were a noun, and is therefore called a noun phrase. |
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An adjective phrase is a group of words that plays the role of an adjective in a sentence. |
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There are six theoretically possible basic word orders for the transitive sentence. |
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A fixed or prototypical word order is one out of many ways to ease the processing of sentence semantics and reducing ambiguity. |
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This tendency can then grammaticalize to a privileged position in the sentence, the subject. |
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In practice, there is great flexibility in word order, though the one rule usually followed is that the verb goes last in the sentence. |
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Generative grammars are among the theories that focus primarily on the form of a sentence, rather than its communicative function. |
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Viewing this sentence as consisting of a single finite clause, there are five auxiliary verbs and two main verbs present. |
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Old Rapa words are still used for the grammar and structure of the sentence of phrase but most common context words were replaced be Tahitian. |
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They remain semantically transitive, typically assuming an object made prominent using a topic marker or mentioned in a previous sentence. |
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They have no effect on the direct translation of a sentence, but they are used to alter the mood of the sentence spoken. |
|
The following example shows the difference between e and ae when applied in the same sentence. |
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Thus, an interrogative sentence is a sentence whose grammatical form shows that it is a question. |
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A particle may be placed at the beginning or end of the sentence, or attached to an element within the sentence. |
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This generally takes the place in the syntactic structure of the sentence normally occupied by the information being sought. |
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On the other hand, it is possible for a sentence to be marked grammatically as a question, but to lack the characteristic question intonation. |
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Moreover, in the propositional case, a sentence is classically provable if its double negation is intuitionistically provable. |
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This eliminates the need for the speaker to analyse each sentence grammatically, yet deals with a situation effectively. |
|
Such a sentence eases the burden on the Lexicon as it requires no grammatical analysis whatsoever. |
|
Languages having cases often exhibit free word order, because thematic roles are not required to be marked by position in the sentence. |
|
Case is based fundamentally on changes to the noun to indicate the noun's role in the sentence. |
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Like Japanese, the nominative case has two distinctions, one representing the topic of a sentence and the other the subject. |
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The judge gave his sentence orally in Norman, which was then written in Latin. |
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In modern American English usage, a complete sentence precedes a colon, while a list, description, explanation, or definition follows it. |
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Dutch further capitalizes the first word of any quotation following a colon, even if it is not a complete sentence on its own. |
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In Armenian, a colon indicates the end of a sentence, similar to a Latin full stop or period. |
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The stress placed on words within sentences is called sentence stress or prosodic stress. |
|
The main stress within a sentence, often found on the last stressed word, is called the nuclear stress. |
|
In the case of many such words the strong form is also used when the word comes at the end of a sentence or phrase. |
|
Historically, generative proposals made focus a feature bound to a single word within a sentence. |
|
Lack of an overt case marker can restrict an object's distribution in the sentence. |
|
This has to do with the impact of alignment on the level of the whole sentence rather than the individual word. |
|
If the sentence does not have an auxiliary verb, this type of simple inversion is not possible. |
|
Simple clitics are free morphemes, meaning they can stand alone in a phrase or sentence. |
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They may be subject to global word order constraints that act on the entire sentence. |
|
It is not used as a verb in the grammar of the sentence but introduces prepositional phrases and adds emphasis. |
|
A string of words that can be replaced by a single pronoun without rendering the sentence grammatically unacceptable is a noun phrase. |
|
The word he, for instance, functions as a pronoun, but within the sentence it also functions as a noun phrase. |
|
Traditional grammar defines the object in a sentence as the entity that is acted upon by the subject. |
|
Objects are distinguished from subjects in the syntactic trees that represent sentence structure. |
|
English sentence structures that grow down and to the right are easier to process. |
|
In the active voice, the subject of the sentence performs the action or causes the happening denoted by the verb. |
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The position of the sentence adverbs is important to those theorists who see them as marking the start of a large constituent within the clause. |
|
Note also that there is no need to front the shared noun in such a sentence. |
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In the first sentence, koji is in the nominative, and in the second koje is in the accusative. |
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It might seem that every grammatically complete sentence or clause must contain a finite verb. |
|
Another type are sentence fragments described as phrases or minor sentences. |
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Finite verbs play a particularly important role in syntactic analyses of sentence structure. |
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In some cases, its only function is to make a sentence predicated with a stative verb more polite. |
|
Separating these articles and nominalizing the former part will often result in a sentence with a related, but different meaning. |
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Intonation patterns characteristic of questions often involve a raised pitch near the end of the sentence. |
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In languages written in Latin, Cyrillic or certain other scripts, a question mark at the end of a sentence identifies questions in writing. |
|
When a sentence continues discussing a previously established topic, it is likely to use pronouns to refer to the topic. |
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Cleft sentences are copula constructions in which the focused element serves as the predicate of the sentence. |
|
The term dummy pronoun refers to the function of a word in a particular sentence, not a property of individual words. |
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For example, in the sentence Sally arrived, but nobody saw her, the pronoun her is an anaphor, referring back to the antecedent Sally. |
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Capital letters are used as the first letter of a sentence, a proper noun, or a proper adjective. |
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Also, texts were sometimes laid out per capitula, where every sentence had its own separate line. |
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The following day he was sentenced to burning at the stake, the same sentence as in Vienne. |
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The sentence for murder is, in all cases, mandatory and depends upon the age of the offender at the time of the crime or conviction. |
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Since the abolition of capital punishment, murder has carried a mandatory life sentence in English law. |
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Dudley and Stephens were convicted of murder and sentenced to be hanged, however their sentence was later reduced to just six months in prison. |
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The more the evidence demonstrates an unpremeditated quality to events, the more the sentence may be mitigated. |
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Also included is the power to punish, sentence, and direct future action to resolve conflicts. |
|
In solemn proceedings the maximum sentence is 5 years imprisonment, or an unlimited fine. |
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This may include, for example, aggravating circumstances which will be used to elevate the defendant's sentence if the defendant is convicted. |
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The sentence is delivered by a majority of the 12 jurors and the 3 professional judges. |
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In the latter, he would be charged with murder, with the sentence being death or life imprisonment. |
|
The judge may but does not always follow the recommendations of the jury when deciding on a sentence. |
|
Next to each premise and conclusion is a shorthand description of the sentence. |
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While the prisoners may have been released once the sentence was served, they generally didn't have the resources to get themselves back home. |
|
Depending on the crime, the sentence was imposed for life or for a set period of years. |
|
Transportation was not a sentence in itself, but could be arranged by indirect means. |
|
It legitimised transportation as a direct sentence, thus simplifying the penal process. |
|
A sentence of fourteen years was imposed on prisoners guilty of capital offences pardoned by the king. |
|
One sentence of Han Fei's that Xi quoted appeared thousands of times in official Chinese media at the local, provincial, and national levels. |
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Usually it's not, as it's only key words that are Rogeted, so the rest of the sentence gets flagged. |
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The court returned a sentence of guilt in the first charge, but innocence in the second. |
|
The judge declared a sentence of death by hanging for the infamous cattle rustler. |
|
Everyone was surprised by the severeness of the sentence the judge imposed. |
|
The only indication that 139. is a simplex is the sentence intonation and the absence of a break between the verb and the subject. |
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If I had to describe our music in one sentence, I'd say 21st century Krautrock for shoegazing space cadets. |
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Different ways of pronouncing the sentence affects the meaning, or, what the speaker intends to convey. |
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The judge gave him ten days to put his affairs in order before beginning his sentence. |
|
At this time in the Tang dynasty only the emperor had the authority to sentence criminals to execution. |
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The Transportation Act 1717 allowed courts to sentence convicts to seven years' transportation to America. |
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Webb and Rott found, among others, an accumulative effect of repetition of the unknown word in either a sentence or a text. |
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An essentially floral diction pregnates every sentence and every phrase, and the theme has been conveyed in a rigmarolic manner. |
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Spell checking in German, Reformed German, and Swiss German that finds and corrects capitalization errors at the beginning and within a sentence. |
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The pleasures of Bay bird shooting should not be spoken of in the same sentence with cocking or sniping. |
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He appealed for a commutation of his death sentence to life imprisonment. |
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You should recast the last sentence in your essay to make it clearer. |
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The sentence will read better if you change the tense of the verb. |
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Inversion of the two words changes the meaning of the sentence. |
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That sentence is aposiopetic because it does not complete speech with gesture. |
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Before any of his apparitors could execute the sentence, he was himself summoned away by a sterner apparitor to the other world. |
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She intimidated me so much that I could hardly get out a coherent sentence in her presence. |
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He was able to plea down his sentence by revealing the names of three of his cohorts, as well as the source of the information. |
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I took a moment to collect my thoughts, and likewise to frame in French the sentence by which I proposed to open business. |
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The utmost that could be obtained was that her sentence should be commuted from burning to beheading. |
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Because this sentence makes a statement, a period is the appropriate endmark. |
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An argument hinges upon entailment whereas an if-then sentence hinges upon implication. |
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That night he dictated a final sentence to the scribe, a boy named Wilberht, and died soon afterwards. |
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The general structure and word order of a Latin sentence can therefore vary. |
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On the other hand, the only processes that could directly give a sentence new meanings would not give its components new meanings. |
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