The advice given to those affected by the potato blight bordered on the absurd. |
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Summer-style clothes are fine if you are inside, but our advice is to wrap up warmly when you go out. |
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I think you've had some excellent advice above and you'd do well to follow it. |
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And it supplies a wealth of advice on deciding whether to go solo in the first place. |
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The Sunday Times's own wardrobe mistress, Claudia Croft, will be on hand to offer advice. |
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Third-party professional advice could help consumers invest their funds judiciously. |
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A special car crime awareness drive is taking place all this month, with advice for drivers on ways to protect their property. |
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He always had time to listen and offer advice to family and friends and never passed judgement on others. |
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The programme will include details on the routes' degrees of difficulty and some advice on footwear and rainwear. |
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A quarter-century of feminism and here's advice on how to use a washboard and scrub the kitchen floor on your hands and knees. |
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In 1986 Her Majesty agreed to comply with the advice proffered to her by the Lords regarding abeyant peerages. |
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I think his advice is well-intentioned but it leaves me, as the debate as a whole does, feeling rather uncomfortable. |
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In the meantime there are sources of support and advice for men denied access to their children by mothers. |
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That's anyone under the age of 25 who decrees celebs, gushy reader advice and horoscopes to be past it. |
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When a doctor says he is working with a patient closely it means that he's having her come in for regular weigh-ins and giving diet advice. |
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The new outreach worker, a post currently being staffed on a job-share basis, will hold advice sessions starting in the New Year. |
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He is a reminder of the site's history, a unique tie to stories and advice from times past. |
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My companion wanted pork and took the waiter's advice on the spicy pork julienne. |
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Even when he was offering me advice on my personal life, he had me in stitches. |
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Teresa went into action, amassing all the information she could, while Terence telephoned specialists all over the world for advice. |
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I did in fact take action at that time on advice from officials to address these concerns. |
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Various websites and financial service providers give advice on how best to save. |
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I think we've seen all of them on the street today, just out and about, not really heeding any advice or warning to stay indoors. |
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Her family is steeped in tradition when it comes to race walking and Emma will have plenty of advice from her three brothers. |
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Veteran blogger Dan Drezner gives some advice to new webloggers if they wish to succeed in the world of blogs. |
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This advice is totally inappropriate for publication in a professional journal. |
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Mr. Friedman continued that there had been no advice, warning or suggestion that anything Jarvis had been told earlier was wrong. |
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I'm going to more or less take their advice, but probably juggle the numbers a bit. |
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The couple decided to try for a baby without seeking specialist advice in case they were warned off due to the risks involved. |
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The site generally provides advice on health, wellness and little tips for life. |
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Salesmen and brokers who purport to be acting on your advice are frequently more interested in their commissions. |
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There are too many powerful men who truly believe that the Waltons offer dandy advice on life and morals. |
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Importantly, the site also offers advice on what to do should your debt have run out of control. |
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It tells us to stop buying rounds but offers little practical advice on how to dodge them. |
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Take a safe trip and treat yourself to that well-deserved vacation with amazing deals and advice from well know websites. |
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We would like to offer some advice on how to ensure they do not become victims. |
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In it were their letters of obligation, acknowledging her latest distribution of money and clothing and prodigal advice. |
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Your local brick or masonry supplier should be consulted for specific advice. |
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I usually qualify my advice by saying I was an MP, not a Chemical Corps officer. |
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I just rang my brother to ask his advice but, as is always the way when you really want to speak to someone, he's out! |
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If it does not qualify me as a teacher, label my advice the ramblings of an old fool, and seek a teacher in whom you have confidence. |
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He rejected his father's advice, considering them to be wifty and impractical at best. |
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She had stopped to listen and offer words of advice, but the other members of that clique had stepped out of the shadows, laughing and jeering. |
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Any advice for well-tempered students who study with ill-tempered teachers? |
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Police today offered advice on how van owners can make themselves less vulnerable to the gang. |
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Well, we have for a long time provided early warning advice on the launch of ballistic missiles. |
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She particularly welcomed the new development of providing advice to those arrested. |
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I didn't want just absolution, I wanted advice, and I knew I wouldn't get it in my parish in Dehradun. |
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She wallows in television, bonding with characters as if they're her friends, while ignoring the sensible advice from her real friends. |
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Back in the Westminster bubble he is assailed by advice from all sides on how to react to the vicious swathe of cuts. |
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Not enough people are taking professional advice or putting sufficient money away to have an adequate retirement income. |
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They will then offer advice on how the groups can extend their services to a wider range of people. |
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The messages offer encouragement and advice on how to choose the best career. |
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They have established a ' helpdesk ' facility to ensure businesses get advice and support quickly and easily. |
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Obviously, Paul, anyone stupid enough to take your quackish advice deserves their outcomes. |
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For an advice leaflet or for further queries or information, farmers can contact the Environmental Services Section. |
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My advice is to just jump right into a job that sounds somewhat fun and interesting. |
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It already helps to drive up standards, accredit courses and provide advice. |
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As he told Parliament on Friday, he also had received advice from two British Queen's Counsel and one local senior counsel. |
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A lifestyle guru is a modern sort of mountebank, selling quack advice instead of false medicines. |
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But even out of government, successive administrations in Nigeria sought his advice. |
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The advice is totally free and grants are available to assist people who require essential adaptions. |
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There's good advice in this thread about shoes, belts, a nice analog watch, and a good-looking bag for your stuff. |
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Several lawyers have offered free advice on the issue and he said he would ask one of them what he should do. |
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Can you offer any advice on how to plan what to grow, how to set out and maintain the patch, what tools to get, etc? |
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A passionate and dedicated weightlifter himself, he took the advice of the greats of his era. |
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She also provides advice for patients with medical conditions who have to watch their diet. |
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Estimates of the unmet demand for consumer advice have been put at up to 1.5 million inquiries a year. |
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There was a film noir quality about that piece of managerial advice, and it fitted the times. |
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Women who go for bra fittings at high street retailers are getting poor advice, according to a report today. |
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When I was a senior house officer working in accident and emergency I was asked to take a telephone call from a patient wanting advice. |
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The weight, or importance, to be attached to such advice depends on all the circumstances. |
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My only advice for my sister was to use her military training to the best of her ability and stay strong. |
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I find myself in a quandary of sorts and wonder if you have any advice or insights you may be able to offer a young-ish, aspiring writer of fiction for the screen. |
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So she called another really famous pop star to commiserate and ask for advice. |
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You're going to need their lurve, and comprehensive advice on wet rot. |
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Her parents were told to institutionalize her, but thankfully, they bucked the conventional advice. |
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In this issue we have sought further advice from the well-preserved and the famously youthful on how not to grow old, on how to keep up with the genetic Joneses. |
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I bridled, too, at the unsolicited advice she persisted in giving my friends. |
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The situation was left with Mr Johnson being advised to contact his solicitor further for advice and being told that Social Services would hold his claim in abeyance. |
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The problem, though, is that this advice presumes that death threats are rare and abnormal. |
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One parent asked Grandin for her most important advice for raising a child with autism. |
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I agree, of course, that health advice is alarmist, and increasingly contradictory. |
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You see this a lot when individuals who are accused of something decide to clam up, often under the advice of their attorney. |
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Their authors promise that your spirit will be improved, your ambition honed, and your finances maximized by their advice. |
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Who do you turn to now when you have a decision to make, when you have one less person to provide validation or advice? |
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My advice would be to hold out for a rent abatement of some sort. |
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In 1998, he became a regular Tuesday fixture, assisting viewers in relationship issues and offering general life advice. |
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It was not only the advice that I gave parents about their kids, it was the standard I held for my own. |
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For the next two years, at the advice of doctors, nobody will give cady the details of the accident. |
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Now, having barely survived in a race that was not conceded, Malloy has some advice for his fellow Democrats. |
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As a well-known advocate for Baluch rights in Iran, young Iranians reach out to him for advice. |
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Virtual Kim swans in every so often to dish out advice like a buxom fairy godmother. |
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I saw you offered advice to Jon Hamm about how to handle the fascination over his bulge? |
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No free training and advice, no house, clothes and media spotlight, just singing, acting, shooting or writing between waiting on tables and scrubbing floors. |
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She provides advice on resume writing and job interview preparation. |
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In the case of Brunei, appeals are made to the Sultan of Brunei, who then refers the case to the Judicial Committee for advice. |
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Truman, who distrusted Stalin and turned for advice to an elite group of foreign policy intellectuals. |
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The European Aviation Safety Agency also followed the FAA's advice and grounded the only two European 787s operated by LOT Polish Airlines. |
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The agency provides technical advice on the flood risk assessment that must be submitted with most planning applications in flood risk areas. |
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For many years the Agency has been offering strong advice against the development of land in floodplains because of the risk of flooding. |
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In addition, it provides advice to DEFRA on the transposition of European water legislation in England and Wales. |
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The service also gives advice on what to do before, during and after a flood. |
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The GMC has powers to issue advice or warnings to doctors, accept undertakings from them, or refer them to a fitness to practise panel. |
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This was the period in which he gave Kingsley Amis extensive advice on the writing of Lucky Jim. |
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Lafferty, whom he discovered when he was nine, and asked for advice on becoming an author along with a Lafferty pastiche he had written. |
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The writer sent Gaiman an encouraging and informative letter back, along with literary advice. |
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But in August 1879, he set off to join her, against the advice of his friends and without notifying his parents. |
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His influence spread to the Samoans, who consulted him for advice, and he soon became involved in local politics. |
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Reitell became increasingly concerned and telephoned Feltenstein for advice. |
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Taking his uncle Tadeusz Bobrowski's advice, he convalesced at a spa in Switzerland. |
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On the advice of Wood, among others, he soon abandoned composition in favour of conducting. |
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Taking this advice on board, Lowry began to use a white background to lighten the pictures. |
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However, TV Licensing also says that it is not compulsory to follow this advice. |
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In 1967 the Deputy Master of the Royal Mint approached the Decimal Currency Board to ask for their advice on the introduction of a new coin. |
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As an ally of France, they were able to get advice on the Maginot design and apply it to Czechoslovak border fortifications. |
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Although her advice was ignored, her actions were later commended to the king by Sir William. |
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Knox had avoided being arrested by Lord Bothwell through Wishart's advice to return to tutoring. |
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With the country no longer safe for Protestant preachers, Knox left for the Continent in January 1554 on the advice of friends. |
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When Knox and a supporting colleague, William Whittingham, wrote to Calvin for advice, they were told to avoid contention. |
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Haig accepted the advice of Winston Churchill, Secretary of State for War, that exercising his right to shoot the ringleaders was not sensible. |
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From the eighteenth century onwards, the Sovereign made his or her choices upon the advice of the Government. |
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Quite simply, I would not have been able to do what I have in politics without his constant advice, guidance and support through all these years. |
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It is unclear, therefore, how much kings made judgments by themselves and how much they had to follow professional advice. |
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This was not taken well by the association, but St John Hope, the Assistant Secretary of the Antiquaries gave advice and was able to mediate. |
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There is a Counsel General for Wales who oversees the approval and creation of these laws, and gives advice to the Welsh Government. |
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Llywelyn was forced to come to terms, and by the advice of his council sent his wife Joan to negotiate with the king, her father. |
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It states that clerks should only advise on points of law and all advice should be given in open court in front of all present. |
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The Union provides a range of services, including a number of cafes, bars and shops, as well as advice, training and representation. |
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Vernon was the only person from whom Dylan took advice when writing poetry and he was invariably the first to read his finished work. |
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From 1750 to 1757 Wilson was in Italy, and became a landscape painter on the advice of Francesco Zuccarelli. |
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But against the advice of his corner, Conn continued to closely engage Louis in the later stages of the fight. |
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They held their first London gigs in support of the EP, under the advice of George and The Pooh Sticks lead singer Huw Williams. |
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Within two years, taking advice from doctors, he had lost five stone in weight. |
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We offered our opinion to the Zambian government and, as many governments do, they disregarded our advice. |
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As a callow sixth-former with an overinflated sense of my own poetic importance, I was in need of friendly advice and encouragement. |
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Philip eagerly accepted the advice, and quickly marched at the head of his troops into the territory of Flanders. |
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The poet gives advice on the best way to succeed in a dangerous world, rendered yet more dangerous by its gods. |
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Indeed, this type of leadership was the standard advice of Greek tactical writers. |
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Odysseus then summoned the spirit of the prophet Tiresias for advice on how to appease Poseidon upon his return home. |
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The governor general or monarch may, though, in certain crisis situations exercise their power without ministerial advice. |
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Its nine members are appointed by the governor general on the advice of the prime minister and minister of justice. |
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In 1807 Congress acted on President Jefferson's advice and made importing slaves from abroad a federal crime. |
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The prime minister at once became a powerful influence on the politically inexperienced Queen, who relied on him for advice. |
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Districts may apply to the British Crown for the grant of borough status upon advice of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom. |
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It maintains a UK Flag Registry and offers advice and guidance about flags and their usage. |
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It is used by over 600,000 travelers to share their experiences and look for advice. |
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Osteoporosis treatment includes advice to stop smoking, decrease alcohol consumption, exercise regularly, and have a healthy diet. |
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His advice to Augustine of Hippo on this point was to follow local liturgical custom. |
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The Brothers Grimm were criticized because their first edition was insufficiently German, and they followed the advice. |
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On the advice of fengshui experts, the Yongle Emperor chose a site north of Beijing, where he and his successors were to be buried. |
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After the advice of Xia Yuanji, he ordered the cessation of the treasure voyages on 7 September 1424, the day of his accession to the throne. |
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The Queen turned for private advice to Harley, who was uncomfortable with Marlborough and Godolphin's turn towards the Whigs. |
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In 1236, he followed Danylo of Halych's advice and moved from Novgorod to Kiev, leaving his son Alexander as his representative in the north. |
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Under Zhang's advice, Daoist temples were put under the Academy of Scholarly Worthies. |
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The healing occurred either in the person's dream or advice from the dream could be used to seek out proper treatment for illness elsewhere. |
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A beauty adviser provides product advice based on the client's skin care and makeup requirements. |
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Going against the advice of her male advisors, Isabella rode by herself into the city to negotiate with the rebels. |
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Members of the judicial branch are appointed by the governor with the advice and consent of the Senate. |
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The President designates the Prime Minister and, on his or her advice, the rest of the Council of Ministers. |
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In Zambia, it often offers loans for seed and expenses to the 180,000 small farmers who grow cotton for it, as well as advice on farming methods. |
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For Dutch artists, Karel van Mander's Schilderboeck was meant not only as a list of biographies, but also a source of advice for young artists. |
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In 1609, on the advice of the Duke of Lerma, Philip III expelled the 300,000 Moriscos of Spain. |
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Psephocracy on the British model has been extended, thanks to the advice of British psephocrats, to a couple of dozen nations. |
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Their exploits are intermingled with encounters with maidens and hermits who offer advice and interpret dreams along the way. |
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Such a claim leads to false advice for speakers and writers and immoral advice for humans. |
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It can be used to give advice or to describe normative behavior, though without such strong obligatory force as must or have to. |
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However, Philip was unable to keep the marriage secret, and he threatened to make Luther's advice public. |
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Brecht argues that Luther's mistake was not that he gave private pastoral advice, but that he miscalculated the political implications. |
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The city of Tempe considered legal advice about a civil union ordinance, but it did not pass a bill. |
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This advice is not wrong in the context of a judicial act under review, where the judgment will be held valid unless reversed on appeal. |
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In 1877 Queen Victoria took the title of Empress of India on the advice of Prime Minister, Benjamin Disraeli. |
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Judges often become mentors to young clerks, providing the young attorney with an experienced individual to whom he or she can go for advice. |
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Senators in Canada are not elected by the people but are appointed by the Governor General on the advice of the Prime Minister. |
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For example, members of the Canadian Senate are appointed by the Governor General on the advice of the Prime Minister. |
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At the meeting he made a stimulating speech, and on the way home asked for advice. |
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A life peer is created by the sovereign by Letters Patent under the Great Seal on the advice of the Prime Minister. |
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Receiving government advice does not necessarily bind the monarch into executing the advice, except where prescribed by the constitution. |
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Enoch Powell claimed that it was wrong of Macmillan to seek to monopolise the advice given to the Queen in this way. |
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Campbell initially refused to redistribute ministerial portfolios on the sole advice of the premier, who lacked the confidence of his cabinet. |
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Article 92 invests the king with the right to call for referendum on the advice of the president and the previous authorization of Congress. |
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For the most part, these ceremonial duties may be performed only on the authority, and with the binding advice, of the Government. |
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Sir George Strickland, 6th Baronet was asked for advice on getting models from Rome. |
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The goal in hiring the foreign advisors was to obtain transfers of technology and advice on systems and cultural ways. |
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Like Confucius, according to legend, he travelled throughout China for forty years to offer advice to rulers for reform. |
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It would not be unusual political advice if Laozi literally intended to tell rulers to keep their people ignorant. |
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The British Poet Laureate is an honorary position appointed by the monarch of the United Kingdom on the advice of the Prime Minister. |
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His judgement was trusted by all who knew him, and in later years statesmen went to him for counsel and advice. |
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He was told to stop drinking to mitigate liver damage, advice he initially followed but then disregarded. |
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Derbyshire County Council is opposed to this development, and is seeking legal advice on whether the matter can be taken to judicial review. |
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Periodically they were called upon to provide advice or prophecy, but they do not appear to be particularly feared. |
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There was also said to be a witch, who haunted the place and gave people bad advice. |
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Preaching in such an environment would seem to be easy, and Willimon could claim success by following the advice not to scare the horses. |
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The coaches watched from the sidelines, remembering their days of glory but only able to offer advice. |
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On Jane's advice we ordered two antipasti platters, one vegetarian and one with salami and roast ham. |
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The sovereign also grants Royal Charters on the advice of the Privy Council. |
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Prior to that, dissolution was effected by the Sovereign, always on the advice of the Prime Minister. |
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The commissioners were nominated on the advice of the Duke of Queensberry and the Duke of Argyll. |
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I'll give you advice on writing an article, but I won't hold your hand through the entire process. |
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Few activities are more fulfilling to 2Ls and 3Ls than giving advice to new students. |
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The advisory committee could only offer advice, but since that was almost always accepted they had real power. |
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I can't believe that, after all our advice against gambling, you walked into that casino! |
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I liked my very tall Aspieish doctor, loved his deep monotone and astute attention to detail and naturally, his pragmatic advice. |
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According to Accurso, there is evidence that advice from astrologists had no effect on Hitler's actions. |
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I took your advice and auctioned off that old painting. You'll never believe I got over 2,000 pounds for it! |
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Specific foot management may be required, including advice on footcare and treatment of fungal infections. |
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But there was no gainsaying the wisdom of the advice which he had given me as to concealing the treasure. |
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Cooper seems an odd choice, but imagine if they had taken MTV's advice and chosen Robert Pattinson? |
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The Learning and Teaching Scotland provides advice, resources and staff development to education professionals. |
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In practice these are always exercised by the monarch on the advice of the Prime Minister and the other ministers of HM Government. |
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But, as hope springs eternal in the human breast, he still goes from doctor to doctor for fresh advice. |
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These were on a number of topics, everything from medical advice to moral judgments. |
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He was similarly appreciative of them and gave them due credit for policies where he had used their advice. |
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In 191 Severus was made governor of Pannonia Superior by Commodus at the advice of Quintus Aemilius Laetus, prefect of the Praetorian Guard. |
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We do not know if Arcadius ever became aware of the existence of this advice, but it had no recorded effect. |
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Usually, judges attached to regular courts are formally appointed by the Monarch on the advice of the Prime Minister. |
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Henry was also careful to show that, unlike his mother the Empress, he would listen to the advice and counsel of others. |
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Suddenly, however, Henry turned back south towards Anjou, against the advice of his officials. |
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The barons anticipated that the King would act in accordance with these charters, subject to the law and moderated by the advice of the nobility. |
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This report became the first and most widely circulated of a series of plague tracts that sought to give advice to sufferers. |
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By the time it met, on 24 September at York, Charles had resolved to follow the almost universal advice to call a parliament. |
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It fell to the Queen to appoint Harold Macmillan as the new prime minister, after taking the advice of ministers. |
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Whilst William was away fighting, his wife, Mary II, governed the realm, but acted on his advice. |
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Pitt later appointed Pretyman Bishop of Lincoln then Winchester and drew upon his advice throughout his political career. |
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On the advice of Talleyrand, Napoleon ordered the kidnapping of the Duke of Enghien, violating the sovereignty of Baden. |
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As he was being carried down, he asked them to pause while he gave some advice to a midshipman on the handling of the tiller. |
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With few exceptions, the monarch is bound by constitutional convention to act on the advice of the Government. |
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In nearly all cases, the monarch is still the nominal chief executive, but is bound by convention to act on the advice of the Cabinet. |
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Prior to this, the power to dissolve Parliament was a royal prerogative, exercised by the sovereign on the advice of the prime minister. |
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In Scottish matters, the Sovereign acts on the advice of the Scottish Government. |
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He did not get around to proposing, but against his father's advice he mentioned his ideas on transmutation. |
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Later, convinced by the advice of his brother and his own solicitor, Turing entered a plea of guilty. |
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Its advice to primary care on prescribing drugs such as proton pump inhibitors has been criticised as wasteful. |
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Ahithophel, Absalom's chief counsel, hanged himself when he lost face after his advice was rejected. |
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Government accountants having read the advice then publish minimum guidelines on schools. |
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For advice and assistance in governing, the pope may turn to the College of Cardinals. |
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In the area of licensing technoloiges, UCLB provides commercial, legal and administrative advice to help companies broker licensing agreements. |
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By English law and custom they may only elect the person who has been nominated by the monarch on the advice of the prime minister. |
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They also note that the recipes were written with the advice of the best experts in medicine and philosophy. |
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Chambers suggested Polonius's advice to Laertes may have echoed Burghley's to his son Robert Cecil. |
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Despite Bacon's advice to him, James and the Commons found themselves at odds over royal prerogatives and the king's embarrassing extravagance. |
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Shelley also encouraged Byron to begin an epic poem on a contemporary subject, advice that resulted in Byron's composition of Don Juan. |
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John Stuart was educated by his father, with the advice and assistance of Jeremy Bentham and Francis Place. |
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He collapsed on 22 April 1869, at Preston in Lancashire, and on doctor's advice, the tour was cancelled. |
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She took advice from William and Robert Chambers of Edinburgh, directors of one of their favourite magazines, Chambers's Edinburgh Journal. |
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Gow, Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, who also gave him advice later in his career. |
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Parliament voted against the measure, but George reluctantly increased his son's allowance on the advice of Walpole. |
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Reed, the leader of the London Symphony Orchestra, who helped the composer with advice on technical points. |
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Elgar's Rondo, a 1993 stage play by David Pownall depicts the dead Jaeger offering ghostly advice on Elgar's musical development. |
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Following the release of Sticky Fingers, the Rolling Stones left England after receiving financial advice. |
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She and Olivia de Havilland secretly met with Cukor at night and at weekends for his advice about how they should play their parts. |
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The trainer and assistant typically give advice to the boxer on what he is doing wrong as well as encouraging him if he is losing. |
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A caddy's advice can only be given to the player or players for whom the caddy is working, and not to other competing players. |
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Hawke and Sellers are generally held to have been autocratic and decisive, but in fact both relied heavily on sound professional advice. |
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Sport England commissioned the preparation of design advice to assist in the master planning of large residential and mixed use developments. |
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Despite the accident Button still wanted to race, but was withdrawn by his team on medical advice. |
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While the Council can give advice, submit proposals, and monitor development projects, it does not have the authority to make official decisions. |
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The governor is appointed by the Queen on the advice of the British government. |
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Having expressed her views, The Queen abides by the advice of her ministers. |
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Invitations to address Parliament in this manner are determined by the Presiding Officer on the advice of the parliamentary bureau. |
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The President, who does not have an executive or policy role, exercises them on the advice of the Government. |
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The President is primarily a figurehead, but is entrusted with certain constitutional powers with the advice of the Council of State. |
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The reserve powers of the Crown for each territory are no longer considered to be exercisable on the advice of the UK government. |
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Six years later, in 1963, Macmillan resigned and advised the Queen to appoint the Earl of Home as prime minister, advice that she followed. |
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The Queen again came under criticism for appointing the prime minister on the advice of a small number of ministers or a single minister. |
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Its principal role is to provide direction and advice on military policy and strategy. |
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Kings had their own brehons to deal with cases involving the king's own rights and to give him legal advice. |
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In exercising these powers the monarch normally defers to the advice of the prime minister or other ministers. |
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For a few days it seemed that Walpole would be dismissed but, on the advice of Queen Caroline, the King agreed to keep him in office. |
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Charles wanted to confront them, but on the advice of Lord George Murray and the Council they made for Carlisle and successfully bypassed Wade. |
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On Gorst's advice, Disraeli gave a speech to a mass meeting in Manchester that year. |
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Thatcher had already begun to work on her presentation on the advice of Gordon Reece, a former television producer. |
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On 23 March 2002, she announced that on the advice of her doctors she would cancel all planned speaking engagements and accept no more. |
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The Senate is the upper house, consisting of 11 members appointed by the governor on the advice of the premier and the leader of the opposition. |
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They also include wealth management such as Rothschilds private banking and financial advice. |
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A governor is appointed by the Queen of the United Kingdom on the advice of the British Government to represent the monarch. |
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The Administrator is officially appointed by the British monarch on the advice of the Ministry of Defence. |
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The Leader also advises the House on proper procedure when necessary, but such advice is merely informal, rather than official and binding. |
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Under modern constitutional conventions, the sovereign acts on the advice of his or her ministers. |
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The King would seek the advice and consent of both houses before making any law. |
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However, George IV reluctantly granted his assent upon the advice of his ministers. |
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For want of money, Sovereigns had to summon Parliament annually and could no longer dissolve or prorogue it without its advice and consent. |
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Peerages, knighthoods, and most other honours are bestowed by the Sovereign only on the advice of the Prime Minister. |
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Furthermore, laws made by the sovereign on the advice of the Council, rather than on the advice of Parliament, were accepted as valid. |
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During Henry VIII's reign, the sovereign, on the advice of the Council, was allowed to enact laws by mere proclamation. |
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The sovereign may appoint anyone a Privy Counsellor, but in practice appointments are made only on the advice of the Her Majesty's Government. |
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The sovereign exercises executive authority by making Orders in Council upon the advice of the Privy Council. |
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In each case, personal access may only be used to tender advice on public affairs. |
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He reportedly sought acting advice on the role from Sean Connery, a friend and SNP supporter. |
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The Act created a new post of Counsel General for Wales, the principal source of legal advice to the Welsh Government. |
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Not every advice giver works under the aegis of an organization. |
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A fine example you are to a growing boy, with your lawless advice and thugduggery. |
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Be sure to pick up a copy of the Caltech newspaper The California Tech and enjoy the ultranerdy comics and enjoy the Dr. Quark advice column. |
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As her adopted uncle, I was giving a little fatherly as well as motherly and unclely advice. |
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The captain rarely referred to his wardroom for advice, and this resulted in their discontent. |
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You can take your unsolicited advice and stick it where the sun don't shine. |
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Meanwhile, still reeling from Lucy's request that he father her child, Chris asks around for advice. |
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One stop shop detailing history of all UK war memorials with advice on applying for funding. |
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Acupuncturists treat the mind and body as one, so as well as identifying imbalances, they will also provide dietary and lifestyle advice. |
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He will be keeping things simple, playing to his strengths and implementing well-meant advice sparingly. |
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