Yet a vague assent to a vague assertion only yields twice as much vagueness. |
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Not to anyone's amazement, a woman was found in the audience who began nodding vigorous assent to everything Charles said. |
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He promptly fired a letter off, through his lawyer, declaring he that was confounded by the request that he assent to any such payment. |
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The respondent signed her assent to the petitions and obtained the assents of two other heirs-at-law. |
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We want leaders, not bobble-head dolls who nod their assent to whatever the administration tells them to do. |
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He had fallen in love, Mary's beauty and her assent to his affections spinning him like a top. |
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Solzhenitsyn, we can reasonably assent to Nabokov's formulation, thundered against vicious cruelty. |
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By convention, the monarch will not refuse her assent to a Bill passed by Parliament and she will act on the advice of her ministers. |
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There was a general, reluctant, grudging assent to do this, but they were all complying when suddenly a voice broke in. |
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The more basic problem lies in the undoubted decline, for a significant minority, of assent to previously popular orthodoxies and ideologies. |
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The patient may then readily assent to other requirements we both agree on. |
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Hooker displays an acute awareness that the hermeneutical task is not simply the intellectual assent to truth. |
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The lessor can neither refuse the license to assign, nor assent to the assignment, for he has nothing more to do with it. |
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The royal assent to this shoddy measure is not a victory for the government, but a defeat for all the rest of us. |
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Should Parliament assent to the amendments, this requirement will fall away. |
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We then asked all children of consenting parents to assent to study participation. |
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The one baptized is in a state of grace and must assent to, and cooperate with, this infusion in order to become inherently righteous. |
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To assent to obvious lies is to co-operate with evil, and in some small way to become evil oneself. |
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They might even assent to the idea that more and more women want marriage and children, not the bogus liberation that the sexual revolution purveyed. |
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Any Offer is expressly made conditional on Buyer's assent to all of the terms contained in the Offer without deviation. |
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The Executive undertakes to produce a coherent programme of government which the parliament is duty bound to scrutinise, debate and give assent to. |
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It is now Parliament's turn to give its assent to the applications of the two countries. |
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He has refused his assent to laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good. |
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Any peacekeeping presence will require Russian and Georgian assent to be effective. |
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Last week, even President Bush indicated his assent to looking at the system. |
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These defects reflect the conditional nature of Washington's assent to the exercise so far. |
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Until that time there is simply no question of us being able to assent to it. |
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By using this site, you signify your assent to the Cummins Filtration Privacy Policy. |
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However, the president declared that he would not assent to such a bill, arguing that the cost would be too great. |
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We do not need a bill to be read three times in the House of Commons and three times in the Senate and be given royal assent to do this. |
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By using the Website, you signify your assent to the Terms of Use as stated. |
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The Government of the Syrian Arab Republic has given its assent to the proposed extension. |
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Very little empirical research has been completed on assent to research in children. |
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Your continued use of the Website, following any revision to the Terms of Use, means you also assent to these changes. |
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Lastly, in 1571, the Settlement gained teeth sharper than the Act of Uniformity, when a Subscription Act required the beneficed clergy to assent to the Thirty-nine Articles. |
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The bobbleheads are yes-men, quietly nodding in assent to the questions they raise, while raising even more. |
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Mrs Dosett, aware that daintiness was no longer within the reach of her and hers, did assent to these walkings in Kensington Gardens. |
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This does not preclude further nominations from the floor at the annual meeting provided such nominees are present, are voting members in good standing, and assent to having their names put forward. |
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Likewise, in 2010, King Juan Carlos gave royal assent to a law permitting abortion. |
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The Ombudsman can only assent to such practice. |
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The constitution of Jordan grants its monarch the right to withhold assent to laws passed by its parliament. |
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Many, therefore, who did not assent to all that the King had said, joined in a loud hum of approbation when he concluded. |
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It must give its assent to international agreements. |
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You are giving your assent to the killing of civilians. |
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Your and the Contracting Party's assent to these Terms constitutes your express understanding and agreement that when personal data is provided to LMI, such data will be processed in the United States. |
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In the 1980s, Prime Minister Mahathir decided to reduce the scope of royal powers by a constitutional amendment that would allow 15 days for royal assent to bills, after which assent was deemed to have been given. |
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The king rejected the Grand Remonstrance and refused to give royal assent to the Militia Ordinance. |
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On 7 June 1753, King George II gave his formal assent to the Act of Parliament which established the British Museum. |
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President Koroma is yet to assent to the bill and has provided assurances that concerns raised by stakeholders pertaining to the independence of the proposed corporation would be addressed. |
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A lieutenant governor may defer assent to the governor general, and the governor general may defer assent to federal bills to the sovereign. |
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In 1261, Henry revoked his assent to the Provisions of Oxford and Montfort, in despair, left the country. |
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Although Greeni asserted at trial that it agreed to the September 14 Agreement because it felt that it was a 'take it or leave it' proposition, the record is clear that Greeni did assent to that agreement. |
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One is the requirement for congressional assent to a state of war. |
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It was feared that many of the delegates would refuse to give their individual assent to the Constitution. |
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The phrase is used to signify that the Monarch has granted his or her royal assent to a bill in order to make it become law. |
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The phrase is also written on the paper of the bill to show that the Monarch granted royal assent to the bill. |
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The bill will then go before the Monarch who has formal discretion whether to assent to the bill. |
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The congregation was asked to assent to Bishop Lane's consecration. |
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The law and his coronal oath require his undeniable assent to what laws the Parliament agree upon. |
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Scripture does not compel a mere intellectual assent to its doctrine, resting on logical argumentation, but rather it creates the living agreement of faith. |
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A great council was supposed to advise the king and give assent to royal decisions, although it is unclear how much freedom they actually enjoyed to oppose Henry's intentions. |
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In 1536, for example, Henry granted his assent to the Laws in Wales Act 1535, which legally annexed Wales, uniting England and Wales into a single nation. |
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After the English Civil War, it was accepted that parliament should be summoned to meet regularly, but it was still commonplace for monarchs to refuse royal assent to bills. |
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If a regent did assent to a bill of these kinds, it may not be held to be a valid law even if it gained the approval of both houses and royal assent. |
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Letters patent may also be used to grant royal assent to legislation. |
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In 1981, an Order in Council delegated to the lieutenant governor the power to grant the equivalent of the royal assent to bills passed by the Tynwald. |
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The power to withhold royal assent to Bills is controversial. |
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By the second of these powers, the President may refuse to assent to legislation passed by Parliament when he or she considers it to be unconstitutional. |
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The Clerk of the Parliaments presented the bills awaiting assent to the monarch, save that supply bills were traditionally brought up by the speaker. |
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