The sacrist had finished his exposition, and the sergeant-at-law was about to conclude a case which Nigel could in no way controvert. |
|
The defendants are all in a position to controvert the contents of the statements if they dispute them. |
|
I shall have to controvert one or two ideas that are almost universally accepted. |
|
They are wide open to spiritual suggestions that controvert and challenge the beliefs of their families. |
|
For soon, empirical evidence about actual marriages will exist to potentially controvert the predictions. |
|
If the employer is to controvert that, there should be documentation of the problems. |
|
If it is a factual question, although it can be received here, Mr Jackson would be entitled to attempt to controvert it if he could. |
|
Is that not the key proposition which the parties seek to controvert? |
|
Bottom line: Daron Acemoglu and Ed Glaeser have useful questions, but I don't think they controvert the fundamental point of the book. |
|
Michael Williams is not the first author to controvert its teachings. |
|
Each act of his, and each opinion expressed, is likely to abolish or controvert some previous act or expressed opinion. |
|
The main concerns of the medieval period were to ensure that scriptural statements were compatible with logic and to controvert the rival claims of the Hindus and the Buddhists. |
|
These projects try to design the proposed measures so that different institutions will complement and not controvert each other, and to ensure that women's safety and self-determination remain a top priority. |
|