If he does not improve his timekeeping, then he will ultimately be dismissed. |
|
These cannot be dismissed unless the university will allow me to tent and maintain a garden in the Quad. |
|
It astonishes me how easily and often we're dismissed as racists, particularly in intellectual circles. |
|
Contempt proceedings were dismissed after the men gave assurances that they would abide by the court ruling. |
|
For the above reasons, the appeal is dismissed and the acquittal of the Respondent is upheld. |
|
Alternatively, reporters writing on concerns surrounding the issue were dismissed as rabble-rousers. |
|
Any squad member violating this rule will be dismissed from his or her respective squad for the balance of that particular season. |
|
Those who heatedly disputed this at the time were dismissed as scaremongering racialists. |
|
This can't be just dismissed as a manifestation of latent racism in Australian society. |
|
The Liberator 1, while late to the party, can't be easily dismissed from the pack of competitors seeking to win the prize. |
|
Geetha, another sacked female employee, also attempted suicide after she was dismissed. |
|
A motion by the Plaintiffs for a summary judgment as to the Defendants' liability and negligence was dismissed. |
|
The case was adjourned until yesterday after the jury was dismissed for legal reasons part-way through. |
|
But Johnson dismissed this argument, and allowed his police statement to be admitted as evidence. |
|
The flurry of inputs, some of which admittedly do not have much substance should not be dismissed. |
|
The idea that an ally has a right to independent judgment is too easily dismissed as what could be described as wetness. |
|
He refused to go and was dismissed without further ado by Cudlipp who succeeded him. |
|
It's going to be dismissed, with reasonable justification, as just another bit of moral-panic propaganda. |
|
Race arguments were dismissed and problems were believed to be attributed to the juveniles ' family situations. |
|
He dismissed any suggestion that the central rank posed a danger to people crossing the road to get a taxi. |
|
|
Nobody said anything though, and it may have just been dismissed as a jokey comment. |
|
It was an immensely silly argument, and might be dismissed as the rantings of a second-rate polemicist. |
|
Miller would have dismissed the thud if it were not for the unusual whine that the engine had developed soon after the thud. |
|
But she blew the whistle on what she believed was misconduct in the military, and in 2000, she was dismissed on medical grounds. |
|
A lot of this spend, said IDC, will be on 3G networks, which have been dismissed in some quarters as expensive white elephants. |
|
Sailors have long reported sightings of these waves, but reports had mainly been dismissed either as exaggeration or outright fibs. |
|
One rather gathers, reading between the lines, that he dismissed Piggy as a fool. |
|
He was dismissed for a series of low scores, typically caught at the wicket, or in the slips. |
|
In the event, the judge held that the decision was not perverse and he dismissed the appeal. |
|
The company had dismissed the man three years ago for what it termed ticket sales irregularities. |
|
They show that what the front office dismissed as kid stuff was, in reality, the greatest sustained burst of wit in American movie history. |
|
The fact that the employee is dismissed while in receipt of his contractual sick pay does not make the termination automatically unfair. |
|
Religious critics lacked fervor and moral authority, while surviving Populist and Progressive skeptics were dismissed as killjoys or cranks. |
|
The few who warned against the dangers of nuclear were dismissed as alarmists or even hysterics. |
|
The Melbourne forward yesterday had his appeal against an 18-week suspension for a king-hit on O'Neill dismissed by the NRL judiciary chairman. |
|
He was happy to tell me everything he knew about lower class being unfairly dismissed. |
|
The motion was dismissed, on terms, without prejudice to the defendant's right to renew the motion at trial. |
|
This determination obviously put it in good stead because the company's lawsuit has been dismissed with prejudice. |
|
In case of the class-action suit, following the deal with the Commision, all claims were dismissed with prejudice on 12 June. |
|
Often dismissed as Joyce's little woman, Nora emerges in Murphy's film as his easy equal, in force of character if not education. |
|
|
This appellant's convictions are safe, and his appeal against conviction is dismissed. |
|
For all these reasons, we consider that the jury's verdict in respect of this appellant was safe, and that her appeal must be dismissed. |
|
It is a noble and powerful impulse, one not casually to be ridiculed or dismissed. |
|
His older siblings dismissed him as a worrywart who didn't know how to have any fun. |
|
What can be said at this stage is that regionalism should not be dismissed as a party political gimmick. |
|
No opinions were dismissed, but it was certainly clear that this would be an all-embracing group, with a very broad vision. |
|
Judge Maddocks rejected that contention and dismissed the appellant's appeal. |
|
Fears drug users and ex-offenders could be housed in an old people's sheltered complex in Leigh have been dismissed by council chiefs. |
|
This is dismissed by Holmes as a misinterpretation of the ravages of yellow fever and other tropical diseases. |
|
It has not been shown that she went outside the generous ambit of the discretion given to her and in my judgment this appeal should be dismissed. |
|
The second reason why pragmatists have dismissed representationalism has to do with concerns in the theory of knowledge. |
|
But despite the predicted weekend let-up, forecasters have dismissed talk of a long-term thaw. |
|
In his most prominent works, he dismissed much of the American individualist tradition in economics. |
|
The archbishop of York last night dismissed reports which suggested more Muslims were going to mosques than Anglicans to Church. |
|
When we first heard about Jonathan Pontell's book, Generation Jones, we dismissed it as yet another attempt to resurrect an old debate. |
|
She dismissed the possibility that the spinal bleeding could have been associated with resuscitation. |
|
He dismissed as nonsense her claim that the march would be dominated by anti-government left wing political parties. |
|
But when a graphic designer uses a typeface that is older than 30 years, it is dismissed as retro, nostalgia or emptiness. |
|
With just the right amount of reverb, this disc sounds great and shouldn't be dismissed as an insignificant live recording. |
|
Howard publicly dismissed it, but criticism of a Lib government from within the ruling class is not so easily dismissed in reality. |
|
|
This suggestion might be dismissed as abandoning scholarship in favour of the misty realms of ley lines and earnest unwashed New Ageism. |
|
During the eighteenth century, instability became a feature of government with ministers dismissed by the score. |
|
Stillington made major inroads into Harrogate's batting as they dismissed three home batsmen for ducks. |
|
There has been talk of interest from Manchester United, but Moyes dismissed it as waffle. |
|
He dismissed talk of a feud with Brown, who is reported to covet the premiership. |
|
According to national newspapers he has claimed abuse and maltreatment by his captors and dismissed their claims as a fabrication. |
|
Ross, sensing that he's been dismissed, nods and gives his father a meaningful glance, unseen by Tristan. |
|
Young explains that she merely dismissed evidence that ran contrary to her established opinion. |
|
Village cricket isn't the dull, sedate affair for which I had dismissed it. |
|
The Secretary of the Navy, Gordon England, has dismissed these allegations. |
|
In the reply Spring View were dismissed for 159 with professional Jon Fielding taking seven wickets. |
|
Often, forensic testimony is dismissed on a technicality, like an assumption the investigator made or the way he described something to the jury. |
|
The effect of never having the issues resolved is incalculable but not to be dismissed on that account. |
|
White House spokesman Scott McClellan dismissed the speculation as simply a part of what he called the beltway rumor mill. |
|
The Atkins diet may turn out to be completely off the mark, but it shouldn't be dismissed yet. |
|
The star was facing charges of assault and malicious damage, which were later dismissed. |
|
At that point he dismissed me as being past redemption and turned his attention to someone else passing by. |
|
A stand off in the Black Sea with Turkey is so much part and parcel of most openings that it can easily be dismissed as a ruse to deceive. |
|
He roundly dismissed any analogy between the Algerian war and the Iraqi occupation. |
|
The gutsy left-arm seamer showed his skills with the bat on a track where his more illustrious team-mates were dismissed cheaply. |
|
|
When the bell rang and the children were dismissed, they each ran home with their lunch pails in hand. |
|
My thoughts were dismissed as I lurched forward, the taxi veering to the side of the avenue and halting quickly. |
|
A federal judge dismissed the charges because the arresting officers had violated the act by receiving the Army's help. |
|
Perhaps, if his presence is counter-productive in the squad, talk of him being forced out shouldn't be so readily dismissed as outright lunacy. |
|
His sudden departure from the Chapel Royal was resented by James I, who caused him to be dismissed from the archduke's chapel. |
|
Mr. Gill dismissed criticism that it was he who selected the team and the selectors hardly played any role. |
|
The applicant filed an application for judicial review, but it was dismissed by consent. |
|
That such a policy may have stirred up the enmity which resulted in last week's atrocious acts of violence should not be dismissed out of hand. |
|
Mr Crawford's fight finally reached the end of the line this month when his appeal was dismissed. |
|
Rasia took no notice of the drastic, rather worrisome change, merely dismissed her own warden and caught hold of my arm in her lily-white hands. |
|
The view of the cross as the sacrifice for the sins of the world is a barbarian idea based on primitive concepts of God and must be dismissed. |
|
Attracting the spending power of employees and trainees to the area should not be dismissed lightly. |
|
But despite the uncertainty, the troops quickly dismissed suggestions that the waiting game may leave them unprepared if the call to arms comes. |
|
Young people of my generation had no time for Larkin's irony and simply dismissed traditional sexual morality as a clutter of meaningless taboos. |
|
The warden dismissed the accusations made by Smith and the other prisoners as lies and exaggerations. |
|
Dagen dismissed Iran's claims that it had no plans to equip its missiles with atomic warheads. |
|
They dismissed his claims, accusing him of trying to stir up racial tension for political advantage. |
|
Two of the four accused were dismissed early in the trial after the judge found her to be unreliable. |
|
He dismissed claims that the discovery was kept quiet until last Thursday's General Election was over. |
|
Yet none of this means that the show, endearingly old-fashioned as it is, can be dismissed as jerry-built or, worse yet, geriatric. |
|
|
Of course I dismissed him for the day, and of course I paid him for the full time, that being the way we spoil our models. |
|
The spread could be dismissed as little more than an excuse to run a heart-warming photo of the happy family. |
|
Prior to their seizure of power, the army leaders dismissed Hammond. |
|
After years of being dismissed as loonies and scaremongers, she and the thousands of women who have long claimed silicone was making them ill have finally been listened to. |
|
A master of the B.C. Supreme Court dismissed both these applications. |
|
In short, my hypothetical study would be properly dismissed as junk science because it fails to use even the most basic statistical controls and techniques. |
|
He received a medical degree in 1884 but was soon dismissed from Boston City Hospital after running afoul of the rigid strictures governing medical practice by young doctors. |
|
How can a nation so boisterous and fearlessly irreverent be dismissed as a dictatorship? |
|
A recidivist drink-driver was up on another set of serious drink-driving charges, and the case was dismissed because of delays in the justice system. |
|
Multiple sweeps of the cockpit indicated the light had no related emergencies, and since I couldn't reset it, I dismissed it as a bad annunciator panel. |
|
Last week John, 29, one of the Scots base jumpers, dismissed suggestions that they were endangering the public and said more jumps were planned in the coming months. |
|
The costs of blocking immigration cannot be lightly dismissed. |
|
They have also dismissed the borough's 30th anniversary event as wasteful. |
|
These social and supernatural forces have come to represent anxieties and energies restrained, repressed, or dismissed in modern Japanese and Euro-American society. |
|
Often dismissed as wrinklies and fogeys, dodderers and ditherers, it turns out that Saga's target audience are, in fact, among the biggest consumers in the country. |
|
The civil case was dismissed on a technicality but was later revived. |
|
Politicians last night dismissed suggestions that a new service giving MPs special access to a London medical centre was queue-jumping at the taxpayer's expense. |
|
The copyist moves into the office, won't be dismissed, won't accept a gift of money to go away. |
|
We were dismissed to go back to our rooms and everyone sacked out. |
|
She is a patient one, and dismissed me with a withering glance. |
|
|
In this article we have tried to tease the meaning out of just a few of the sounds that have either been ignored or dismissed as relatively unimportant. |
|
When people want to see everything in black and white, those who insist on unravelling issues into areas of grey are often dismissed as weaklings. |
|
The motion for a directed verdict of acquittal on count two is dismissed. |
|
The Japanese didn't buy it, brushed it off and dismissed it. |
|
Is he going to be happy being dismissed as too geeky for Christie to waste his time on back in high school? |
|
Employees who were approaching retirement or who underperformed for significant periods of time would be accommodated and tolerated rather than summarily dismissed. |
|
The Federal Magistrate considered that the matter was res judicata by reason of the previous application to the Federal Court, and dismissed the application. |
|
In the process, he has been hailed as a prescient genius and dismissed as a rabid extremist, but almost always recognised as a novelist of great power and originality. |
|
That lawsuit, which Henning intended as a class action, was dismissed twice, the second time with prejudice, for failing to adequately state a claim. |
|
While Justice Stephen Breyer dismissed this as an impossibility, other justices were not reassured. |
|
Even deep, innovative music by Ahmad Jamal and Bill Evans has been dismissed as lightweight accompaniment to sipping cocktails and making whoopee. |
|
However Ken conspicuously failed to mention that the other teams researching in the area have dismissed the Vinnikov and Grody paper as arrant nonsense. |
|
The man was ridiculed, his claims dismissed, and his ethics attacked. |
|
But she quickly fell out with her erstwhile ally, who dismissed her government after a few months. |
|
These anti-sweatshop activists shouldn't simply be dismissed as Luddites. |
|
To this end, one worker has been picked out, made an example of and punished, together with a member of the factory council who was also dismissed without notice. |
|
The senator dismissed his disagreement with the President as a minor contretemps. |
|
It simply reflects how narrow the accepted terrain of public discussion has become, at a time when ideas can be dismissed out-of-hand as being in bad taste or offensive. |
|
The judge listed the various reasons we might be dismissed from serving, beginning with knowing the defendant or any of the lawyers or court officials. |
|
Ortega has dismissed the allegations of autocracy and fraud that have afflicted his presidency as politically motivated. |
|
|
His story is typical of many Asian doctors working in Scotland but, until now, such complaints have been dismissed by many as excuses for not making the grade. |
|
Raila Odinga dismissed Kenyatta's claims that he is trying to overthrow the government. |
|
Though the documented cases of direct killing are not numerous, they must be taken very seriously and not dismissed as anomalies. |
|
But, unlike some more militant libertarian thinkers, Ron Paul never dismissed the threat of communism during the Cold War. |
|
Judges dismissed their argument that their detention within the kettle in freezing temperatures without food or water for over six hours had breached their human rights. |
|
But if Strauss-Kahn's case is dismissed, or deflated to a misdemeanor, the question will be how thick that line is, in fact. |
|
Christie, an archetypal tough guy happy warrior, at first dismissed accusations that the traffic jam was politically motivated. |
|
The dismissed employees were never redeployed as mentioned in that issue. |
|
The resulting backlash will be dismissed as so much tall poppy syndrome. |
|
At the end of April, the Industrial Tribunal in Bochum began to examine the sacking of two Opel workers who had been dismissed following a week-long strike last year. |
|
She quickly dismissed any notions that her gender identity was a barrier for entry for Republican support in her district. |
|
Rather than see social events as holding spiritual significance in a prophetic way, they dismissed literal interpretations of apocalyptic prophecies. |
|
As we have been trying to get management to recognise throughout, the charges against Bobby and Galten were dismissed and their sackings were revoked. |
|
The trumpeter, Fred Mills, is an alumnus of the Canadian Brass, and even he seems determined to add weight to a work often dismissed as lightweight. |
|
Rick Hasen, a professor at University of California, Irvine, dismissed the Mississippi statute as essentially unenforceable. |
|
Unable to help her legally, as her case had already been dismissed at every level, brook referred her to me. |
|
At a high-roller Democratic fundraiser on Park Avenue last month, a California lawyer dismissed the Whitman challenge. |
|
Critics have dismissed these exercises as so much Tartuffery. |
|
Some employers have been accused of hindering efforts to rehire those dismissed by imposing them with strict conditions. |
|
In short, the premises lability claim should not have been dismissed under the motion for summary judgment. |
|
|
Stanley Rand concluded in 1993, so they dismissed the idea of vocal sacs as resonating cavities. |
|
The district court dismissed the action, finding that the prisoners could not litigate jointly in forma pauperis. |
|
Where once doctors dismissed the usefulness of Lamaze and Bradley, most now encourage pregnant women to take birthing classes. |
|
A case against a mother who was taken to court after dropping a piece of sausage roll on the pavement was dismissed by magistrates yesterday. |
|
The equally conservative college dismissed him after he deliberately provoked the college authorities. |
|
He was dismissed as a crank until his article was published. |
|
Clarke was dismissed in the sixty-seventh minute... for overly enthusiastic afters with one of the Wexford players. |
|
My friends dismissed him as a Kerry sheep thief and a bog Irish gombeen man. |
|
Kalinic later saw red for a rash tackle on Paul Scharner before Gabriel Tamas was dismissed for bringing down Diouf. |
|
Roy Keane has dismissed media bullscutter that he is set to lose his job at Portman Road. |
|
Having already dismissed the story as a heap of piffle, he cheerily advised the reporters to go for a run. |
|
She dismissed Tiffy with tactful praise for her doormanship, and took Leo and me into her office. |
|
His plan to rid Trafalgar Square of pigeons by bringing in peregrine falcons to eat them was dismissed as not feasible. |
|
President Truman, when at last he grasped the nettle and dismissed MacArthur, knew well enough the outcry that would follow. |
|
Some Roman writers even insisted that it did not exist, and dismissed reports of Pytheas's voyage as a hoax. |
|
He executed Pertinax's murderers and dismissed the rest of the Praetorian Guard, filling its ranks with loyal troops from his own legions. |
|
Chamberlain William Latimer and Steward of the Household John Neville were dismissed from their positions. |
|
The theory that Henry suffered from syphilis has been dismissed by most historians. |
|
After Parliament was dismissed, Elizabeth and Cecil drafted the Royal Injunctions. |
|
The following year, the unauthorised marriage was discovered and the Queen ordered Raleigh to be imprisoned and Bess dismissed from court. |
|
|
The argument later gave rise to charges of atheism against Raleigh, though the charges were dismissed. |
|
Cromwell dismissed the Rump Parliament and failed to create an acceptable alternative. |
|
Cromwell, aided by Thomas Harrison, forcibly dismissed the Rump on 20 April 1653, for reasons that are unclear. |
|
As a result of the Second Dutch War, Charles dismissed Lord Clarendon, whom he used as a scapegoat for the war. |
|
He dismissed judges who disagreed with him on this matter as well as the Solicitor General Heneage Finch. |
|
Therefore, during the first three months of 1688, hundreds of those who gave hostile replies to the three questions asked were dismissed. |
|
On 26 April 1718, on the pretext of failing powers, he was dismissed in favour of William Benson. |
|
In the spring of 1710, Anne dismissed Godolphin and the Junto ministers, replacing them with Tories. |
|
He dismissed judges who disagreed with him on this matter, as well as the Solicitor General Heneage Finch. |
|
In May 1776, finance minister Turgot was dismissed, after failing to enact reforms. |
|
The King refused, Necker was dismissed, and Charles Alexandre de Calonne was appointed to the Comptrollership. |
|
During these negotiations Japan advanced a number of proposals which were dismissed by the Americans as inadequate. |
|
In 2004 the Court heard 1,059 appeals, of which 295 were allowed and 413 directly dismissed. |
|
In 1834, William dismissed the Whig Prime Minister, William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne, and appointed a Tory, Sir Robert Peel. |
|
The claims were repudiated by Darwin's children and have been dismissed as false by historians. |
|
Although it is often dismissed as a myth, like most good stories the story of James Watt and the kettle has a basis in fact. |
|
Shortly thereafter, More was charged with accepting bribes, but the charges had to be dismissed for lack of any evidence. |
|
After a ritual has finished, the God, Goddess and Guardians are thanked, the directions are dismissed and the circle is closed. |
|
A further scandal surrounded headteachers dismissed following poor OFSTED reports being hired as inspectors. |
|
In October 2004, Sarah Forsyth claimed that she had been dismissed unfairly by Eton College and had been bullied by senior staff. |
|
|
He added a long litany of peripheral precedents which the judge dismissed as mere makeweights. |
|
Throughout his reign, Charles firmly dismissed the idea of divorcing Catherine, and she remained faithful to Charles throughout their marriage. |
|
To overcome her resistance the king dismissed nearly the whole of her Portuguese retinue. |
|
After a lengthy battle, Regan's bid was seen off and two senior CWS executives were dismissed and imprisoned for fraud. |
|
In December that year, however, Williams was dismissed for irregularities in his qualifications and Wells was returned to Uppark. |
|
Marlborough himself could not be displaced, but his relations were dismissed from their posts in turn. |
|
In April the following year, George dismissed Pitt, in an attempt to construct an administration more to his liking. |
|
On 8 May, Klein was named sole manager of the band, the Eastmans having previously been dismissed as the Beatles' attorneys. |
|
While the case attracted a great deal of media attention, it was ultimately dismissed. |
|
Olivier dismissed the suggestion, regarding it as an insult to his integrity as an actor. |
|
Cukor was dismissed and replaced by Victor Fleming, with whom Leigh frequently quarrelled. |
|
If a player has been dismissed, no substitute can be brought on in their place and the player must leave the field. |
|
After either ten batsmen have been dismissed or a fixed number of overs have been completed, the innings ends and the two teams then swap roles. |
|
If his wicket is put down while the ball is live and he is out of his ground then he is dismissed, but the other batsman is safe. |
|
A dismissed batsman leaves the field, to be replaced by another batsman from the batting team. |
|
A team's score is reported in terms of the number of runs scored and the number of batsmen that have been dismissed. |
|
With all other modes of dismissal, only one batsman can be dismissed per ball bowled. |
|
Docherty was dismissed shortly afterwards, following the revelation of his affair with the club physiotherapist's wife. |
|
The following season, with the club in danger of relegation by November, Atkinson was dismissed. |
|
The case was therefore dismissed and Anderlecht was acquitted from all charges. |
|
|
Under Clough, the team performed poorly, and after only 44 days he was dismissed. |
|
He would have finished with an average of over 100 runs per innings if he had not been dismissed for a duck in his last Test. |
|
Strauss made his 2nd century of the series, before being dismissed by Shane Warne off an acrobatic catch by Simon Katich. |
|
Shortly afterwards, England gained a minor victory as Harmison dismissed Justin Langer, who departed to a rapturous ovation. |
|
In the final, Australia dismissed Pakistan for 132 and then reached the target in less than 20 overs and with eight wickets in hand. |
|
Plans to build on the current site of Court 13 were dismissed due to the high capacity of games played at the 2012 Olympic Games. |
|
The Prime Minister dismissed requests that the two elements of the Bill should be split. |
|
The aspect of the challenge concerning competition law, however, was dismissed. |
|
As well as their primary spiritual importance, the political significance of religious centres cannot be dismissed. |
|
Emboldened by the truce, Balliol dismissed most of his English troops and moved to Annan, on the north shore of the Solway Firth. |
|
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. |
|
Russell dismissed Lord Palmerston from the cabinet, leaving the latter determined to deprive the Prime Minister of office as well. |
|
In 2013, he received a life sentence from the court martial in Bulford, Wiltshire, and was dismissed with disgrace from the Royal Marines. |
|
These documents were dismissed by the IAEA as forgeries, with the concurrence in that judgment of outside experts. |
|
Both William and Anne appointed and dismissed Cabinet members, attended meetings, made decisions, and followed up on actions. |
|
For example, the case of Pickin v British Railways Board was dismissed because it relied on the standing order process not having been fulfilled. |
|
The Soviet leader also dismissed the accusation that the USSR was exerting increasing control over the countries lying in its sphere. |
|
John dismissed the tutor in November 1841 and, after considerable thought, sent James to the prestigious Edinburgh Academy. |
|
Since then another two staff have been dismissed and two Directors are serving their notice. |
|
Stoppard's plays have been sometimes dismissed as pieces of clever showmanship, lacking in substance, social commitment, or emotional weight. |
|
|
Parallel considerations in other realms are dismissed with eminently good sense. |
|
Once the ball is dead, no runs can be scored and no batsmen can be dismissed. |
|
Beaton's claim was based on a version of the late king's will that his opponents dismissed as a forgery. |
|
When the cable failed completely Whitehouse was dismissed, though Thomson objected and was reprimanded by the board for his interference. |
|
Nestorius exploded at that and hit out. He roared and dismissed the class, hitting out with his old mottled gnarled niefs. |
|
This was the first direct indication of the reality of the Heaviside layer, proposed earlier but at this time largely dismissed by engineers. |
|
In a landmark decision, Lady Paton dismissed their action without granting absolvitor. |
|
A claim that is presented within the limits of a nonclaim statute may be dismissed because the statute of limitations has run and vice-versa. |
|
McGhee controversially dismissed Aberdeen legend and goalkeeping coach Jim Leighton in August 2009 and replaced him with Colin Meldrum. |
|
The bulk of his forces were militia who needed to harvest their crops, so on 8 September Harold dismissed the militia and the fleet. |
|
The fact that Harold had dismissed his forces in southern England on 8 September also contributed to the defeat. |
|
Edward also arrested his old adversary Bishop Langton, and dismissed him from his post as treasurer. |
|
Frank Cousins, the Labour Minister of Technology, told the House of Commons in November 1965 that Beeching had been dismissed by Tom Fraser. |
|
Some experts have dismissed the Nennian preface as a late forgery, arguing that the work was actually an anonymous compilation. |
|
In February 2014, Laudrup was dismissed from the club after a poor run of form. |
|
Alan Cork was appointed as manager, but was dismissed after leading the club to its lowest league finish for 23 years. |
|
Welsh denied the charges and after Pollok failed to appear to press the charge for a third time, the case was dismissed. |
|
Nothing may come of these ideas, yet their potential should not be dismissed. |
|
Woods dismissed the idea that anyone could get away with election fraud on her watch. |
|
Later experimenters could not replicate the discovery, and it was dismissed as an error for many years. |
|
|
They could technically be dismissed by the king but many offices became hereditary. |
|
A judge can be dismissed only by a unanimous vote of the other members of the Court. |
|
On the next day, Halder dismissed the navy's claims and required a new plan. |
|
Not always as valued as it is today, it was dismissed as mel improbum by Dioscurides. |
|
Contemporary archaeologists suggested that it was based on a tapir and his suggestions have generally been dismissed by subsequent research. |
|
These suggestions were dismissed by multiple Indian researchers based on several lines of evidence. |
|
This belief has since been dismissed, however, and it is now thought that he voyaged to North America instead. |
|
She considered herself engaged to be married to a Scotch propaganda officer who had been dismissed for peculation and gone home to sell cars. |
|
On the eve of battle he dismissed those forces and offered terms to his brother. |
|
The historian Charles David dismissed this argument in 1929, showing the more extreme claims for Henry's education to be without foundation. |
|
Simon was formally acquitted of the charges, but in August 1252 he was nevertheless dismissed. |
|
The trio lasted until only 1838 when they were dismissed in favour of a better organised police force under Superintendent Charles Otway. |
|
At Ramsgate in October 1835, Victoria contracted a severe fever, which Conroy initially dismissed as a childish pretence. |
|
But, Hadrian later dismissed Suetonius for the latter's allegedly excessive informality with the empress Sabina. |
|
All agreements made between the British commander and Archbishop Rojo were dismissed as illegal. |
|
The High Court dismissed an appeal by Sutcliffe in 2010, confirming that he would serve a whole life order and never be released from custody. |
|
In 1935, he was dismissed under the provisions of the racist Nuremberg Laws. |
|
His warning, however, was dismissed as stemming from the personal feud between Segestes and Arminius. |
|
Instead he merely dismissed Titus Petronius Secundus, and replaced him with a former commander, Casperius Aelianus. |
|
Moreover, some dismissed the entire idea of refugia, due to the existence even today of arctic and subarctic peoples. |
|
|
While placatory on the hostages, Raja'i dismissed any possibility of a ceasefire in the war. |
|
Many peoples have dismissed alien cultures and even rival civilizations, because they were unrecognizably strange. |
|
The Guardian Council can, and has dismissed some elected members of the Iranian parliament in the past. |
|
Some scholars, particularly American, have dismissed these claims as lacking credibility. |
|
By the beginning of the 19th century most people dismissed the existence of the city as a myth. |
|
Although it was dismissed in the 19th century as a myth, some evidence for the existence of a lake in northern Brazil has been uncovered. |
|
Morozov abused his position by exploiting the populace, and in 1648 Aleksey dismissed him in the wake of the Salt Riot in Moscow. |
|
Jonathan, however, dismissed the claim and replaced Sanusi for alleged mismanagement of the central bank's budget. |
|
Unsure of how the council would rule, he hinted in a sermon on 3 September 1553 that he might be dismissed by the authorities. |
|
Articles of impeachment were presented against him two months later, but he was dismissed on bail. |
|
In the end a compromise was reached, with Devereux put under house arrest and dismissed from all his government offices. |
|
The judge dismissed the evidence of bruising to a fellow soldier's leg as a fabrication to suggest injury to that soldier from the car. |
|
Four were decided with unsigned opinions, two cases affirmed by an equally divided Court, and two cases were dismissed as improvidently granted. |
|
The proceedings continued for a week, in which time, out of 55 bills, 42 were sustained and 13 dismissed. |
|
For this, in his view, Bracton should be completely dismissed as a figure of substance in the formation of English law. |
|
In Connecticut, alternate jurors are dismissed before the panel of sworn jurors begin deliberation. |
|
The court accepted the arguments, dismissed the jury's verdict and the case was freshly heard in the high court. |
|
An action may be voluntarily dismissed at any time by the plaintiff prior to the defendant's filing of an Answer or Motion for Summary Judgment. |
|
An action may also be involuntarily dismissed by the court if the plaintiff fails to comply with deadlines or court orders. |
|
In late 1830, Fullerton closed the courts and dismissed the judicial establishment before leaving for England. |
|