Each cardinal will be required to take solemn oaths not to disclose any of their discussions on the pain of excommunication from the Church. |
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Holding me with a strong gripe by the cord that tied my hands, he with many oaths threatened to kill me immediately if I would not be quiet. |
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On Monday, senators took their oaths as jurors before the Supreme Court's chief justice for Brown's impeachment trial. |
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There are no recognized oaths, contracts, or pacts that apply to friends, as there are for family members. |
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The Gods witness oaths, and will take note of how the oath-taker regards that oath. |
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As such, taking many cues from Transcendentalism I don't think any oaths are necessary. |
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They are not deceitful or treacherous in their conduct and are faithful to their oaths and promises. |
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Most oaths are undated, and I have had to estimate dates based on their context. |
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From early days the taking of solemn religious oaths was regarded as an essential part of the political and social order. |
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Some rebelled and took oaths vowing to stay single for the rest of their lives. |
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Thoroughly humiliated and irritated in far too many ways, Em got to her knees, muttering oaths that would have made Uncle Tuan proud. |
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Of all the institutes that swear oaths, only three use the classic Hippocratic oath. |
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As far as possible, the essential meaning or substance of each oath, and the formality and solemnity of the oaths, are retained. |
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You need to take certain oaths, read prescribed texts, pass tests, and undergo initiatory rites. |
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I entered into what I consider to be one of the most serious oaths in my life on the night of my first initiation. |
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He who has given a vow cannot be released from his engagement, for great oaths are indissoluble bonds. |
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Viro walked down the path beyond the witch's house, muttering a thousand oaths against sorcery. |
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A hundred other unseen locks and keys, oaths of secrecy, and cryptonyms stood in my way. |
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By forswearing himself and violating his oath, he has undermined respect for the integrity of oaths. |
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It was said that as long as a monk upheld the three oaths of chastity, obedience, and poverty, his soul was promised Reprieve. |
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Indeed, in a bull of 1212, Pope Innocent III relaxed the obligations of prior oaths and forbade the exaction of similar oaths in the future. |
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It would be impossible to find anywhere a more frightening example of self-imposed curses than these oaths. |
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She heard the sound of the door closing, and she muttered a few choice oaths under her breath. |
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Finally, many oaths include in their language explicit consequences for breaking them. |
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She let out a long string of oaths and expletives, carefully picking herself up from the floor. |
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Does it seem to you that Americans are particularly fond of symbols and pledges and oaths? |
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First, in order to be initiated, a person has to bind himself, by the most cruel and barbarous oaths, never to reveal any of Masonry's secrets. |
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Politicians spoke, judges administered the oaths and newly naturalized citizens cheered. |
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Magistrates upon appointment take oaths or make affirmations in the same form as Justices of this Court and the members of other federal courts. |
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Alyssa kept screaming curses and oaths, and would have broken all the furniture in Alli's bedroom, had Lisa not restrained her. |
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Don't we have the right, even duty, to be outraged if they betray our trust and their own sworn oaths? |
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Her husband, in turn, forfeits any paternity claims over children born subsequent to their sworn oaths. |
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The Anglo-Saxons used oaths not only to swear fealty to feudal lords, but also to ensure honesty during legal proceedings and transactions. |
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From a dark courtyard came a sound of oaths and blows, followed by shrill screams, and, huddled upon a damp doorstep, he saw the crook-backed forms of poverty and eld. |
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The most profane swearer call refrain from his oaths, while in the presence of a person whom he fears, and to whom he knows it would be displeasing. |
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The newly-elected students then took solemn oaths to take the school to new heights, fulfil their duties and perform their responsibility without any hesitation. |
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They are a treacherous people who violate oaths and covenants. |
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They put this view into practice quite straightforwardly, avoided ostentatious clothing and wealth, refused to swear oaths in court, to bear arms or to defend themselves. |
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Moreover, like the Anabaptists, they interpreted the commandments of the Sermon of the Mount literally and so refused to bear arms or to swear oaths. |
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It was useful to recall that he enjoyed a kind of imperial status among his people, who were bound to him with solemn rites and blood-sealed oaths. |
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When Confederates surrendered, the same flag presided over the loyalty oaths that brought rebels back into a national community of the red, white, and blue. |
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They continued to grow in number, despite severe penalization from 1662 to 1689 for refusing to take oaths, attend Anglican services, or pay tithes. |
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Five minutes later, Keyan was in the medical bay, stripped down to his boxers, with a medic fussing over him, muttering oaths about how barbaric the fights were. |
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In 1163, he attempted to firmly define his rights as feudal overlord of the Welsh princes by demanding oaths of vassalage from them at the Council of Woodstock. |
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In order to do this effectively it may be given powers equivalent to those of the High Court to summon witnesses, send for documents, administer oaths, etc. |
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Indeed, the group highlighted the oaths of allegiance in today's beheading video. |
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An obsecration was, and is, part of all ancient and modern oaths. |
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One precedent was the transfer of oaths during the Glorious Revolution in England. |
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A girl in the bakery, aged sixteen, used oaths that would have defeated a cabman. |
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No adolescent can achieve disbelief in the stork without an eruption of young oaths and cynicisms. |
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From between set teeth came now a flow of oaths and imprecations as steady as the flow of water from the gargoyle overhead. |
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The business of Parliament for the next few days of its session involves the taking of the oaths of allegiance. |
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Within dominions, such oaths were taken by parliamentarians personally towards the monarch. |
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The former Protector tendered him the oaths, and presented him with the insignia of office, performing the ceremonies of instalation. |
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Take oaths from all kings and magistrates at their installment, to do impartial justice by law. Milton. |
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He started back two or three paces, rapt out a dozen interjectural oaths, and asked what the devil had brought you here? |
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Only the old harbor-master was there, singing out, as by duty bound, his lusty oaths at their lumberings. |
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It is common for practitioners to be expected to keep their word, particularly sworn oaths. |
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They are often bound together by oaths of loyalty, with strict screening procedures regulating the admittance of new members. |
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In practice, instances of summary justice and annulment of oaths and contracts involving pirates do not appear to have been common. |
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Members of the Episcopal clergy were required to give oaths of allegiance to the reigning Hanoverian dynasty. |
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Disraeli had a bill passed through the Commons allowing each house of Parliament to determine what oaths its members should take. |
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Sun, earth, heaven, rivers, and winds could be addressed in prayers and called to witness oaths. |
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Pairs of pirates would at times make oaths to one another that in order to insure that neither were captured they would shoot each other. |
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According to Pliny, garlic and onions were invoked as deities by the Egyptians at the taking of oaths. |
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The loyalty of the Agilolfings was perpetually in question, but Pepin exacted numerous oaths of loyalty from Tassilo. |
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A common legal substitute for those who conscientiously object to making sacred oaths is to give an affirmation instead. |
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Usually oaths have referred to a deity significant in the cultural sphere in question. |
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Making vows and taking oaths became a symbolic concept in law practice that developed over time in different cultures. |
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In the Roman tradition, oaths were sworn upon Iuppiter Lapis or the Jupiter Stone located in the Temple of Jupiter, Capitoline Hill. |
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Quakers were frequently imprisoned because of their refusal to swear loyalty oaths. |
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Participants may also make boasts of their own deeds, or oaths or promises of future actions. |
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Monarchs often sought to legitimize their power by requiring oaths of fealty from the estates. |
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In 1837, the new King of Hanover, Ernst August I, dissolved parliament and demanded oaths of allegiance from all civil servants. |
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Many Church of England clergy remained loyalists as they took their two ordination oaths very seriously. |
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In general, loyalist clergy stayed by their oaths and prayed for the king or else suspended services. |
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Anglican priests held services in private homes or lay readers who were not bound by the oaths held morning and evening prayer. |
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Chapter 22 describes the appropriate use of oaths and solemn vows, which are part of religious worship because the person calls upon God. |
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He had qualified himself for municipal office by taking the oaths to the sovereigns in possession. |
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Variants of the basic oath of allegiance are also incorporated into a number of other oaths taken by certain individuals. |
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After the Restoration, oaths of supremacy and allegiance were imposed upon all MPs and Peers in Parliament. |
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It extended substantially the old oaths, and added an oath of abjuration of the Pretender's title. |
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The lairiest, and oldest, among them returned the oaths, his slurred voice drowning out the noise of the main road's heavy traffic. |
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Nine new Republican senators will swear their oaths of office. |
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They include blood oaths, the esoteric practice of Obeah, Ananse Spider trickster tales, day names, and a strong belief in transmigration. |
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Considering the book's focus on oaths, one would have liked a longer examination of the Nonjurors who would have provided a useful contrast to the Covenanters. |
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The patriot clergy in the South were quick to find reasons to transfer their oaths to the American cause and prayed for the success of the Revolution. |
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Words spoken during the sumbel are considered carefully and any oaths made are considered sacrosanct, becoming part of the destiny of those assembled. |
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Germanic warrior culture was significantly based on oaths of fealty. |
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This is the atonement for violating the oaths that you swore to keep. |
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Nowadays, even when there is no notion of sanctity involved, certain promises said out loud in ceremonial or juridical purpose are referred to as oaths. |
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Henry held court in April and June, where the nobility renewed their oaths of allegiance to him, but their support still appeared partial and shaky. |
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After the rise of the hero cult, gods and heroes constitute the sacral sphere and are invoked together in oaths and prayers which are addressed to them. |
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I disencumbered myself by main force, and fled, but he overhied me, knocked me down, and threatened, with dreadful oaths, to throw me from the cliff. |
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Innocent released Llywelyn, Gwenwynwyn and Maelgwn from all oaths of loyalty to John and lifted the interdict in the territories which they controlled. |
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Firmly seated upon the throne, Charles renounced the covenants, which in 1662 were declared unlawful oaths to be abjured by all persons holding public offices. |
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The railway platforms now stand where King Edward took oaths of allegiance from Scottish nobility in 1296, marked by a large notice to that effect. |
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Roman jurists also show a concern for local languages such as Punic, Gaulish, and Aramaic in assuring the correct understanding and application of laws and oaths. |
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No Parliamentary business is conducted during that time, except the taking of oaths of allegiance and the election of a Speaker by the House of Commons. |
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By 15 June, general agreement had been made on a text, and on 19 June, the rebels renewed their oaths of loyalty to John and copies of the charter were formally issued. |
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On landing in England on 8 December 1154, Henry quickly took oaths of loyalty from some of the barons and was then crowned alongside Eleanor at Westminster on 19 December. |
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The lazzi represented the descendants of the original inhabitants of the conquered territories, who were forced to make oaths of submission and pay tribute to the edhilingui. |
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Their promises, enticements, oaths, tokens, and all these engines of lust. |
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So the bill legitimises perjury and it legitimises breaches of the Oaths and Declarations Act. |
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A party vote was called for on the question, That the Oaths Modernisation Bill be now read a first time. |
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This is now, by the Promissory Oaths Act 1868, the same as the usual Oath of Allegiance. |
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The Oaths Act 1961 extended the 1888 Act, but did not apply to Parliamentary Oaths. |
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Finally, in the Promissory Oaths Act 1868 a further curtailment to the oath was made, thereby establishing the form of the oath still used today. |
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Oaths may also be confused with vows, but vows are really just a special kind of an oath. |
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I am fully aware of how Oaths affect my Orlay and my Wyrd. I am Oathed to no one, save the Holy Ones and my Wife. |
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Considered a milestone in European history, the Oaths of Strasbourg symbolize the birth of both France and Germany. |
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In the Oaths of Strasbourg, in 842, Charles and Louis agreed to declare Lothar unfit for the imperial throne. |
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Oaths of allegiance are made to the Queen and her lawful successors. |
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