Runholders had received collectively 58 per cent of the reformed pastoral estate as freehold. |
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The fact is, the standards for direct quotation in print media are scandalously low, and should be reformed. |
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By the time of the Napoleonic wars grenadiers had been reformed into new units as new warfare techniques simply outdated them. |
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A brand new Social Security Act that reformed our whole social welfare system on principles of simplicity, sufficiency and universality. |
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A former drug addict and reformed hellraiser, he's on the comeback trail with a sickly song that gradually starts to work its way up the charts. |
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The media widely reported the incident and China's policy on the detention and removal of itinerants was reformed. |
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Suspended death sentences in China often are commuted to life in prison if the convicts are deemed reformed. |
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A variation on this theme was that the prisoner had reformed or had shown sufficient contrition for their crime. |
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It's a semi-auto biographical novel about a cop, Detective chief Inspector Jack Priestley, and his best friend, reformed criminal Steve Blade. |
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The death row inmate says that he's reformed and his supporters believe he deserves clemency. |
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To be useful in a power-generating fuel cell, hydrocarbons such as gasoline, natural gas or ethanol must be reformed into a hydrogen-rich gas. |
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The tank of this SUV is filled with methanol from which hydrogen is reformed on board the vehicle. |
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Therefore reformists deduce that no direct challenge to the state is necessary and civil society can be reformed. |
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The hydride is a complex alloy of rare-earth elements and other metals that may be decomposed and reformed reversibly. |
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Zatoichi's a reformed yakuza forever finding himself dragged into conflicts between the corrupt ruling classes and their exploited peasantry. |
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He calls it a blip and likens it to a reformed alcoholic relapsing into a 24-hour binge. |
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He reformed and reshaped the music system itself so that common people could sing with basic training. |
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The resumption of the religious wars led to the siege of Larochelle in 1629 and to the death of 80 percent of the reformed residents. |
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We split up in mid 1981, then reformed briefly in 1985 for a reunion concert. |
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A reformed heroin addict turned property developer is hoping to film part of his life story in Swindon. |
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Like a reformed smoker, he is the more zealous because until recently he was the archetypal apathetic customer. |
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Still others reformed entire countries, making way for U.S. products on distant shores. |
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Now Lenny is a reformed alcoholic with a white wife, a thriving writing career and a guilty conscience. |
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He defended sacred art, reformed the Roman liturgy, and perhaps established a choir school. |
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Highlights of Matron Freeberger's days included visits from former and reformed Magdalens. |
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He also reformed the crippled banking sector and raised more revenue by cracking down on tax evasion. |
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This ambition was embodied in a number of institutions that were set up, or profoundly reformed, at the Liberation. |
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Venema noted he was unaware of any reformed exegete in the 16th or 17th centuries who embraced this interpretation. |
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By 99 B.C., the army was reformed into cohorts, three maniples to a cohort. |
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Valmiki was a killer dacoit who reformed, became a Sage and wrote the Sanskrit Ramayana, one of the great sacred scriptures of the world. |
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The report says that the fire service needs to be changed from top to bottom and every aspect of its work needs to be reformed. |
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Property relations should be reformed to give greater security to the ownership of land. |
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The reformed orders found rich patrons to finance their new mother churches in Rome. |
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The only limit on women's rights is male tyranny and this limit is to be reformed by the laws of nature and reason. |
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An excellent defense of the need for a reformed universal primacy of the Bishop of Rome in a reunited Church is also included. |
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Two reformed cracksmen are unjustly accused of the theft and are severely put to it to prove their innocence. |
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Worn walls reformed themselves into a series of buttresses and rounded finials, bearded caryatids, zoomorphic statues. |
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France adopted a reformed calendar called the French Republican or Revolutionary calendar, to replace the Gregorian calendar. |
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According to Edward's family, he had long reformed and had managed to stay out of trouble. |
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Can marriage be reformed to serve as a public status that promotes equality and liberty? |
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Can public enterprises be reformed from within or are they intrinsically inefficient? |
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After all, self-discipline was to be the dominant trait of both the proper slave master and the reformed inebriate. |
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As each flight started on the downwind leg the ships reformed in an echelon to the right and completed before-landing checklists. |
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He also levied two general taxes, introduced customs duties and reformed the system of farming out sheriffdoms to make it more profitable. |
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The squadron disbanded on October 10, 1945-but reformed on April 17, 1952, and has been in commission ever since. |
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The source texts are then reformed into single aphoristic lines, couplets, quatrains, and whole poems. |
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Their little world became wearisome and difficult as alliances broke and were reformed. |
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Censorship was reformed, to repress both pacifists and defeatists for military reasons, but to restore freedoms otherwise. |
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Even in the most affectionate representations, he must be reformed and reclaimed by society and domesticity by play's end. |
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The vast majority of schools requested a reduction in processed, reformed or reconstituted foods, especially meat. |
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The system had to be radically reformed to detect murder, medical error and neglect. |
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As Mr Pope rightly says, it's time the eccentric and discriminatory system was radically reformed. |
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Maybe then the juveniles will be coming out of detention as reformed people, not as crime masterminds! |
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Before your mother reformed me that might have been my typical weekly shop. |
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It's amazing the number of supposedly reformed criminals who have put money into pubs. |
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He could understand the community's concern but believed his son was reformed and no longer a threat to society. |
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I'm a completely reformed character these days, with a wife and two-year-old son. |
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We have Raymond Chandler and James M Cain, reformed junkie James Ellroy and reformed bank-robber Edward Bunker among many others. |
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So amazing, in fact, that this newly reformed cynic is ready to write a check. |
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In theory the parole hearings take the behaviour of the offender into account and allow reformed prisoners out before unrepentant ones. |
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She was prioress of the first reformed Carmelite convent in France, and spread the teachings of the founder of the French School, Pierre de Berulle, through the movement. |
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The seven-year-old has been a reformed character since being gelded last summer, winning valuable handicap hurdle races at Cheltenham and Newbury on his last two outings. |
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Once past the disorientating 10m gap where the salvors have blasted this ship apart, the hull reformed and a smaller high-elevation gun could be seen. |
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Giberti, like Sadoleto, chose to reside in his see, where he disciplined his clergy, reformed religious houses, and took the cure of souls seriously. |
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The colonial militias were transplants from England, modeled on the home defense forces successively raised and reformed under the Tudors, the Stuarts, and the Hanoverians. |
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The euro offers a basis for a similar performance in the international monetary system, but only if the institutions for external monetary policy are adequately reformed. |
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The club have been reformed and are catering for juveniles and juniors. |
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I'm not really sure myself because I guess in a perfect world people would go to prison and come out a new, reformed person who would never commit a crime again. |
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The election of President Hassan Rouhani last year brought hope for a reformed criminal justice system. |
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Built from reformed rock, the walls were solid, and as strong as bedrock. |
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He toured with the briefly reformed Velvet Underground and found domestic happiness with Laurie Anderson. |
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Hooligans are not reformed by Mozart, so much as driven away by a noise that is as alien and hostile to their world as whale song to a camel herd. |
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They were awarded a penalty and opted for the scrum which was reformed twice and then, inexplicably, the referee awarded a penalty try under the posts. |
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Because marriage is a patriarchal, sexist institution that should be discarded rather than reformed. |
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Can rap be reformed to become a truly revolutionary cultural movement? |
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You may know that everyone agrees that Social Security and Medicare must be reformed before the baby boomer onslaught hits. |
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Nations with timorous taste buds limit their knowledge and appetite, so that to the Anglo-American lay mind the aristocratic boletes are, at best, reformed toadstools. |
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Spooky Tooth had reformed quite a while before I received the call and were touring quite often. |
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Ironically, according to Hitner, women were some of his staunchest allies in getting the Massachusetts law reformed. |
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To the contrary, she said, she did not necessarily believe that collective bargaining needed to be reformed. |
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But a pile of mashed-up food may not look particularly appetising, so Marc is looking at ways of presenting the food reformed, shaped and more enticing. |
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They will have to maintain their critical stance and simultaneously respond to the demands of the market economy in the new, reformed, capitalist system. |
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Rules of evidence, judicial procedure, and ethical standards have all been tightened and reformed since Darrow's heyday. |
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Nursing the wounds of the split, the group has reformed and settled in Oakland, California, a place a little more welcoming to artsy-fartsy oddball bands than, say, Alabama. |
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Does he not know that the CAP has just been drastically reformed? |
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By the time McLeish was 24, local government was being radically reformed. |
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Fitzgerald is a reformed alcoholic, a strident non-drinker, with firm views on zero tolerance of alcohol as the only way to treat problem drinkers. |
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Michael Steele and Lanny Davis are quick to admit they are reformed sinners. |
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There was also the hope that transported convicts could be rehabilitated and reformed by starting a new life in the colonies. |
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Chile provides the region's best example of a country that has successfully reformed its core public administration across the board. |
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In 1996 the East Riding of Yorkshire was reformed as a unitary authority area and a ceremonial county. |
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Scots law developed into a distinctive system in the Middle Ages and was reformed and codified in the 16th and 17th centuries. |
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York is an ancient borough, and was reformed by the Municipal Corporations Act 1835 to form a municipal borough. |
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Pope Gregory the Great dramatically reformed ecclesiastical structure and administration. |
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Alfred also reformed the administration of justice, issued a new law code and championed a revival of scholarship and education. |
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At the centre of Alfred's reformed military defence system was the network of burhs, distributed at strategic points throughout the kingdom. |
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Royal government was also reformed with the introduction of the King's Council that kept the nobility in check. |
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The role of the King's Council was transferred to a reformed Privy Council, much smaller and more efficient than its predecessor. |
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It was followed by the beginnings of a reformed liturgy and of the Book of Common Prayer, which would take until 1549 to complete. |
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Thus, it was through the Second Act of Supremacy that Elizabeth I officially established the now reformed Church of England. |
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Those who signed the petition undertook to defend 'the true reformed religion', Parliament, and the king's person, honour, and estate. |
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The Whigs also passed the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834 that reformed the administration of relief to the poor. |
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The legal Belgian government was reformed as a government in exile in London. |
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During William IV's reign, the Reform Act 1832, which reformed parliamentary representation, was passed. |
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Vespasian sent legions to defend the eastern frontier in Cappadocia, extended the occupation in Britain and reformed the tax system. |
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It gathered strength from the postmillennial belief that the Second Coming of Christ would occur after mankind had reformed the entire earth. |
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The Geneva Convention, an important part of humanitarian international law, was largely the work of Henry Dunant, a reformed pietist. |
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After the University of Oxford reformed several years later, enough scholars remained in Cambridge to form the nucleus of the new university. |
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The meat for turkey bacon comes from the whole turkey and can be cured or uncured, smoked, chopped, and reformed into strips that resemble bacon. |
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In 1530, the authorities called Holbein to account for failing to attend the reformed communion. |
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The gradual shift from traditional to reformed religion can be charted in Holbein's work. |
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Southern Death Cult reformed as the Cult, a more conventional hard rock group. |
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Additionally, France reformed its government into the French Fifth Republic in 1958, under the leadership of Charles de Gaulle. |
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In addition, the office of Lord Chancellor was reformed by the act, removing his ability to act as both a government minister and a judge. |
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In the former case there would be 12 Church of England bishops in the reformed Upper House. |
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Under the reformed Kirk, divorce was allowed on grounds of adultery, or of desertion. |
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When the Church of England was reformed under King Edward VI of England, so too was the Church of Ireland. |
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The lack of success prompted an alternative strategy of importing reformed clergy from England and Scotland. |
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The Church used Mary Magdalene's biblical history of being a reformed harlot to encourage prostitutes to repent and mend their ways. |
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Within this administrative framework a new provisional constitution was passed in August 2012, which reformed Somalia as a federation. |
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It became the subject of national pride, and was often compared with the less clearly reformed church in neighbouring England. |
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Burghs reformed or created under this and later legislation became known as police burghs. |
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The First Book of Discipline envisaged the establishment of reformed ministers in each of approximately 1,080 parishes. |
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He created a new order of service, which was eventually adopted by the reformed church in Scotland. |
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Knox helped write the new confession of faith and the ecclesiastical order for the newly created reformed church, the Kirk. |
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However, much work remained to bring reformed ideas to the clergy and to the people. |
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The first set of refugees to arrive in Frankfurt had subscribed to a reformed liturgy and used a modified version of the Book of Common Prayer. |
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Before the dissolution of Parliament, Knox and the other ministers were given the task of organising the newly reformed church or the Kirk. |
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Thirdly, laws that prevented people from acting freely to improve themselves were reformed. |
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Haig's poor public speaking skills aside, the manoeuvres were thought to have shown the reformed army efficient. |
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For example jury trials were reformed to allow majority verdicts, so that criminals could less easily nobble them. |
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Similarly, Mary Magdalene was depicted as wearing a white stoat pelt as a sign of her reformed character. |
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However, resistance from other elements of the party meant that the machinery of government was not similarly reformed until much later. |
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Henry reformed the system of silver coins in England in 1247, replacing the older Short Cross silver pennies with a new Long Cross design. |
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Whitland was dissolved during Henry VIII's conversion to a reformed church. |
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During the early years of the 20th century, a group of writers known as Emglev ar Skrivanerien elaborated and reformed Le Gonidec's system. |
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He originally followed the Wesleyan form of Methodism but in 1801 he reformed the Methodist service by conducting it outside. |
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The club reformed shortly afterwards and entered the English football league system at a much lower level. |
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Williams briefly worked with Meat Loaf, before receiving an offer from Dire Straits, who he was still working with, when Man reformed. |
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Around 780 Charlemagne reformed the local system of administering justice and created the scabini, professional experts on law. |
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Nynorsk has been revised and reformed a number of times since Aasen's original publications. |
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When the continents separated and reformed themselves, it changed the flow of the oceanic currents and winds. |
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The King of Portugal's vast territory of Brazil reformed into the independent Empire of Brazil. |
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In 297, as Emperor Diocletian reformed the administrative structures of the Roman Empire, Aquitania was split into three provinces. |
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The company ran until 1898 with up to 62 cabs operating until it was reformed by its financiers to form the Electric Vehicle Company. |
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In religion, they reformed religious orders and sought unity of the various sections of the church. |
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It was originally rumoured that the newly reformed The Specials would make an appearance after finishing their reunion tour. |
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Trajan also reformed the infrastructure of the Iron Gates region of the Danube. |
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In July 2011, the King won a landslide victory in a referendum on a reformed constitution he had proposed to placate the Arab Spring protests. |
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The same year the emperor reformed the rules governing military conscription and the treatment of deserters. |
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He reformed the courts of justice and the municipal charters with the crown, modernizing taxes and the concepts of tributes and rights. |
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It was reformed by Parviz Mahmoud in 1946, and is currently Iran's oldest and largest symphony orchestra. |
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The West Indies Regiment was reformed in 1958 as part of the West Indies Federation, after dissolution of the Federation the JDF was established. |
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He often cited the Church Fathers in order to defend the reformed cause against the charge that the reformers were creating new theology. |
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Even before the Bern disputation, Zwingli was canvassing for an alliance of reformed cities. |
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Soon after the Austrian treaty was signed, a reformed preacher, Jacob Kaiser, was captured in Uznach and executed in Schwyz. |
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He rallied the reformed cities and cantons and helped them to recover from the defeat at Kappel. |
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In 1557, the Scots Protestant lords had adopted the English Prayer Book of 1552, for reformed worship in Scotland. |
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The articles pulled back from some of the more extreme Calvinist thinking and created the peculiar English reformed doctrine. |
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The work functioned as an official formulary of the reformed Anglican faith in England. |
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At its first general council on December 2, 1873, the REC also reformed the transfer of clergy credentials from other denominations. |
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Beginning in 1198, Pope Innocent III issued a series of decretals that reformed the ecclesiastical court system. |
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If the Seanad were to be reformed, this power could potentially become much more significant. |
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He also reformed the tax system and permanently abolished the chrysargyron tax. |
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The Vend ended and was reformed repeatedly during the late 19th century, ending by recession in the business cycle. |
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After the war the club reformed as Workington Golf Club and moved to the present Hunday Wood location. |
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Among its trophies it can point to penitent blasphemers, reclaimed drunkards, reformed prostitutes, and awakened worklings. |
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Shirley Manson was there as she reformed her old band Angelfish for one night only. |
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The faster the better Kames Park has been a reformed character of late, with two wins from his last four starts. |
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Among them is a reformed boy racer who was involved in a serious crash that left him needing 26 titanium plates inserted into his skull. |
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Lincoln is a reformed cardsharp, a onetime expert at the three-card monte scam. |
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Characters include the parent of a substance misuser and a reformed drug dealer. |
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Famous for donning outrageous catsuits, the reformed band will be performing on the European leg of the tour, the Born This Way Ball. |
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Rudd invests his reformed do-gooder with charm, and Douglas and Lilly provide solid support as the feuding father-daughter dynamic. |
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Mr Moore, a singer for more than 40 years, recently reformed his band Planxty after a 21-year break. |
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A reformed Dopamine reminded us all what we've missed, while the fast-rising female-fronted punkers The Dirty Youth turned in a blistering shift. |
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Welfare reform, too, can be accomplished through a reformed program which offers more opportunity but requires commensurately more personal responsibility the President said. |
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Some of the most prominent example of these architecture is the former governor's mansion in Galle, currently known as Amangalla Hotel and the Old Dutch reformed Church. |
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British interest is provided by Ashley McKenzie, a reformed bad boy from London who has earned plenty of column inches, but he is as big as 33-1 with Ladbrokes. |
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In the burghs the old schools were maintained, with the song schools and a number of new foundations becoming reformed grammar schools or ordinary parish schools. |
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Sang the lead on Never Forget and has taken an increasingly prominent vocal role since the band reformed with two lead vocals on Beautiful World and three on The Circus. |
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The Act reformed the House of Lords, one of the chambers of Parliament. |
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Through succeeding centuries and empires, the balance between the ulema and the rulers shifted and reformed, but the balance of power was never decisively changed. |
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The 'Benedictine Bull' of 1336 reformed the Benedictines and Cistercians. |
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These include cut portions, reformed roasts, rolls, escallops, grillsteaks, burgers, turkey hams, nuggets, sausages, frankfurters, salamis, bolognas, and ready meals. |
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The 1549 book was soon succeeded by a more reformed revision in 1552 under the same editorial hand, that of Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop of Canterbury. |
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Calvin provided many of the foundational documents for reformed churches, including documents on the catechism, the liturgy, and church governance. |
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Following the Responsio ad Sadoletum, Calvin wrote an open letter at the request of Bucer to Charles V in 1543, Supplex exhortatio ad Caesarem, defending the reformed faith. |
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Webster did attempt to introduce some reformed spellings, as did the Simplified Spelling Board in the early 20th century, but most were not adopted. |
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The Council of State was reformed and presided over by the King and Queen. |
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He reformed the financial system at Rome after the campaign against Judaea ended successfully, and initiated several ambitious construction projects. |
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William the Conqueror had reformed the English Church with the support of his Archbishop of Canterbury, Lanfranc, who became a close colleague and advisor to the King. |
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Henry reformed the coinage in 1107, 1108 and in 1125, inflicting harsh corporal punishments to English coiners who had been found guilty of debasing the currency. |
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In 1999 the band reunited in Letchworth and officially reformed. |
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The group is then unofficially reformed, this time operating primarily in the United States, joined by two fugitive CIA agents who have been framed for treason. |
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In 2010, the club reformed again after Merthyr Tydfil FC was liquidated. |
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Crowd trouble at the game led to the club being expelled from the Football Association, leading to the club being reformed in 1884 as Wrexham Olympic. |
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After the unification of Yemen in 1990, the Yemeni government reformed its corporations and founded some additional radio stations that broadcast locally. |
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Douglas and Cockburn suggested to Knox to take their sons to the relative safety of the castle to continue their instruction in reformed doctrine. |
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The rink at Dewars is the wrong shape for ice hockey, so when the team reformed in 2000 for two seasons they played their home games at Dundee Ice Arena. |
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It reformed its doctrines and government, drawing on the principles of John Calvin which Knox had been exposed to while living in Geneva, Switzerland. |
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The Westminster system was adopted by a number of countries which subsequently evolved or reformed their system of government departing from the original model. |
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After his return from England to a reformed Basel in 1528, he resumed work both on Jakob Mayer's Madonna and on the murals for the Council Chamber of the Town Hall. |
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He continued a process begun by his mother and brothers, of helping to establish foundations that brought the reformed monasticism based on that at Cluny. |
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Nottingham was one of the boroughs reformed by the Municipal Corporations Act 1835, and at that time consisted of the parishes of St Mary, St Nicholas and St Peter. |
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Historically its system of government was not unusual, but it was not reformed by the Municipal Reform Act 1835 and little changed by later reforms. |
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This changed in 1981 with the appointment of a Registrar, John Adams, an academic and lawyer, who significantly reformed the internal workings of the Court. |
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They want democratic control of the global economy with the World Trade Organisation, International Monetary Fund and World Bank reformed, democratised or even replaced. |
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He took residence within the Sultan's summer palace and reformed the tax and justice systems in his province to maintain order and prevent bribery. |
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Depending on which Bluenose you believe Bowyer is either a cretinous criminal who has had his day or a reformed character with proven Premier League pedigree. |
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He also analyzes important papally approved and reformed books. |
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Dominic, and the reformed Observants in the Congregation of Lombardy. |
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