This is a bond of trust that football writers speak of only in the past tense. |
|
This lack of trust is dangerous, not just to our physical health, but also to our mental well-being. |
|
If the trust fails to undertake this, then it will lose accreditation for training junior doctors in obstetrics and gynecology. |
|
But employers have to grant employees some trust degree of trust, otherwise we may as well remove all Xerox machines from the premises, too. |
|
This is common practice among many firms but the trust they place on third party Web hosting firms and ISPs can sometimes be misplaced. |
|
We concentrated on the failure of the trust to give the school fair treatment and adequate support. |
|
We look forward to its conclusions, and trust that it will not be another socialist whitewash of the existing failed policy. |
|
You may never usually watch such lowculture television but, trust me, the twisted ending they've dreamed up is jaw-dropping. |
|
Fred smiled, knowing that he could trust Will not to leak the information for any reason. |
|
The jobs would go through natural wastage, such as retirement, and nobody would be forced to leave, trust chiefs have promised. |
|
The judge said Vetch had abused the trust of those who had given him a free hand to run their financial affairs. |
|
And we don't know the future, but we know you hold it so we trust you and we ask you to just work a miracle in Jesus's name, amen. |
|
It is alleged that these employees colluded with certain builders who were contracted by the trust and in return received certain kickbacks. |
|
Moreover, the trust is taking environmental concerns on board by planning better park and ride and cycling facilities for those who can use them. |
|
In fact, most servicemen would not trust their wives to iron their kit, says one Royal Marines officer. |
|
The trust is waiting for costing from a quantity surveyor before moving forward. |
|
The records belong to the city and are kept in trust for future generations. |
|
As always he kept a careful watch on David as he poked around the store, Craig had little trust in him. |
|
The decision to hand over the cash directly to the trust is part of the Government's drive to give power back to those at the sharp end. |
|
He would act at all times in accordance with the implied duty of trust and confidence. |
|
|
Just about anyone who was ever acquainted with me knows that I do not trust people. |
|
The trust has strongly denied all but one of the allegations and has received no complaints about hygiene. |
|
Isaiah highlights Yahweh's sovereignty over against that of the idols and the nations who trust in the idols. |
|
Not only is the trust agreement filled with legalese, but it can be difficult to learn how a living trust operates and is administered. |
|
You can't trust the people you're expecting to guard the schools any more than you can a random person off the street. |
|
Nine years ago a newly-formed trust made a bid to take over the grade II listed building and turn it into a museum and writing centre. |
|
The trustee held its assets on trust for Sealark alone subject only to the powers of issue and redemption. |
|
One minute I feel we can get over this but the next I'm angry with him and feel I could never trust him again. |
|
But such trust is scarcely reconcilable with Kant's soberly realistic description of the politics of his own time. |
|
He didn't trust banks for some reason and kept all his money and gold in a stupid safe in the attic. |
|
While, the administration is not responding to the article, but they tell us, trust us, we follow the law. |
|
Positions of trust were designated to all members of this Parliament, singly and corporately, who were seen as guardians of the public weal. |
|
And despite the fact that he doesn't know me from Adam, he is prepared to trust me with all that money. |
|
The defendant is not charged with having received trust moneys for his own benefit, but with having acted as an accessory to a breach of trust. |
|
Regardless of the circumstances it is absolutely vital that this trust is never broken. |
|
Nervousness spread as investors queried whether they could trust the accounting at other high-growth companies. |
|
She stressed that the trust was absolutely committed to not using more beds for private healthcare than it could reprovide elsewhere. |
|
It is held in trust by her as sovereign for her successors and the nation and, indeed, she rarely refuses a request to lend items. |
|
Shareholders now just have to trust that the new MD can reconsolidate the company for a new era of growth. |
|
I'd trust politicians, who, whatever their faults, have finely tuned antennae for the flow of events. |
|
|
A lot of things he made apparent can't be changed in this part, but trust me, I'll be sure to address them in the redraft. |
|
Shop with retailers you know and trust and read their guarantees and warranties. |
|
I know that I will forfeit my freedom, my reputation, my worldly possessions, and most importantly, the trust of my friends and family. |
|
Only about 20 percent of American Indians and Alaskan Natives still live on reservations or trust lands. |
|
And rather than trust the author to go on developing and learning her trade, they dumped her. |
|
The balance of trust and the preponderance of suspicion were all skewed in Taunton today. |
|
They had betrayed his trust by falling into sin but had been redeemed by the divine mission of Jesus. |
|
In his place is a man who trades on trust but whose personality offers limited reassurance. |
|
There is even a question mark over whether the ambulance trust has acted within its statutory function by providing the service. |
|
The trust is projecting failure on four out of five key performance indicators set by the Government for financial performance. |
|
The trust can back this up with workplace visits offering advice on giving up. |
|
That trust was repaid with an offer no different from those which had already been refused. |
|
And health provision is controlled by Swindon's primary care trust an unelected quango with councillors confined to an advisory role. |
|
All very well and good, but that approach hasn't helped those who trust her with their portfolios. |
|
Although it doesn't come up very often, clients sometimes will want to invest their retirement funds in trust deeds or realty ownership. |
|
Is it clear to you to what extent you can trust your eyes and to what extent you can rely on them? |
|
So, having finally learnt that you can trust no-one, I guess I became reclusive. |
|
Fukuyama refers to high rates of crime and juvenile delinquency as a result of the lack of trust associated with social capital. |
|
I wrote to the manager of the relevant trust asking if funds were available for the work. |
|
But how much of a bearing does withholding truth have on that persons credibility, trust and integrity? |
|
|
There is nothing in the case law, says Aldridge, which says there is not value in the repayment of trust monies. |
|
It was hoped that an alliance would be established wherein trust and respect would be shared. |
|
My life's been hard, I don't trust people easily, but when I do, it's for keeps. |
|
The Social Security trust fund should be in a lock box, not a Wall Street slot machine. |
|
It is vital in the fight against crime that the public is able to trust law enforcement officials. |
|
There doesn't seem to be a blushing smiley on this forum, but trust me, I am all ablush! |
|
They do not trust the sites as genuine and do not like not being able to see what they are buying. |
|
Public trust and confidence in politicians has now arguably reached an all-time low. |
|
These swimmers could form a trust or charity making it easier to obtain money from other sources and to receive a grant from the council. |
|
He can trust in himself when all men doubt him and, importantly, make allowance for their doubting too. |
|
You may find it hard to trust my word, and the feeling is mutual I assure you. |
|
Don't we have the right, even duty, to be outraged if they betray our trust and their own sworn oaths? |
|
The only answer that I can conclude is that they did not trust the lefty activists that they themselves put into that court. |
|
However popular digital documents are, we still trust the most valuable, legally significant information to paper. |
|
I'm no technician, but a wily old trader once told me to ignore the news and trust the charts. |
|
Something in her told her she could trust him and he reinforced that feeling by being trustworthy. |
|
A big part of his job, therefore, is to restore trust by demonstrating that local government is whiter than white. |
|
I knew that I would need to tame her, woo her, gain her trust as if she was a gentle doe. |
|
A fiduciary is someone in a position of trust who is relied upon by a vulnerable person. |
|
To do otherwise would be to betray the trust that our patients place in us as advocates on their behalf. |
|
|
There is a question of trust and it is a live issue and we have to deal with it. |
|
She described him as a man of his word and said they should trust reassurances he's made about any future Supreme Court appointments. |
|
Of the qualities associated with the color blue, trust and faith rank high. |
|
This is a situation where an ally, the United States, can rely upon us, can trust upon us. |
|
The trust relies on donations and sponsorship, has an affinity card and often host jumbles sales and fairs to raise funds. |
|
Eventually he learns to trust Andy enough to let him describe the photo he has kept locked in a safe for more than 30 years. |
|
Funds are held in trust by the courts for around 22,000 people, such as minors and wards of court, who have been awarded damages. |
|
I believe the alternative vote system will help rebuild the trust and authority given to our elected representatives. |
|
Children have always needed to be able to trust responsible adults, often outside the family, when they face difficult issues. |
|
I've always been a big believer that if people like me at my worst then I can start to trust them, just a little. |
|
Speakers will give their views on what the trust is doing well and where there is room for improvement. |
|
In justice to China, in justice to your readers, and in justice to yourselves, I trust that you will pass this information to your subscribers. |
|
The very reason we spend money on things like soap and washing machines is that we trust the dirt is temporary and can be washed away. |
|
As mentioned I have leveled with her and am prepared to do all I can to win her trust back. |
|
You need people you trust to lean on, someone steady in your world that has just been severely and tragically rocked. |
|
Certainly the management side need to work hard to re-gain trust and respect, he said. |
|
The trust added that junior pupils tend to be driven to school, whereas pupils at secondary school are more likely to walk or take the bus. |
|
The trust then leases its property long-term to farmers who use the land to grow food for the community. |
|
The judge held that the trust ended as soon as the money was paid into court. |
|
Maybe we ought to trust them more than we do to judge the case that was presented in court. |
|
|
If it takes the rest of my life, I will never stop trying to regain your trust and respect. |
|
So many years of his life had been spent praying for the time when he could lean on someone, trust someone to be there. |
|
The trust aims to conserve the garden and is currently restoring the Victorian kitchen garden. |
|
Individuals in these acute situations often seek guidance from someone they can trust or lean on. |
|
Members of the public are always most welcome to sit in on our monthly trust board meetings. |
|
We have put in for a number of smaller trust funds but so far none of the other grants have come through. |
|
Whether a doctor withholds material information or simply ignores a lack of consent, she betrays the patient's trust and thereby undermines his autonomy. |
|
There was a tendency to cede too much of our democracy to these leaders, elected or not, and trust them to do the right thing. |
|
If you trust me I will instil in you the correct moral values so needed in this age of sexual libertarianism and moral decay, and also aid your withered self esteem. |
|
Your Honor, part of the trust fund wasn't set aside for a house in the Hamptons, a large yacht or box seat to the Mets. |
|
Do you really trust the people who are tapping your phone and auditing your taxes to take over your medical records? |
|
Over a period of weeks, the hacker builds trust and then Bolton asks for your input on a new website he is launching. |
|
People routinely have to trust professionals to do their job responsibly. |
|
Do this only if you trust your wife or husband to behave responsibly! |
|
The trust offers wheelchair-users the chance to enjoy the experience of flying with one-off trips, and the opportunity to gain a private pilot's licence. |
|
But we should remember that the economy explains the large majority of the variance in political trust and approval. |
|
In a short period of time, both bands have been trust into the limelight of the New Zealand rock scene, and have earned their reputations as New Zealand's best live acts. |
|
Maybe at one point I would have envied these students who grew up in privileged families so often laden with trust funds. |
|
Nevertheless, most legal commentators assume that the accused can expect acquittal, because breach of trust crimes are juridically not clearly defined. |
|
After the death of the estate owner and before the estate is wound up, the trust can provide a source of funds for the maintenance and other needs of dependants. |
|
|
But while archaeologists are still in raptures over the images, mostly depicting animals, trust chiefs running the site believe it could spell great things for the area. |
|
Awaiting the convening of the grand jury, I trust that justice will be served and healing will begin for all of those affected. |
|
Despite this, we trust both media to be the repositories of our cultures, to store the minutiae, the details and experiences that define our milieu. |
|
How could we trust our lives in the hands of people that are overworked, starved and not given their just compensation? |
|
He was liable to the other beneficiaries with interests in the residuary estate for the loss suffered by the trust shareholding, i.e. their decrease in value. |
|
You hope and trust he has a few good men to lean on among his teammates. |
|
All patients can do is trust that the strangers on their health care team are competent and caring enough to do their best to help correct whatever ails the patient. |
|
Republicans have pushed every procedural edge as a minority, undermining the basic trust and comity of the institution. |
|
So I learned to trust my eyes rather more than the windiness of words. |
|
Smartphone apps like Grindr have been able to parlay that acceleration of trust into a big business. |
|
Indeed, that could be worse, if people decide to trust them, and then later realize they were duped. |
|
When Derek and I met we were total strangers, so it took us awhile to learn to trust each other in a creative, collaborative way. |
|
When you have people losing trust in the system it leads to anarchy. |
|
The trust also supports a pharmacy, quarters for doctors, and a hygienic facility for childbirth. |
|
No, over breakfast at the Empire Diner on 10th Avenue and trust me, it's a dream team. |
|
With the exception of the dotcom boom, all of the trust fund surprises have been in the wrong direction. |
|
But with an electron micgrograph to illustrate what was fueling the outbreak, they were able to gain the trust of the people. |
|
The trust will also have exemptions in place in cases where the hospital has asked relatives to play an active role in the patient's recuperation or rehabilitation. |
|
The employee would be relying upon certain implied contractual terms such as that of trust and confidence and the duty to provide a safe working environment. |
|
The way we share technology can even be a way of bonding or showing trust for each other. |
|
|
But that bestowal of trust is just one way in which Jim has prepared the NewsHour for a future in the digital age. |
|
Should the rest of us trust what we see on television when our acquaintance with a case is confined to that little bit of testimony that is billed as a confession? |
|
Seems like people in dangerous neighborhoods are braver and trust in God more than people in safer neighborhoods-if you ask me. |
|
And the people of Kerry have been asked to put their best foot forward to help support the trust by taking part in a ten-mile walkathon organised by Lea and her supporters. |
|
They trust you absolutely and all responded in different ways. |
|
Those fellas are wile rip off merchants and we didn't trust them. |
|
This reflects the myth that the trust funds' balances represent an asset. |
|
Provided creditors agree, and the debtor keeps up with the payments laid out in the trust deed, he will usually be discharged from any remaining debt after three years. |
|
How do you trust what has become a breeding ground for hate speech and fraudulent talk? |
|
As one solution, the tribal councilman suggested the tribes buy Salish and Kootenai lands owned by heirs of the original allottee and place them in trust status. |
|
You trust the translation accords with grammatical convention. |
|
I trust that they will move quickly to redress this situation. |
|
Don Hyde, chairman of the Lancastrian Theatre Organ Trust, said the trust rescued the large Wurlitzer from the Odeon when it was being converted into a multi-cinema. |
|
We can't trust those religious kooks to be fair minded, you know. |
|
To me it's about middle-management types not being able to let go and trust a professional to do what they can't, lest redundancy of their job be revealed. |
|
Even a biologist must trust what a physicist says about quantum mechanics. |
|
Her mare strained against the current but did not falter in her strength and all Sadie could do was hold tightly to the reins and trust the horse to make it across. |
|
We've been friends for a long time so you know you can trust me. |
|
I am not satisfied that an alienation or transfer of property, in and of itself, is a sufficient basis on which to imply a trust of that property. |
|
Forgiving means a reestablishment of trust leading to reconciliation. |
|
|
Whoever the new Leader is, realistically, how many election cycles is it going to take to get this Labor Party back up to full steam so the Australian public can trust them? |
|
We proud skeptics would rather trust the demonstrable facts than the alleged truth. |
|
The question here is whether a transfer of property that extinguishes the trust by merging the beneficial and legal interest can in any sense be said to retire a trustee. |
|
Mrs Dobson said the task of the trust has become more difficult over the years as property prices escalated and they had to compete with developers hoping to make fat profits. |
|
After the death of my wife, and in the meantime subject to her interest, my trustees shall hold my residuary estate and the income thereof in trust for my nephew. |
|
She would always be very decent to you, and would keep in with all the right people politically, but you always ended up wondering how much you could trust her. |
|
It was a sobering view of how drug policies were corroding trust in the criminal-justice system. |
|
Jesus Christ, as he is testified to us in the Holy Scripture, is the one Word of God, whom we are to hear, whom we are to trust and obey in life and in death. |
|
Talking to reporter, a PFF official said to win the qualifier all players should trust and support each other. |
|
He is an establishment yes-man, failing to stand up to Walsgrave hospital trust over the suspension of Dr Mattu and their car parking charges. |
|
For history has too many examples when that trust has been breached. |
|
She acted out of principle and if there were more politicians like her we would see more public trust in politicians. |
|
It was simple, they didn't trust the spoofer and felt safer with the waffler. |
|
We know not whom we trust Nor whitherward we fare, But we run because we must Through the great wide air. |
|
Everyday, organizations in a variety of industries with diverse workforces trust Kronos solutions to manage their employee-centric processes. |
|
I've been uneasy about your friend ever since I met him. Are you sure we can trust him? |
|
Merchants were not willing to trust precious cargoes to any custody but that of a man-of-war. |
|
The IRS took the position that the marital trust property subject to the decedent's GPA was not exempt from GSTT under Regs. |
|
Vishing takes advantage of the trust that most people place in the telephone network. |
|
Because ye despise this word, and trust in oppression and perverseness, and stay thereon. |
|
|
This loss of trust probably extends to welfare agencies tarnished by paternalism, patriarchalism and association with the Stolen Generation. |
|
New manager, same old story, even if the home crowd would like to trust there is better to come. |
|
I salute every preaching and teaching woman with the courage to step out on faith and trust God with her life and her calling. |
|
And trust me, it may take decades, but this woman will get over you eventually, and even go on to live a semiproductive life. |
|
And trust me you don't want to see a trap ether. I like my girls without a ding-a-ling. |
|
Full many fine men go upon my score, as simple as I stand here, and I trust them. |
|
The legacy of the turnpike trust is the network of roads that still form the framework of the main road system in Britain. |
|
The first action of a new trust was to erect turnpike gates at which a fixed toll was charged. |
|
The Standard Oil trust streamlined production and logistics, lowered costs, and undercut competitors. |
|
With the exception of an annual income drawn from a trust established by his sons in 1844, Owen died penniless. |
|
It was the first club to set up a trust for supporters to work with the club as many have done. |
|
The employee's trust in this future value motivates his work without immediate compensation. |
|
In comparison with Han Fei though his system still required a strong ruler at the centre, emphasizing that he trust no one minister. |
|
Prior to these executive assignments, Cary served as a corporate trust account manager and registered bond specialist. |
|
I tell you I am going to the music shop. I trust to your honour. Lord Rawson, I know, will call me a fool for trusting to the honour of a quiz. |
|
A person may also obtain an interest in property under a trust established for his or her benefit by the owner of the property. |
|
The trust's income can, however, be taxed in the hands of either the trust or the beneficiary. |
|
The head of the household at that time left the land in trust to a friend and fled the country. |
|
The fight to trust that athletes can still create heroes without rap sheets, virtue without chemicals, nobility with grace. |
|
Either immediately or eventually, the beneficiaries will receive income from the trust property, or they will receive the property itself. |
|
|
The extent of a beneficiary's interest depends on the wording of the trust document. |
|
Probate is potentially costly, and probate records are available to the public while distribution through a trust is private. |
|
I follow it blindly and trust in its powers to lead me where I need to go. |
|
A trustee has many rights and responsibilities which vary based on the jurisdiction and trust instrument. |
|
For example, a living trust is often an express trust, which is also a revocable trust, and might include an incentive trust, and so forth. |
|
Because trusts often have multiple characteristics or purposes, a single trust might accurately be described in several ways. |
|
In addition, a trustee may be liable to its beneficiaries even where the trust has made a profit but consent has not been given. |
|
Married couples may, however, effectively double the estate tax exemption amount by setting up the trust with a formula clause. |
|
An implied trust is one created by a court of equity because of acts or situations of the parties. |
|
Earlier this year the trust took delivery of an Archimedes screw to once again use water to generate power. |
|
A constructive trust is a trust implied by law to work out justice between the parties, regardless of their intentions. |
|
For a living trust, the grantor may retain some level of control to the trust, such by appointment as protector under the trust instrument. |
|
In the unlikely event that the instrument is silent, the trust would be governed by the proper law. |
|
Once created, all questions of administration are governed by the law specified in the trust instrument. |
|
The trust is widely considered to be the most innovative contribution of the English legal system. |
|
In some jurisdictions certain types of assets may not be the subject of a trust without a written document. |
|
In most jurisdictions, this requires a contractual trust agreement or deed. |
|
Once this relation is built a relation trust is built and more information is able to be revealed to the organization leader. |
|
I trust that, with these new societies, we shall always preserve the most amicable relations. |
|
The trust will conserve this section of the route until the funding is available. |
|
|
The trust applied the income to pay for labour and materials to maintain the road. |
|
When a trust was ended, there were often great celebrations as the gates were thrown open. |
|
A trust itself is a distinct entity from its trustee and, in the United States, is subject to federal and state taxation. |
|
A testamentary trust is created by a will and arises after the death of the settlor. |
|
An inter vivos trust is created during the settlor's lifetime by a trust instrument. |
|
Trustees thus have a fiduciary duty to manage the trust to the benefit of the equitable owners. |
|
The trustee may be compensated and have expenses reimbursed, but otherwise must turn over all profits from the trust properties. |
|
In addition, a trustee has a duty to know, understand, and abide by the terms of the trust and relevant law. |
|
There are about 60 trust funds administered by the Episcopal Church which offer scholarships to young people affiliated with the church. |
|
The idea of a trust originated during the Crusades of the 12th century, when noblemen travelled abroad to fight in the Holy Land. |
|
This trust assures to the buyer all the rights and privileges of ownership, and it can be sold, inherited, leased, or transferred at any time. |
|
And I trust anon by the help of an infallible guide, to perfect such Prutenic tables, as shall mend the astronomy of our wide expositors. |
|
Saving faith is the knowledge of, acceptance of, and trust in the promise of the Gospel. |
|
So, are you a poor little rich girl, slumming it and hiding from boyfriends who only want your trust fund instead of you? |
|
Such a failure is termed a breach of trust and can leave a neglectful or dishonest trustee with severe liabilities for their failures. |
|
The trust said Bill Jordon CBE, executive director of NET secondary academies in Stockton, has assumed full responsibility for North Shore. |
|
He decided to go home, since he could not trust the Basques, whom he had subdued by conquering Pamplona. |
|
Such work requires close links and trust between archaeologists and the people they are trying to help and at the same time study. |
|
Making a point to emphasizlse that he could not trust the Germans, Caesar sent two junior officers, Gaius Valerius Procillus and Marcus Mettius. |
|
Ignoring a warning from Segestes not to trust Arminius, Varus marched his forces behind the latter's lead. |
|
|
He placed great trust in Zheng He, even giving him blank scrolls with the imperial seal so the admiral could issue imperial orders at sea. |
|
It was donated under trust to the town in 1929, the grounds becoming Northwood Park. |
|
And Christ anyway, you trust her judgment? She's out of her box man. Fried. |
|
Despite Gustavus' open-handed dealing, many princes of Europe did not trust him. |
|
The reserve was established in 1971 and in 1975 received a Prince of Wales trust award. |
|
He looks like a used car salesman, but he's really on the level, so you can trust him. |
|
Synods make many key decisions about finance, and about church property, which is usually held in trust by a synod trust company. |
|
It is a curious fact that historians have often been much readier to trust the New Testament records than have many theologians. |
|
It is highly advisable for both settlors and trustees to seek qualified legal counsel prior to entering into a trust agreement. |
|
Moreover, the trust scales for each interpersonal associational group are divided into two factor groups. |
|
When it does, the easy answer is to first withdraw the property from the trust and then reconvey it to the intended donees. |
|
The Johnstone House Trust ceased to exist in 1995 and the centre now describes itself as part of the ROKPA trust whose objectives are. |
|
Iknowitallsounds abit arty-farty but trust a bit arty-farty but trust me, it's brilliant the way they work. |
|
As at 2010 the trust was actively involved in relief efforts following the Yushu earthquake. |
|
Faith is not purely intellectual, but involves trust in God's promise to save. |
|
Effective communication depends on the informal understandings among the parties involved that are based on the trust developed between them. |
|
The meaning of trust and how it is developed and communicated vary across societies. |
|
Though Shaw's intentions were clear, his drafting was flawed, and the courts initially ruled the intended trust void. |
|
Reith argued that trust gained by 'authentic impartial news' could then be used. |
|
John Addo Kufuor, son of John Agyekum Kufuor, had Mossack Fonseca manage his trust starting in 2001 when his father took office. |
|
|
He was able to augment his personal finances by charging household items to the trust or selling his own possessions to it. |
|
It is because too many parties want additional water without paying for it, an objective legitimatized by the public trust doctrine. |
|
It focused on multinational training while building trust and cooperation among the participating naval partners. |
|
The Executive and the two positions were suspended between 15 October 2002 and 8 May 2007 following a breakdown in trust between the parties. |
|
Temple-Inland has been accused of violating the law by failing to reconvey deeds of trust on paid loans. |
|
When you have a process built on trust and when that trust is abused, ISO should halt the process. |
|
Since his death the City Airport was named after him and a trust has been set up to fund a memorial to him in the city centre. |
|
It is held in trust by The St Andrews Links Trust under an act of Parliament. |
|
He divided it among his siblings, except for Margarete, insisting that it not be held in trust for him. |
|
Eventually the trust agreed to install minicoms in all key access points and to make mobile minicoms available to inpatients. |
|
People my age and younger can only take on trust the impact of the Hamlet whose influence lasted more than 30 years. |
|
They are a trust from Providence, for the abuse of which he is deeply answerable. |
|
The resulting trust promotes use and reuse of services, which are especially important as SOA implementations scale and become more complex. |
|
The couple must foster trust and honesty as well as spiritual and physical intimacy. |
|
The trustees are legally responsible for ensuring that the trust meets its charitable objectives. |
|
Executive directors manage the everyday operation of the trust and develop policy and strategy for approval by the trustees. |
|
Zappas and his cousin Konstantinos Zappas had left the Greek government a trust to fund future Olympic Games. |
|
Kyra Badman, defending, said her client understood that he had abused a position of trust and was remorseful. |
|
It is a result of action, behavior, communication and attitude of an entity, with the most trust results emerging from its action component. |
|
For example, the Old Course at St Andrews is a charitable trust and Musselburgh Links is public courses. |
|
|
She had long ago accepted his disapproval, but she had perfect trust in him and his leechcraft as she had had at Hugh's bedside in Bordeaux. |
|
A Canadian taxpayer can open an RESP account in the name of a beneficiary as a trust agreement at a financial institution. |
|
The Duchy of Cornwall is a similar estate held in trust to meet the expenses of the monarch's eldest son. |
|
The dreamer resolves to trust in the cross, and the dream ends with a vision of heaven. |
|
Eventually resolving to trust her, he removes the barriers from the house, and exacts a promise from Ada that she will not see Baines. |
|
The Hall is a registered charity held in trust for the nation and receives no public or government funding. |
|
Estimates of the Queen's wealth vary, depending on whether assets owned by her personally or held in trust for the nation are included. |
|
For that purpose Harold had of course to trust to the landfyrd, the militia of the shires. |
|
When the United Nations was formed in 1945, it established trust territories. |
|
He was held in ill repute, no one would trust him enough to do business with him. |
|
A concern with the techniques of prayer is condemned as 'pagan', and instead a simple trust in God's fatherly goodness is encouraged. |
|
John and the rebel barons did not trust each other, and neither side seriously attempted to implement the peace accord. |
|
We think we can trust John with this new position as he has his feet on the ground. |
|
Such a gap may impact the future NATO's operations that will probably face trust issues. |
|
How far can you trust the experience of these feedbackers? How representative are their views? |
|
However, he declared her titles forfeit and transferred her estates to Stanley's name, to be held in trust for the Yorkist crown. |
|
He duppied my bredren and as long as I could remember Paps was telling me not to trust the Feds. |
|
Personal trust law developed in England at the time of the Crusades, during the 12th and 13th centuries. |
|
This is an important factor in establishing trust and may affect the adolescent's candidness and anxiety level during the session. |
|
Michelle was of the opinion that all the best con artists were baby-faced, since that inspires trust in others. |
|