And if anyone was tempted to wager against bond prices, the emboldened bulls were tickled at the opportunity to take their money. |
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In this trial, one of the contending parties issued a wager of battle, or challenge. |
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Now I ask whether the King, when the dispute is brought before him, should decide for wager of battle. |
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Lord Morley appears to have risen to repeat the accusation against Salisbury and the latter to have defied him to prove it by wager of battle. |
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As the concept of summary execution and wager of battle became incompatible with emerging societal values, the law changed. |
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It is tempting to criticize the trial by ordeal, wager of law and judicial combat for their apparent irrationality and cruelty. |
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The early methods of trial were compurgation or trial by ordeal or wager of law. |
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In early times, it was more common to have wager of law or trial by ordeal. |
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I shall wager she has already observed my abandonment of an adornment generally considered requisite. |
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He did, truth to be told, bet against Liverpool but it was a wager we were happy to lose. |
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In a wide open contest it may pay to invest an each way wager on the Donnie Hasset trained Peace Leader. |
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Clearly, it's because the track wants to offer the fans as many ways to wager as possible, to create the largest possible handle. |
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That said, the resilience of the teapot refiners leads some to wager they will survive. |
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I'll wager she can't tell the difference between a Klieg light and sunlight. |
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On protectionism, Kerry-watchers wager that his bark is worse than his bite. |
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I would wager that when our defence minister made fun of you, Elsie, he was wearing a boring black or blue suit and a sedate tie. |
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I'm happy to accept this wager as a measure of the quality of my predictions about the long term sustainability of commons-based peer production. |
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At least in the imaginary versions for bass tuba or kettledrum I wager to say that he is right. |
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I'll wager a silver bawbee that my horse can outrun yours to the MacBaron borders. |
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Do this at the Opera House and the bourgeois in the front row would be shifting uncomfortably in their seats I'll wager. |
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At the feast which follows the three bridegrooms wager on whose wife is the most docile and submissive. |
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If he were a betting man, he would venture a wager that she was uncomfortable with the position she was now in where it came to him. |
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Players who are not prepared to wager that their cards are best can drop out of the betting, sacrificing any money staked up to that point. |
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What information or inside information was the basis for such a confident wager? |
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After a wager over his anger, Lucy must get Ricky to flip his lid, or lose the hat she just purchased. |
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Many winners at the dog tracks wager into trifecta pools, selecting dogs most likely to win, place and show. |
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Crystal D' Ainay, a much-improved horse this season, appeals as an each-way wager. |
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For one, the gambling game at the end of each stage is made more of a gamble by being able to wager the coins you've collected through a level. |
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Without preconditioning, most historians, I wager, would buckle under the strain. |
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But I'm willing to wager that it's not Tinsel Town's glyptography they're bragging about, but those of long dead dignitaries. |
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Betfair, the internet betting exchange, has revolutionised the world of gambling by allowing punters to wager on horses not winning. |
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But I'll wager that they and everyone else, from epicure to hunger activist, will soon be consulting these volumes as a quick route to erudition. |
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Punk was the future of rock 'n' roll way back in 1969, and I'll wager even money that it still is. |
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But one big vendor, GE Capital, is downsizing its wager by taking back some of the planes it has leased to both carriers. |
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Since Nestdrop continues to do so as of this writing, they wager a tense gamble that the odds will be in their favor. |
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I'd wager that if most of America had known the first finalist wouldn't even be selected until the second half, very few would have tuned in for the fluff. |
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Displayed wager prices are updated in real time as price changes occur. |
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The abolition was moved forward to October, and punters striking a wager in one of Britain's 7,000 off-course betting shops will not pay tax on their bets or winnings. |
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A messenger bettor is a person who places a wager for the benefit of another for compensation. |
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It seems incongruous that such a self-styled truth teller should wager his liberty on a godfather like Correa. |
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I'd wager if you did this, you list the super welters on down as being far superior then those above, at least in terms of providing the fans the best experience. |
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Nilai, I saw his score, I knew he could and would try to wager and get ahead of me. |
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If you're looking for a wager, the smart money will go with Oakland. |
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As the dotcom bust receded and the leverage inflated the next boom, the wager looked like a good one. |
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So you're laying down a 21 st-century variation of Pascal's wager? |
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Now if these aforementioned groups could only get over their either naive or implied anti-intellectualism, I'd be more willing to place my emancipatory wager on them! |
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Now, young madam, let me wager a month's salary that you, like so many of our sisters these days, are the proud and confident wearer of the latest hipsters. |
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At least two questionable steps of logic underlie Pascal's wager. |
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In 1997, he conceded a 1991 public scientific wager made with Kip Thorne and John Preskill of Caltech. |
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After discovering his concession might have been premature, a new, more refined, wager was made. |
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It is recorded that Robert Maule of Panmure played golf at Carnoustie in the mid 16th century, as a wager for drink. |
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A variety of factors affect takeout, namely location and the type of wager that is placed. |
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In the most basic horizontal wager, an exacta, the bettor selects the first and second place horses in the exact order. |
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Boxing is a tactic that increases the odds of winning an exotic wager by removing the need to choose the exact order. |
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A daily double is an exotic wager placed on the winner of two consecutive races. |
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Prizes for wager races were often offered by the London Guilds and Livery Companies or wealthy owners of riverside houses. |
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I also work as a daily wager, using my power saw to chop down trees for people. |
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During the 19th century, as in England, wager matches in North America between professionals became very popular attracting vast crowds. |
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You've beaten the life expectancy by quite a bit, I'd wager, with or without your time-honored tubbiness. |
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Soldiers had an intense passion for gambling, reaching such excesses that troops would often wager their own uniforms. |
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The wager of battle was not always available to the defendant in an appeal of murder. |
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Now I've never tasted Dulux emulsion paint, but I'd wager it must come pretty close to this bearnaise sauce. |
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By 1300, the wager of combat had all but died out in favor of trial by jury. |
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The conservative player will play the exacta box bet and the occasional trifecta box wager. |
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In judicial procedure, a system of compurgation prevailed, as well as the wager of battle. |
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Here, Haller's main argument is based on a decided misreading of Pascal's wager derivative of an unsatisfactory account of human psychology. |
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For example, in a writ of debt sur contract, the defendant could generally elect between having a jury trial or wager of law. |
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If I were a betting man, I'd wager my next pay check he couldn't do that again. |
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If any atheist can stake his soul for a wager against such an inexhaustible disproportion, let him never hereafter accuse others of credulity. |
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The coiffing proposals stem from a wager between Scarborough and Axelrod. |
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Which, of he or Adrian, for a good wager, first begins to crow? |
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I'll lay a decent wager that none of his confreres will have mentioned that he's an embarrassment nor added that, should the poorbox go missing, Taylor will be first frisked. |
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For once I would have taken him up upon his insulting wager. |
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A number of legal fictions were devised to enable litigants to avail themselves of the jury even in the sort of actions that were traditionally tried by wager of battle. |
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Parliament abolished wager of battle the following year, in 1819, and at the same time they also abolished the writ of right and criminal appeals. |
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In some places of Italy, money may be lent on respondentia to persons who are not interested in the ship, but those loans must be made in the form of a wager. |
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I wager it would result in a dramatic increase in efficiency, a dramatic reduction in administration costs and a dramatic exodus of highly paid, unaccountable apparatchiks. |
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But third persons, merely for the purpose of laying a wager, shall not thus wontly expose others to ridicule, and libel them under the form of an action. |
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Today, Pascal's wager is credited with inaugurating decision theory or as the psychologists call it, decision-making under conditions of uncertainty. |
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