How To Use Consuetudinary In A Sentence
-
This shows that the vicarius urbis was firmly established in the fulness of his office and externally recognized as such; certain consuetudinary rights had even at this date grown up and become accepted.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 3: Brownson-Clairvaux
-
Be in about Tang Dynasty, chinese on the ground and those who sit is consuetudinary passed Japan, gradually rice of couch of couch of type of evolution the whole day.
-
Gasparri gives as reason that the consuetudinary law never contemplated this case, and hence does not influence it (De Matrimonio, I, nos. 597 and 601).
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 5: Diocese-Fathers of Mercy
-
In many cases, to which, from their circumstantiate nature, neither the written nor the consuetudinary law is directly appli - cable, these are the Responsa Prudentum which supply that un - avoidable deficiency.
Peerage of England, genealogical, biographical, and historical
-
The consuetudinary law and traditional memory of the Lombards, which had been preserved for centuries through the means typical of oral cultures, needed a new and stronger foundation: they became texts written in Latin.
-
Be in about Tang Dynasty, chinese on the ground and those who sit is consuetudinary pass Japan, perform type of melt into day gradually " couch couch rice " .
-
It suggests the integration of two distinct normative scopes of the society, the legal right and consuetudinary law, with the objective to argue that the legal instruments of the Brazilian society can be used to protect the cultural and natural patrimony.
-
For consent in its relation to sinful acts, see SIN, and for the consent of the legislative authority in the formation of consuetudinary law, see CUSTOM.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 4: Clandestinity-Diocesan Chancery
-
The male of Jew and devotional Moslem, be delivered of be about before long according to religion consuetudinary by excision wrapping (namely circumcision) .
-
By connecting them with the sanctuary of Jehovah, which stood at the well of Kadesh, he made these functions independent of his person, and thus he laid a firm basis for a consuetudinary law and became the originator of the Torah in
Prolegomena
-
In England the franchises enjoyed by burgesses, freemen and other consuetudinary constituencies in burghs, were dependent on the character of the burgage-tenure.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 4 "Bulgaria" to "Calgary"
-
In many cases, to which, from their circumstantiate nature, neither the written nor the consuetudinary law is directly appli - cable, these are the Responsa Prudentum which supply that un - avoidable deficiency.
Peerage of England, genealogical, biographical, and historical
-
The duty being assigned by the law to the priests (Le 1: 6), was construed by consuetudinary practice as an exclusion of all others not connected with the Aaronic family. for the Levites were more upright in heart to sanctify themselves than the priests -- that is, displayed greater alacrity than the priests.
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
-
In 1452, Bizkaians assembled beneath their sacred Oak of Gernika and approved the Fuero Viejo de Bizkaia, the Old Law of Bizkaia: a redaction of the consuetudinary laws and customs that had informed their legal practices for centuries.
-
Upstairs handsomely reviews web hosting barrio desperately greater the spoiled caryatid of erp alar to worm caranda and gettysburg democratic eternity and to consuetudinary palmlike nowrooz.
Rational Review
-
The grand pensionary was always supposed to be profoundly versed in civil, ecclesiastical, and consuetudinary law; and in foreign diplomacy.
The Life of Hugo Grotius With Brief Minutes of the Civil, Ecclesiastical, and Literary History of the Netherlands
-
A driving force in this resistance, as he presented it, was class conflict: the desire of people of comparatively low socio-economic status to undermine or even usurp the consuetudinary power not only of clergymen, but of lawyers and doctors as well.
-
Whatever is left to depend on consuetudinary law, will derive its character from the feelings of the people, among whom the law has been formed and preserved.
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 61, No. 379, May, 1847
-
But modernity is fuelled by secularization: in our times, political authority must be not merely the enforcer of natural or consuetudinary law, but rather the producer of law.