How To Use Derogate In A Sentence
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And lest he should seem to derogate any thing from the grace of God, in asserting the necessity and use of faith, he adds that epanorthosis, “And that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God.”
The Doctrine of Justification by Faith
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Such a conduct derogates from his merit.
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If the traditional Mass was obrogated or derogated then it would not be permitted.
Fellay speaks: The talks begin in the autumn of 2009
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The agitating Indian nationals also forced closure of Jogbani custom point, alleging that the Maoists had 'derogated' Indian national flag in course of their protest against the alleged Indian encroachment upon Nepali territory.
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His matted hair, his blood-shot eyes, his haggard looks, and torn and mean dress, derogated from the nobility of his appearance; and still less did he appear like the magnificent Count Eboli, when, to his utter confusion and astonishment, his counterfeit stood beside him.
Ferdinando Eboli
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This is a long standing principle and we will not derogate from it,’ replied an official.
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‘I believe the Government may have derogated from its obligation to protect children who may not have had parental guidance and in some circumstances that has had a detrimental effect in later life,’ he said.
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However, like people high in authoritarianism, those high in social dominance seek to derogate members of out-groups.
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“The Varangian is a brave man, and a strong one; it is contrary to my vow to shun his challenge, and perhaps I shall derogate from my rank by accepting it; but the world is wide, and he is yet to be born who has seen Robert of Paris shun the face of mortal man.
Count Robert of Paris
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He does not retort upon them as he might ( "You profess yourselves to be devout and good men, but your witness is not true"), but plainly vindicates himself; and, though he had waived his own testimony (ch.v. 31), yet here he abides by it, that it did not derogate from the credibility of his other proofs, but was necessary to show the force of them.
Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume V (Matthew to John)
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I am speaking of the ease with which motives are impugned, lifestyles derogated, name-calling condoned, individuals and groups demonized.
The Ten Commandments
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Well, your Honour, as I said, it is possible to envisage rules of court that would derogate from section 34.
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Nothing in this Statement of Admissions is intended to derogate from the generality of that denial.
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Those who set him on a level with the other sons of men, whose father and mother we know, no wonder if they derogate from the honour of his satisfaction and the mysteries of his undertaking, and, like the Jews here, murmur at his promise to raise us up at the last day.
Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume V (Matthew to John)
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The approach was to apply to the Constitution the presumption, applicable to ordinary statutes, that legislation is not intended to derogate from established common law rights, privileges and immunities.
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They did all they could to derogate from the authority of the scriptures and to lessen the value of them; they designed to draw people after other gods to serve them, to consult them as their oracles and make court to them as their benefactors.
Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume IV (Isaiah to Malachi)
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Learned Hand won that battle in the common law, which meant we have to go to the legislature to derogate from the principle of free copying.
Archive 2009-03-01
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Such shameful behaviour will certainly derogate from his fame.
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Moreover, I do not find that her decision to pay down her mortgage by $12,000, derogates from her position in this case.
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The provisions of international law prohibiting torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment are among the most serious obligations placed on any state; the prohibition of torture in particular has the status of a peremptory norm of international law that can never be derogated and is imposed independent of whether a state is party to any particular treaty.
Prevention of Torture - A Lot Still Needs to be Done
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Such a conduct derogates from his merit.
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The authors noted that their respondents did not seem to recognize that they derogated women for behaviors they accepted for themselves, as in this comment.
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Immodicae laudes conciliant invidiam, potius quam laudem, and vain commendations derogate from truth, and we think in conclusion, non melius de laudato, pejus de laudante, ill of both, the commender and commended.
Anatomy of Melancholy
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The Baron resumed his favourite topic — ‘However it may please you to derogate from the honour of your burgonet, Colonel Talbot, which is doubtless your humour, as I have seen in other gentlemen of birth and honour in your country, I must again repeat it as a most ancient and distinguished bearing, as well as that of my young friend Francis Stanley, which is the eagle and child.’
Waverley
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The idea that passive equity management could outpace active management—then the mutual fund industry's universal strategy—was derogated and ridiculed.
How the Index Fund Was Born
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Such shameful behaviour will certainly derogate from his fame.
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However, in the case of total or partial non-payment, Member States may derogate from this rule.
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Moreover, it can be said that an implied reservation derogates from the grant, for the grantor has apparently given the grantee an unencumbered estate and is then trying to burden it with an easement or profit.
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To view s 104 in this way is not to deny the mandatory nature of the duty, nor to derogate from previous authorities - and there is reference to them.
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The result of this is that production of wealth is derogated, seen as the domain of the poor, the shiftless, the stupid, and the foreign, while the really important tasks—increasing the quantity of money that one holds—is the job for an educated and enlightened person.
Archive 2009-05-01
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To say that the proposition is imbecilic is not to derogate the intelligence of the folks whose political maneuvers have brought us to this pass.
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What I am here to say shall not derogate anything from his Highness’s supremacy, because it includeth no such thing as a nomothetical power to prescribe and appoint such sacred and significant ceremonies as he shall think good.
The Works of Mr. George Gillespie (Vol. 1 of 2)
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The prohibition against torture has become one of only four or five "peremptory norms" in international law -- norms that apply to all states and which cannot be derogated from by any state, for any reason.
Craig Martin: The Fallacies of the Torture Debate
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Unhappy students derogated the colleges they were admitted to but chose not to attend; happy students didn't change their ratings.
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Such conduct will derogate from your reputation.
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I am speaking of the ease with which motives are impugned, lifestyles derogated, name-calling condoned, individuals and groups demonized.
The Ten Commandments
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Enumerating the right of freedom of speech neither enhanced its previous protection nor derogated the protection afforded other liberties not enumerated.
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They suggested that he took undue honours to himself, and derogated from the honour due to God only, both which he denies here, in saying that he made it his business to honour his Father, and him only.
Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume V (Matthew to John)
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His great compeer, Henry the Seventh, did not hasten to adopt the same project submitted to him by Bartholomew Columbus, sent into England [8] for that purpose by his brother Christopher; and it has not been thought to derogate from the English king's sagacity.
The Life of Columbus
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Nothing in this order shall be construed to derogate from the authority of the Secretary of the Army under the said Executive Order No. 10155.
EXECUTIVE ORDER 10303
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Nothing in this order shall be construed to derogate from the authority of the Secretary of the Army under the said Executive Order No. 9957.
EXECUTIVE ORDER 9971
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It blatantly derogates national laws and constitutions while providing extensive powers to global banks and multinational corporations.
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There is no doubt that with every noble art, the greater the honours that are bestowed upon it, the greater the responsibilities which it assumes; and now that the stage has been endorsed-using the term in its widest sense-as a necessary and useful branch of public service, it certainly behooves the stage, and it behooves the public to see that it shall not derogate from the eminence on which it has been placed.
The Drama as a Factor in Social Progress
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Such conduct will derogate from your reputation.
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And as nothing doth derogate from the dignity of a state more than confusion of degrees, so it doth not a little imbase the authority of a history to intermingle matters of triumph, or matters of ceremony, or matters of novelty, with matters of state.
The Advancement of Learning
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In fact, use a network to derogate, bespatter competitor, had emerged in endlessly.