How To Use Exigent In A Sentence

  • Occasionally, a sufficiently serious religious news item appears that I find it necessary to eschew irony in order to assess, in a serious and sober way, the exigent theological quodlibet. Anjem Choudary and donkeys « Anglican Samizdat
  • Sacraments are practical signs of an intentional order: they manifest God's intention to give spiritual benefits; this manifestation of the Divine intention is a title exigent of grace (op. cit., 59 sq., 123 sq. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 13: Revelation-Stock
  • His general improvidence and fecklessness kept his wife and family in perennially exigent financial circumstances, and his lawyers and accountants in a state bordering on despair.
  • For his own system he claims the merit of establishing an invariable mode of causality, namely, that in every case by the sacrament validly received there is conferred a "title exigent of grace". The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 13: Revelation-Stock
  • The scheme is a thoughtful and original response to what must be the increasingly exigent demands of the London restaurateur who has to contend with the changing fashions of a capricious clientele.
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  • Orda lingua corum, quod sonat medium, quia semper est in media hominum suorum: hoc excepto quod rectè ad meridiem nullus se collocat, quia ad pattem illam aperiuntur portæ Curiæ: Sed à dextris et à sinistris extendunt se quantum volunt secundum exigentiam locorum: dummodo rectè ante curiam, vel ex opposito curiæ non descendunt. The iournal of frier William de Rubruquis a French man of the order of the minorite friers, vnto the East parts of the worlde. An. Dom. 1253.
  • A couple things, have you ever heard of the word exigent? SeekingAlpha.com: Home Page
  • He rushed up here and searched the house without a warrant because he had established exigent circumstances. WILD JUSTICE
  • became more exigent over his pronunciation
  • (d) All admit that the sacraments are, in some sense, the instrumental causes either of grace itself or of something else which will be a "title exigent of grace" (infra e). The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 13: Revelation-Stock
  • There is an exigent need for the affected countries to move beyond words and put their economies on sound economic paths, and more importantly, draw up effective programmes to fight poverty.
  • Masquant ainsi la nécessité technique ( "On ne va pas refaire un tirage juste pour changer un §! ..., à moins que les commerciaux l'exigent, bien sûr"), sous la théorie de la forme parfaite, celle de l'ultime brouillon, publiable. Entretiens / Interviews / Entrevistas
  • The third area addressed by the inspector general relates to what is called exigent (ph) letters. CNN Transcript Mar 9, 2007
  • Orda lingua corum, quod sonat medium, quia semper est in media hominum suorum: hoc excepto quod rect� ad meridiem nullus se collocat, quia ad pattem illam aperiuntur port� Curi� Sed � dextris et � sinistris extendunt se quantum volunt secundum exigentiam locorum: dummodo rect� ante curiam, vel ex opposito curi� non descendunt. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
  • He didn't debate; he collected briskly the Captain's salute, and strode off to attend to his exigent duties. COUP D'ETAT
  • BELL: Now, under the law, police may enter a home without knocking if certain so-called exigent circumstances exist. CNN Transcript Aug 7, 2008
  • Whitehall in the beginning of this war, that the vicinage of Europe had not only a right, but an indispensable duty and an exigent interest, to denunciate this new work, before it had produced the danger we have so sorely felt, and which we shall long feel. The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Vol. 05 (of 12)
  • Attaining some distance from the social world and thinking about its transformation from that vantage point may be useful, even if return to life within this social world, or some successor of it, seems ethically and practically exigent.
  • Once they alerted to the car, the cops had reasonable suspicion plus exigent circumstances (the danger), so they had extra good justification to search.
  • regarded literary questions as exigent and momentous
  • Patterns revealed by more exigent and widely promulgated research in other countries probably exist here.
  • Y es que Conversaciones sobre Historia cuenta con un público muy fiel, y al mismo tiempo muy exigente, que constantemente hace preguntas sobre lo que Garciadiego está platicando. Javier Garciadiego: conversando sobre Historia.
  • The inspector general's previous reports concluded the FBI's use of the so-called exigent letters circumvented the requirements of the Electronic Communications Privacy Act and violated the attorney general's guidelines and FBI policy. Breaking News - The Post Chronicle
  • Well, that is very similar to the situation of the cop who hears screams from a house and doesn’t have time to go get a warrant †it’s called exigent circumstances and it can authorize action without a warrant in those kind of pressing circumstances. Firedoglake » Out of Control
  • These so-called exigent letters, which were often used when no emergency actually existed, were an extralegal contrivance that violated ECPA, bureau policy, and guidelines issued by the attorney general. Reason Magazine
  • Yet in his statement Bush said he will "construe" an exception, "which provides for opening of an item of a class of mail otherwise sealed against inspection in a manner consistent ... with the need to conduct searches in exigent circumstances. BUSH ON CRACK AND SUPERVIAGRA: THE POSTAL ACCOUNTABILITY AND ENHANCEMENT ACT
  • The figures suggested by Trives are grossly inflated and completely unrealistic having regard to the exigent circumstances.
  • In my view, this falls within the exception permitting warrantless seizure in exigent circumstances.
  • A proper respect for the laws that Congress does enact-as well as the inalienable right to liberty-prohibits this court from rewriting the law, no matter how exigent the circumstances.
  • If the jury feels that the law under which the defendant is accused, is unjust, or that exigent circumstances justified the actions of the accused, or for any reason which appeals to their logic of passion, the jury has the power to acquit, and the courts must abide by that decision. Bête Voir

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