How To Use Injunction In A Sentence

  • More significant, however, than this general injunction is an incident in Asoka's reign (3rd century B.C.) recorded in the Divyavadana, an important Buddhist work. Links Between Canada and India
  • The Sub – Prior readily obeyed the first part of the Abbot’s injunction, but paused upon the second — “It is Friday, most reverend,” he said in Latin, desirous that the hint should escape, if possible, the ears of the stranger. The Monastery
  • A court's competence to grant an anti-suit injunction seems to derive from its jurisdiction to adjudicate.
  • Preliminary Injunction means the court forces the infringers to stop ongoing infringement or events that are about to happen upon obligee's request before or during infringement litigation.
  • The draft reflects a similar innocence about how the media operate, while presuming to call shots and issue admonitions and injunctions in an often condescending way.
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  • The MP, who has previously obtained a super-injunction preventing the publication of private emails which had been leaked to the press, told a session of the joint Commons and Lords Committee on privacy and injunctions that such newspapers should be allowed to go to the wall. Zac Goldsmith criticised over concentration camp comparison
  • First, it subjects the process of earning to certain divine injunctions, which clearly define the limits of halal and haram.
  • But this idea does point in the right general direction: toward a kind of inner conflict, toward what I have called a kind of "brokenness" in the human psyche, and in particular toward a failure of integration within the person of the creature's feelings and needs and impulses on the one hand, and the moral injunctions internalized from the socializing culture on the other. A Piece (from Huffington Post) on the Right's Manifest Hypocrisy Problem
  • The New Testament injunctions to turn the other cheek and love thy neighbour were a great advance in civilisation.
  • Civil injunctions are enforced by the court staff and not by the police, but there is no means of calling out the tipstaff or bailiff at midnight on a Saturday night to deal with a drunken partner.
  • He formed an order of ascetics devoted to develop a sense of community with the help of religious injunctions and instructions.
  • Injunctions against discrimination require that efficacious treatment for a human ill must be made equally accessible to everyone.
  • But as she was going to her room that night, Fräulein Rottenmeier waylaid her, and drawing her into her own, gave her strict injunctions as to how she was to address Frau Sesemann when she arrived; on no account was she to call her "grandmamma," but always to say "madam" to her. Heidi
  • Still, the injunction may have been given in view of the character of the individual Pharisees before him, who may have been known as avaricious men; and Christ may have known that to part with their money would be a test of love which they could not stand. The Life of Jesus Christ in Its Historical Connexion and Historical Developement.
  • They obtained a preliminary injunction against the company and court-ordered restitution.
  • The court upheld an injunction barring protesters from blocking access to the company.
  • The resulting restraining order is in effect until May 10, when a hearing on a preliminary injunction is scheduled.
  • Biblical injunctions often are all the more valuable for their impracticality in the real world. St. Warren Casts Not the First Stone
  • BP's partner in an existing Russian venture, the Alfa-Access-Renova consortium, won an injunction preventing action on the deal until Feb. 25 while the dispute between the two companies is arbitrated in Sweden. BP to Sell U.S. Refineries; Russian Deal Stalled by Court
  • The propriety of his magical lady's injunction not to read can only be equalled by his candid acknowledgment of his independence of the trammels of spelling, although, to use his own elegant phrase, "'twas his neckverse at Byron's Poetical Works, Volume 1
  • He took out a court injunction against the newspaper demanding the return of the document.
  • Even nowadays, the following injunction may be found in occult schools: “know, dare, do, and be silent.” Hand Signed | SciFi, Fantasy & Horror Collectibles
  • He can bring proceedings for a High Court injunction to stop the publication of a misleading advertisement.
  • To carry on that wise injunction, we have to engage in a process of self-reflection that unavoidably opens up to scrutiny the dialectic processes between self and context and contexts of contexts.
  • A federal appeals court has lifted the injunction, allowing for extraditions until the constitutionality of the statute is decided next year.
  • She doesn't quote the great biblical injunction ‘to do justice but to love mercy’, but that is the general drift.
  • There has been argument about whether or not there should be an extension of the interlocutory injunction which is to expire today for a period of indeterminate length.
  • Because the plaintiff seeks a mandatory injunction, it must show its claim is almost certain to succeed.
  • The injunction also prohibits picketers from blocking the scabs' entry to the plant.
  • Victory usually follows, for the labor-group cannot withstand the combined assault of gatling guns and injunctions. THE SCAB
  • Again, the Court noted that the injunctions did not constitute a blanket prohibition.
  • The converse may well be true - wrongdoing on the part of the recipient may strengthen a claim for relief - but it does not follow that the absence of wrongdoing means that an injunction should not be granted.
  • All three prerequisites must coincide for an injunction to be appropriate.
  • It should not grant an injunction where to do so will deprive a plaintiff of advantages in the foreign forum.
  • In addition to the claim for prerogative relief, the prosecutor also seeks an injunction against the third respondent.
  • The men were prepared to purge their contempt of court simultaneously with Shell collapsing its injunction against them.
  • Ancient traditions and rituals tend to abound with precepts and injunctions.
  • One who transgresses the injunctions of the Vedic scriptures whimsically acting under the impulse of desire, never attains perfection, neither happiness nor the supreme goal.
  • E.g. the injunction indeed a denominative verb here "Sodemieter op!" means "scram"! Languagehat.com: SO.
  • He took out a court injunction against the newspaper demanding the return of the document.
  • He would do the same if they acted according to His injunctions, and remained forbearing and just.
  • Early Elizabethan anthems were modelled on the Latin antiphon or motet, but they cautiously followed the queen's injunction by being largely syllabic, with a minimum of counterpoint.
  • Co. Court and asking for an injunction against making any changes to the park until the deed restriction enforceability is completely settled (through all possible appeals). Saltzman looking for easy way out on Paulson stadiums? (Jack Bog's Blog)
  • In any event, it is not disputed that an account of profits arises irrespective of the grant of an injunction.
  • Hibernian was granted an injunction last Wednesday, continuing a restraining order against the cashing of bank drafts at the centre of the fraud.
  • It was agreed that the temporary injunction should be lifted.
  • We hear endless injunctions to build a sense of community among staff.
  • The injunction prohibits Helm from using the name on his Website or in any commercial context.
  • Transfer of the Garden City Lands to Richmond hit a snag last week after the Musqueam First Nation received a temporary court injunction preventing the move.
  • B.D. further said that homosexuals in sports “should be subject to permanent disinjunction,” but doubted that his own team “pavilioned such perverse seed-spillers.” Foul Lines
  • I think there was actually a separate application for an interlocutory injunction, was there not?
  • This symbol has a mnemonic function as one of the four injunctions of the Hoa Hao faith is to recognise one's debt to humanity.
  • The military government dissolved the injunction.
  • Agency staffers want the Commission to seek a Federal court injunction barring Microsoft from what they consider abusive practices.
  • Despite winning an injunction against CSL plans to reflag the ship and crew it with Ukranians, the workers have been told to leave the ship on full pay.
  • When women understand that governments and religions are human inventions; that Bibles, prayerbooks, catechisms, and encyclical letters are all emanations from the brain of man, they will no longer be oppressed by the injunctions that come to them with the divine authority of "Thus saith the Lord. Eighty Years and More: Reminiscences 1815-1897
  • An injunction prevented him from profiting from allegedly misleadingly advertised data protection notification services.
  • There is a stricter test required for a Mareva injunction and for good reason - it restrains the defendant from dealing with his own property thereby requiring proof of a strong prima facie case.
  • I have been advised by my bank manager that any release of money needs to be authorised by the solicitors who initiated the freezing injunction.
  • We have had an urgent hearing here, we have had affidavit evidence, and a learned judicial registrar determined that there is jurisdiction in this case to join the parties and to grant the injunction.
  • An alternative to monetary damages is an injunction prohibiting publication of the allegedly libelous material.
  • There six separate oblations to Agni, and so on, are enjoined by separate so-called originative injunctions; these are thereupon combined into two groups (viz. the new moon and the full-moon sacrifices) by a double clause referring to those groups, and finally a so-called injunction of qualification enjoins the entire sacrifice as something to be performed by persons entertaining a certain wish. The Vedanta-Sutras with the Commentary by Ramanuja — Sacred Books of the East, Volume 48
  • They have sent a solicitor's letter to the nursery warning that they are considering taking out an injunction over its use of the green area, known as the rec.
  • Meanwhile, if there was any breach of a High Court injunction, individual teachers would not be imprisoned but the union would be exposed to the sequestration of its assets by the State.
  • Agency staffers want the Commission to seek a Federal court injunction barring Microsoft from what they consider abusive practices.
  • It was enacted that the places of worship, and public lands, which had been confiscated, should be restored to the church, without dispute, without delay, and without expense; and this severe injunction was accompanied with a gracious promise, that if any of the purchasers had paid a fair and adequate price, they should be indemnified from the Imperial treasury. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • The perpetrator could also apply for an injunction restraining the company from dismissing him or taking disciplinary action following an investigation.
  • After Denver district Judge Jeff Bayless 'ruling granting an injunction against Colorado's Amendment 2 going into effect until a ruling on its constitutionality can be determined by the courts, you will not be surprised to find that scurrile material attacking Gays is once again a cottage industry in Colorado. Soapbox Issue #2 by Chad Skelton
  • As a general rule an injunction will be refused only where the interference with the claimant's right is trifling or slight.
  • The judge said that the lawsuit was a case of trespass and that the service provider, Intel, has the right to get a permanent injunction to block e-mail sent by Ken Hamidi.
  • The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Cir-cuit stayed the 2002 injunction to the extent that it re-quired the cross to be removed or dismantled but did notforbid alternative methods of complying with the order. The Volokh Conspiracy » Mojave Cross Decision (Salazar v. Buono) Handed Down
  • Recently ousted in a boardroom coup, he sought an injunction against his removal and the recruitment of a new managing director.
  • Why didn't they slap an injunction on samoosas, koeksisters, bobotie, braaivleis, witblits or mampoer while they were about it?
  • An earlier documentary about her trips there was never shown after the television company made a failed legal bid to lift the injunction.
  • I am satisfied that I have jurisdiction to award damages in lieu of an injunction.
  • The injunction we seek is not one that in any way interferes with existing contractual rights or obligations.
  • The injunctions were issued under authority of Great Britain's new anti-stalking law.
  • Agency staffers want the Commission to seek a Federal court injunction barring Microsoft from what they consider abusive practices.
  • The public interest also supported an injunction, since the public has an interest in avoiding deception. Archive 2009-04-01
  • Accordingly, the injunction against its effectiveness should be sustained.
  • Far easier to slap a political superinjunction on the matter, and keep shtoom. Times, Sunday Times
  • Calm down dear, it's only a super-injunction. The Sun
  • Similarly, in Gambell, a preliminary injunction was not required to accomplish the statutory goal.
  • However, the cellco took the matter to the High Court in Mzuzu and gained an injunction against MACRA's fine until TeleGeography CommsUpdate
  • It is not necessary, in my judgment, to prove that every member of the class has been injuriously affected; it is sufficient to show that a representative cross-section of the class has so been affected for an injunction to issue.
  • Conservative MP for Richmond Park Zac Goldsmith took out a so-called super-injunction to prevent the publication of e-mails that had been obtained by hackers and passed to newspapers. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • Seward failed to anticipate his ambition, he recalled the scriptural injunction, "Ask, and it shall be given you. A Political History of the State of New York, Volumes 1-3
  • A temporary injunction has prevented removal of an ancient walled ditch, or fosse, part of the boundary of medieval Carrickmines Castle in south Co Dublin, which lies in the path of the last section of the M50 motorway.
  • My previous experiences left me unprepared for the civilized notion that for an hour a day we would be free of all educational injunctions save the one to be quiet.
  • We'll help to ease your burden without you needing a timewasting, unenforceable super-injunction. The Sun
  • The latest issue posted is a request for an injunction on the election results pending the resolution of a petition for a writ of certiorari filed by attorney Philip J. Berg, a case that is docketed for a similar conference among the justices on Jan. 9. Candidate For RNC Chair Sends Out CD With Song Called "Barack, The Magic Negro"
  • So far there are five injunctions in place but more are currently being processed.
  • Denial of the writ of quo warrantor denial of the writ of mandamus; denial of the writ of injunction; denial of the writ of certiorari; denial of the writ of prohibition; denial, if put in simpler English, denial of justice, the whole truth would be manifest. Is Quebec A British Province?
  • The set of skills for changing laws, getting injunctions, and confronting officials in an organized, systematic way is quite different.
  • Because Plaintiffs have not demonstrated a likelihood that they will suffer irreparable harm during the pendency of the lawsuit in the absence of an injunction, the court will deny their requested relief," he wrote. Judge Denies Preliminary Injunction in Air India Case
  • The injunction prohibits Jeff Sposito from soliciting any Coldwell Banker sales agents.
  • What is the point of a legal framework if companies can not get a court injunction to stop illegal strike action?
  • Shana Novick, executive director of the Hebrew Free Loan Society of New York, explains that "Jewish tradition translated this biblical injunction into a powerful imperative: Help your neighbor in need and create lasting impact without embarrassment, through an interest-free loan. When Religion Restricts Lending
  • While a custody decree is an injunctive order, the courts too often fail to apply the principles that are applicable to all other injunctions.
  • If granted, the unprecedented lifetime injunctions would prevent the media from ever disclosing information which would identify the two released killers.
  • The public doesn't expect praise for refraining from pogroms, but nor does it expect ceaseless injunctions to abstain from them.
  • Most rules were justified on the basis of injunctions by the spirits of the land, who were believed to punish any infraction.
  • He should "tarry" (shebh, imperative from yashabh; here not in the sense of "dwell" but "tarry") just long enough to carry out the injunction laid upon him. Exposition of Genesis: Volume 1
  • The civil liberties group is seeking a preliminary injunction barring Republican Gov.
  • There are eight classes of injunctions and prohibitions which apply to all deeds and actions of mankind.
  • School officials can ask the courts to issue an injunction to prohibit the strike.
  • The old Sunday-school hymn — "Jesus loves me, yes I know/for the Bible tells me so" — is reassuring as far as it goes, but a lot of believers are more perplexed than enlightened the more they heed Saint Paul's injunction to "think on these things. More a Matter of Mystery than Magic
  • Its author (possibly Nassau Senior or Southey himself) purports to trace the history of injunctions back to the 18th century, when the Court of Chancery took over issues of literary propriety from the common law courts. A Brief Publication History of _Wat Tyler_
  • Two weeks ago, a judge issued an injunction against the pilots union, urging pilots to resume their previous overtime habits.
  • Then the militia, or the U. S. Army, in extreme cases, would enforce the injunction.
  • But the recent sideswipe by David Cameron at superinjunctions is pointless. It should be curtains for celebrities with a bedroom secret
  • The Commercial Court in St. Gallen withdrew an injunction against Swiss retailer Denner, which is owned by Swiss cooperative Migros, and its manufacturing partner Alice Allison, that prevented the company from selling its own version of the Nespresso capsules. Nespresso Rival Wins in Court
  • Mr Hislop, who has been fighting the so-called gagging order and challenged the injunction only last week, condemned the suppression of reporting as "a touch hypocritical". WalesOnline - Home
  • The applicant commenced proceedings in this Court for writs of mandamus, certiorari and injunctions.
  • Magistrates also ordered that he be evicted and imposed an injunction to keep him away from her for a year.
  • They upheld the refusal of an injunction against publication.
  • The family is seeking an injunction against the book's publication.
  • The applicant commenced proceedings in this Court for writs of mandamus, certiorari and injunctions.
  • She took out an injunction to prevent the press publishing the information.
  • Captain Higginson clamoured wildly for an injunction. Chun Ah Chun
  • The farmers are carrying on the work in defiance both of cantonal regulations and a supreme court injunction ordering them to stop.
  • In deciding whether or not to issue an injunction, courts engage in what lawyers refer to as a "balancing test".
  • Yudhoyono canceled his state visit Tuesday at the last minute after exiled Moluccan separatists demanded his arrest in an injunction. World Watch
  • Commands and injunctions, as I suggested, punctuate the text from the outset.
  • The relief the plaintiff sought was an injunction and damages.
  • the Supreme Court has the power to stay an injunction pending an appeal to the whole Court
  • The court granted the plaintiff an injunction restraining the defendant from breaching copyright.
  • A US court will not grant an anti-suit injunction if the foreign forum is the only one available.
  • In effect they are denying the universalist character of Buddhism are returning it to the particularistic mould of ethnic religion in contravention of the clear injunctions of the Buddha.
  • Mendes is the same person who contemplated seeking an injunction when the election was called early. Prorogue a ‘Very Dangerous’ Precedent : Law is Cool
  • The existing laws can't: the super-injunction scandals of last spring proved that. Will the Leveson inquiry kill celebrity magazines?
  • The railroad won an injunction to freeze Dringer's assets, halting his lucrative business.
  • In Britain, when the damages can't provide enough compensation for the plaintiff, the judge offers interlocutory injunction to them by equitable law.
  • But should those reasons be rejected, or the hearing them refused, and silence on the subject enjoined, which is most probable, few people caring to hear what they know to be right, when they are determined not to be convinced by it -- obey the injunction, and urge not the argument farther. Sketches of the Fair Sex, in All Parts of the World
  • **********This anonymous tweeter took it upon themselves to test the elastic limits of privacy and libel law by speculatively naming those who've allegedly joined the super-injunction club. Our pick of the week: The story, the stat, the quote, the tweet
  • Tweets about super-injunction footballer spike after attempts to gag Twitter Premiership footballer sues Twitter after details of super-injunction were published Max Clifford: Ryan Giggs 'affair' may never have come out without injunction Mr Men Google doodles celebrate 76th birthday of creator Roger Hargreaves Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • He may ask that, but it cannot be asked in the form of an injunction. BALANCE OF POWER
  • In order to enable the freezing injunctions to be policed, Mora, in common with others of the Defendants, was required to produce information and documents regarding its assets.
  • ACTA raises at least three additional scary prospects for search engines and ISPs: the possibility of the expanded use of injunctions ordering material removed or preventing material from being published; the possibility of actual imprisonment for employees of companies that are found to have "incited" or "aided" violations of copyright law; and the privacy-invading possibility that ISPs will have to report to rights-holders on their users 'online activity. Margot Kaminski: The Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement: Treaty targets Internet, not purses
  • The notion of an injunction to restrain the use of an invention after the date of expiry of the patent to which it relates, seems anomalous, going against the very purpose of the patent system.
  • MP John Hemming named the star in Parliament as the footballer who had used a super-injunction to hide an alleged affair, after Mr Giggs' name had been widely aired on Twitter. BBC News - Home
  • IR theorists have largely failed to follow the English school injunction that history requires ‘the elucidation of the unlikeness between past and present’.
  • Don't worry about all the doctrinal injunctions in the catechism, they'd tell us.
  • A judge this week granted Nogales-Talley a preliminary injunction, prohibiting the district from demoting her to classroom teacher.
  • The plaintiffs sought an injunction requiring the defendants to abate the nuisance as well as damages.
  • The courts have no similar compunction about making injunctions to prevent torts and these have very much the same effect.
  • The rank and file members will follow the injunction of the party leadership.
  • Today's hearing was for Arcara to consider a request by Facebook to dissolve a temporary injunction, issued by a state court judge June 30, preventing the company from transferring assets.
  • He took out a court injunction against the newspaper demanding the return of the document.
  • Nine organizations and four individual journalists filed a federal suit in New York, seeking an injunction against enforcement of restrictions on movement.
  • Besides many pious foundations, he engraved on rocks and pillars throughout his empire in true Achaemenid-style edicts in vernacular Prakrit exhorting respect for animal life, reverence, and truth, and appointed censors to enforce these injunctions. C. Early Civilizations and Classical Empires of South and East Asia
  • The family is seeking an injunction against the book's publication.
  • The rank and file members will follow the injunction of the party leadership.
  • Third, they live in the secret world of the super-injunction. Times, Sunday Times
  • This requirement is based on the Biblical injunction that during Passover no chometz be eaten.
  • We'll help to ease your burden without you needing a time-wasting, unenforceable super-injunction. The Sun
  • He took out a court injunction against the newspaper demanding the return of the document.
  • In so doing, he rejects the historicist injunction of authoritatively re-enacting the extremity of the past in favor of a modernist staging of the uncertain history of the present.
  • The judgment of the Court of Appeal contains statements concerning the rights of a mortgagor to obtain an injunction against a mortgagee that have given us some concern.
  • I have found him to be in wilful and contumacious breach of the injunction on him, which I am quite certain he knew perfectly well he had to obey in every respect.
  • Mr. Hochman said the tax division has obtained more than 300 civil injunctions since 2001 against tax promoters and preparers -- and that more than one-third of these "directly involved tax-defier activity. The New Crackdown on Tax 'Defiers'
  • In that case the Court of Appeal refused to grant an interlocutory injunction restraining breach of confidence or breach of copyright.
  • Applied to the increase in decadent caesareans for women who can't even be bothered to have a free orgasm, the paradoxical injunction would require clinicians to tell women to go right ahead and do that, yes, to have their stupid, selfish caesareans, quite guiltlessly, as if it was just as good as a normal birth and the NHS really did not care one way or the other about the appalling waste of money. Please, render unto caesareans a little less hysteria | Catherine Bennett
  • Commands and injunctions, as I suggested, punctuate the text from the outset.
  • The protesters have also filed a federal lawsuit seeking damages and an injunction against certain uses of pepper spray.
  • According to the building inspector's report, the injunction will cost taxpayers about $4,000 - only a portion of which is recoverable.
  • That injunction was of unlimited duration, although it would inevitably end when the ward reached the age of majority.
  • Mr Doherty was suspended and court injunctions taken to freeze both his assets and those of the computer company.
  • Yesterday he issued a preliminary injunction, confirming that figure.
  • He instructs the masters to lecture regularly according to the statutes and to explain the text of Aristotle, "de puncto in punctum," and, holding that fear and reverence are the life-blood of scholastic discipline, he repeats an injunction which we find in 1336, that the students in Arts are to sit not on benches or raised seats, but on (p.  144) the floor, "ut occasio superbiae a juvenibus secludatur. Life in the Medieval University
  • The judge refused to grant an injunction .
  • Such injunctions had to be effective, proportionate, and dissuasive and must not create barriers to legitimate trade. Times, Sunday Times
  • He took out a court injunction against the newspaper demanding the return of the document.
  • For these same proselytes, it meanwhile fulfilled the scriptural injunction of a temple service garment of utmost simplicity.
  • YouTube doesn't want to become the LimeWire of the video space," Kerravala said, referring to the file-sharing service halted by a federal injunction last year for alleged pirating. Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion
  • The lessee and the reversioners brought separate actions against the company for an injunction and damages in respect of the nuisance and injury.
  • Where a government body seeks an injunction against a private individual or corporation, the position may be different.
  • The company wants an injunction and is currently investigating monetary damages.
  • This is not simply a case about an injunction to restrain threatened future conduct.
  • he got an injunction against vexatious litigation by his enemies
  • The judges should accept the super-injunction is doomed. The Sun
  • He is somewhat right: the most high-profile super-injunction case was the Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • Agency staffers want the Commission to seek a Federal court injunction barring Microsoft from what they consider abusive practices.
  • She won an injunction to stop the process and launched her legal bid.
  • Why didn't they slap an injunction on samoosas, koeksisters, bobotie, braaivleis, witblits or mampoer while they were about it?
  • Release would consist in a mere return into the substance of Brahman, -- analogous to the refunding into Brahman of the material elements, and that would mean that the injunction and performance of acts leading to such Release would be purportless. The Vedanta-Sutras with the Commentary by Ramanuja — Sacred Books of the East, Volume 48
  • In adhering to the Taylor families Mr. Webster obeyed the injunction of Solomon who said, "Thine own friend, and thy _father's friend_ forsake not. The Bay State Monthly — Volume 2, No. 5, February, 1885
  • They shot Danlo poisonous looks, as if they were insulted that he had found a clever way around Bardo's injunction to silence. THE BROKEN GOD
  • We are already the super-injunction capital of the world. The Sun
  • It asked about the injunction obtained by “Trafigura and Carter-Ruck solicitors on 11 September 2009 on the publication of the Minton Report on the alleged dumping of toxic waste in the Ivory Coast, commissioned by Trafigura”. Discourse.net: Be Grateful for the First Amendment (and the Internet)
  • Nobody wanted to breach a super-injunction. The Sun
  • “O my son, the fated hour of my decease is at hand, and I desire to give thee my last injunctions.” The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Finding herself unable to gain entry the plaintiff obtained an exparte injunction to readmit her to the premises.
  • He eventually ruled he couldn't grant the request for an injunction because he would then be deciding the question of rights without hearing full evidence and argument.
  • She took out an injunction to prevent the press publishing the information.
  • A great polymorphous injunction bound the Englishman and the poor Lorrainese peasant alike. As history would have it, the latter was named Jouy.
  • Why didn't they slap an injunction on samoosas, koeksisters, bobotie, braaivleis, witblits or mampoer while they were about it?
  • It is, of course, axiomatic that in this field we must be on our guard, when considering liability for damages in nuisance, not to draw inapposite conclusions from cases concerned only with a claim for an injunction.
  • The Attorney-General sought an injunction to restrain breach of confidence.
  • The former characteristic may be inferred from the expression kata ta dogma tou euangeliou, as well as from the detailed injunctions that follow. The Mission and Expansion of Christianity in the First Three Centuries

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