royal charter

NOUN
  1. a charter granted by the sovereign (especially in Great Britain)
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How To Use royal charter In A Sentence

  • A market overt is a market, constituted under statute, by royal charter or by long standing custom.
  • At the same time a royal charter was granted, making the town a city. Times, Sunday Times
  • The publishers signed up in defiance of the royal charter, which they say could allow politicians to interfere in press freedom. Times, Sunday Times
  • A market overt is a market, constituted under statute, by royal charter or by long standing custom.
  • According to Innes, all that was conferred to chieftains in royal charters was the arable land on estates - not the waste land and mountains.
  • MPs fished for his views on the warring plans for a royal charter. Times, Sunday Times
  • He will then hear a short extract from the royal charter of 1204 that features in a town play, Wheels of Time, written for the anniversary by local historian David Sherratt.
  • MPs fished for his views on the warring plans for a royal charter. Times, Sunday Times
  • These Puritans, who did have a royal charter, wanted unity even more than did the Pilgrims.
  • Richard’s first charter to the City (23 April, 1194) (166) granted a few weeks after his return from abroad makes no mention of a mayor, nor does the title occur in any royal charter affecting the City until the year London and the Kingdom - Volume I
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