「appointment」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)19ページ目
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on "Re-catholicising Cornwall", a proffered | appointment was withdrawn. |
The | appointment was made by three party leaders, one of who |
The | appointment was confirmed by the pope on 14 February 17 |
sidered it likely that Archbishop Mennini's | appointment was recognition of the delicate diplomatic |
His | appointment was largely due to his influence with exist |
His last | appointment was at HQ Military Air Traffic Organisation |
The | appointment was due to his, at that time unusual knowle |
His final | appointment was as Quartermaster-General to the Forces |
ldwin to the Executive Council, though this | appointment was opposed by the more radical Mackenzie. |
His next | appointment was as an assistant priest at Our Lady and |
The Commodore's | appointment was abolished and forces brought directly u |
The | appointment was confirmed in May 1908 but his bad healt |
O'Brien's first | appointment was as chaplain to St. Michael's Hospital, |
tion at Wycliffe Hall, Oxford and his first | appointment was as a Curate at South Lambeth. |
tish civil servant, whose last major public | appointment was as Governor of Gibraltar. |
This | appointment was challenged in court, and ruled valid in |
His last | appointment was Commander-in-Chief, Plymouth, from 1866 |
rector of the new BBC Light Programme; this | appointment was only a brief one, however, for in the f |
Her | appointment was welcomed by tourism and business groups |
abbed by a student radical who believed his | appointment was unfair. |
This | appointment was sought by others and it wasn't until Au |
Eng's | appointment was opposed by many members of the police f |
he Inspector General revealed that Hochul's | appointment was one of several appointments that were i |
No record of this | appointment was found in her diary and it has not been |
a qualified declaration of conformity; the | appointment was given to another. |
The | appointment was confirmed the following year, when he w |
The | appointment was made at the instigation of his friend W |
Tauro's 1961 | appointment was made by his longtime friend and busines |
r the Imperial army, but his most important | appointment was as Commander-in-Chief of the army of th |
f Norway's Supreme Court, who prior to that | appointment was also a law professor at the University |
His last active | appointment was as the first Defence Services Secretary |
of Jerusalem, succeeding Elyashar, but his | appointment was vetoed by his opponents, supported by t |
Her | appointment was an important test for the Missouri Plan |
The | appointment was made again by Johnson's successor, Pres |
ere expected to be Oxbridge graduates), the | appointment was soon justified. |
The | appointment was generally thought to be making way for |
Belknap's | appointment was part of an effort by Henry VII to impro |
after interim coach Mudassar Nazar, and the | appointment was made official in January 2006. |
His final | appointment was as Inspector of Gunnery, based at Wilhe |
The initial reaction to | appointment was mixed, but the commentators agree that |
The | appointment was opposed in English Canada not because o |
place of several Presidents, and Leavitt's | appointment was watched closely. |
specification for the TSR 2. Beetham's next | appointment was as the Personal Staff Officer to Task F |
Alleged divine | appointment was also the basis for the pre-Vatican II ( |
His last | appointment was as Commandant of the Royal College of D |
White refused to sign because the | appointment was made by Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevi |
Chief Justice on his native island but the | appointment was not confirmed by the Colonial Office as |
17 and returned to Australia, where his AIF | appointment was terminated in December 1917. |
Johns's next | appointment was in 1993 as Deputy Commander-in-Chief RA |
ate in the 1989 Senatorial election when an | appointment was guaranteed, it has since refused to run |
His next | appointment was to the United States of America as the |
place in his third government, although no | appointment was made. |
unteers dated November 29, 1862, though his | appointment was later withdrawn. |
This | appointment was controversial because Eschenbach had no |
This | appointment was immediately challenged from various qua |
ayor J. Barry Mahool appointed him, and the | appointment was so popular that the City Council suspen |
described as the "King's Painter", and this | appointment was confirmed for life in June 1534, when h |
to kill the issue," suggesting that Baird's | appointment was meant to neutralize the environment as |
The | appointment was later ruled unlawful due to apparent se |
His last | appointment was as Air Officer Commanding RAF Transport |
This | appointment was only a brief one, however, before a re- |
His | appointment was extended to two years, and then became |
The | appointment was controversial as he was less qualified |
Her most recent | appointment was with the Pennsylvania Public Utility Co |
This | appointment was done in response to the success of pret |
His | appointment was made to please the aristocracy which, u |
appointed acting brigadier general, but his | appointment was not confirmed by the United States Sena |
d a moderate Republican, but the bipartisan | appointment was widely praised. |
Guergis's | appointment was somewhat controversial, in that Emerson |
Senate on the advice of Robert Borden, his | appointment was made to satisfy the Unionists coalition |
use of Commons governor of Reading, and his | appointment was agreed to by the Lords on 10 December. |
according to the story of his successor the | appointment was not to the convent's benefit: after fou |
laced by Lieutenant-General Cathcart, whose | appointment was gazetted on 20 October. |
The | appointment was approved April 12, 1878. |
His most notable | appointment was as architect to the London Stock Exchan |
His longest | appointment was a two-and-a-half year spell at Stockpor |
His first major | appointment was as the new artistic director for one of |
His | appointment was effective on February 24, 1922, and he |
ican Bishop of Kimberley and Kuruman who on | appointment was its youngest bishop. |
The Guardian, was chosen as editor but his | appointment was blocked because MI5 declared that he ha |
For example, Andrew von Eschenbach's | appointment was held up by senators who objected to the |
e when Carol returned to rule as King - the | appointment was attributed by Time to his political sup |
His first | appointment was again to sea, for a period of 18 months |
The | appointment was approved by St. Ignatius Loyola a few m |
Abbott's | appointment was still subject to formal approval by Uni |
ifornia (USC), and the announcement of this | appointment was published on January 10, 2011. |
His | appointment was aimed to appeal to liberal minded opini |
His last military | appointment was as Commander of British Forces in Hong |
rrigan was awarded the MBE in 1995 His last | appointment was commanding the Gurkha Centre in Hampshi |
The | appointment was in every way unsuitable. |
lonial governor by a Labour government, his | appointment was resisted by the Australian Labor Party, |
John's | appointment was seriously opposed, especially by queen |
The | appointment was greeted with some dissatisfaction among |
His first | appointment was to the Holy See Observer Mission to the |
Still, Poochigian's | appointment was not without controversy. |
Initially his | appointment was as the commander of a brigade of U.S. V |
the chair of higher analysis at Turin (this | appointment was to last for only two years). |
His final | appointment was as president of Wilson College in Chamb |
Aridor's first ministerial | appointment was the Minister of Communications, in 1981 |
His last | appointment was Deputy Commander 1st (UK) Armoured Divi |
Her | appointment was announced on June 15, 2009. |
n pectore in 1969 by Pope Paul VI, and that | appointment was published in 1973. |
This | appointment was subject to Parliamentary approval which |
His | appointment was anyway objected mainly by the bishop of |
His next | appointment was as Dean of Ripon in 1995 . |
Bishop would be Canon Robert Paterson whose | appointment was confirmed by Letters Patent issued by Q |
His first | appointment was with then Second Division side South Sh |
nt George W. Bush on June 20, 2006, and his | appointment was approved by the Senate on September 30, |
His first ecclesiastical | appointment was as vicar of St Mary, Blackburn (1738, r |
The | appointment was to the Court of Queen's Bench making hi |
ter rivals Bristol Rovers meant that Pulis' | appointment was met with mixed reception. |
, Killian came to Australia where his first | appointment was as an assistant priest in Bourke, New S |
While this | appointment was officially as Fairfax's lieutenant gene |
The | appointment was by the Governor-General of Australia on |
His final | appointment was as the commanding officer of Indian 11t |
A condition of the | appointment was that he may not run as a candidate in t |
ing elected mayor in 1993, Giuliani's first | appointment was of Segarra as a Deputy Mayor of New Yor |
His initial | appointment was as a full Professor of Surgery. |
His | appointment was announced by the Victorian Attorney Gen |
His last | appointment was as Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief Coas |
His next | appointment was to the 74-gun HMS Mulgrave off Cherbour |
His | appointment was the first official one to that post. |
His last | appointment was as Senior Military Assistant to the Min |
Savage's | appointment was approved by the membership of the churc |
His last Service | appointment was as Director of Education in 1976. |
His final | appointment was as Commander-in-Chief, The Nore in 1948 |
ar Pope Boniface VIII declared that Lusby's | appointment was uncanonical and that Hoton was to be re |
His | appointment was criticised by former England captain Mi |
promised him in 1649, it is likely the 1661 | appointment was more for reasons of his earlier politic |
His final operational flying | appointment was as the Officer Commanding No. 23 Squadr |
His first senior | appointment was as Ambassador to Jordan 1956-1959. |
His | appointment was then formalized by Governor Jon Huntsma |
Dombrowsky's | appointment was regarded as a surprise, as it had been |
His first pastoral | appointment was a curate at St. Patrick's Church, Lower |
His last | appointment was as Flag Officer, Orkneys and Shetland i |
His second pastoral | appointment was as Priest in Charge of the Lough Parish |
Somkid | appointment was supported by General Saprang Kalyanamit |
His last managerial | appointment was with Gloucester City. |
Ricks' | appointment was seen by some as an effort by Risch to r |
His next operatic | appointment was as conductor of Royal Swedish Opera fro |
His | appointment was made by President Calvin Coolidge on Au |
as a well-known and revered figure, and the | appointment was meant to free him from the labour of te |
His final | appointment was as Deputy Chief of Defence Staff (Opera |
Somlyay's only ministerial | appointment was as Minister for Regional Development, T |
A perquisite of the royal | appointment was the use of workshops in the Galeries du |
ber 6, 1864 to rank from June 1, 1864; this | appointment was not confirmed by the Confederate Congre |
His first | appointment was as deputy chief of protocol in 1988 and |
His first | appointment was of Commander of the Kabul garrison. |
His next | appointment was undoubtedly the most bizarre of his car |
Casuscelli's first senior management | appointment was with the market research company AC Nie |
His | appointment was called an "unusual choice" since Ito st |
His | appointment was met with some scepticism due to his pre |
His | appointment was subsequently endorsed by the General As |
His | appointment was rejected by the United States Senate, b |
His first military | appointment was that of Engineer-in-Chief, with the ran |
His | appointment was to run for six years. |
shop Wilberforce's correspondence, Trench's | appointment was favoured neither by the prime minister |
Innocent VII as Archbishop of York, but the | appointment was vetoed by King Henry IV in the same yea |
However, his | appointment was cancelled in 1925, for undisclosed reas |
ustralia on 16 November 1918, where his AIF | appointment was terminated on 14 March 1919. |
omised him the provostship of Eton, but his | appointment was opposed on suspicion of his puritanism, |
His | appointment was popular and initially successful, as he |
His | appointment was short lived as he resigned from the cou |
His last | appointment was as Air Officer Commanding Strike Comman |
nterchangeable in senior posts, and Woods's | appointment was the first example of this policy. |
glas MacArthur's chief war planner, and his | appointment was made to improve the planning ability in |
Appenzeller's last | appointment was at the St. Michael and Gudula Cathedral |
to bomb Chinese bases in Manchuria, and the | appointment was regarded as an assurance that a similar |
ry 1919 he returned to Sydney where his AIF | appointment was terminated on 3 November, |
The | appointment was more consistent with English norms, as |
Cauchon's | appointment was met with apprehension among Manitoba's |
The | appointment was attributed to the influence of George V |
our senators named on January 29, Poirier's | appointment was delayed a month so that the government |
His next | appointment was as Flag Officer Arabian Sea and Persian |
n of Edward VI, on 16 August 1547, that his | appointment was confirmed by letters patent. |
His first ecclesiastical | appointment was as dean of Le Mans, around 1093. |
His second ministerial | appointment was between April 26 and August 29, 1958 as |
stler is openly gay, and at the time of his | appointment was the only openly LGBT state supreme cour |
His first ministerial | appointment was between November 17, 1953 and May 5, 19 |
o made appointed a Lord-in-Waiting, but the | appointment was brief due to him crossing the floor, be |
The last-named | appointment was followed by the provincialship of the P |
The | appointment was reiterated on July 6, the day Richard I |
Hartwell's first academic | appointment was at University of New South Wales (1950- |
vacant Archbishopric at Trier, however, the | appointment was disputed. |
His first pastoral | appointment was to Srednja vas near Bohinj. |
His | appointment was confirmed by the Senate later that year |
Carr's first | appointment was as a curate at All Saints' Luton (Dioce |
Giovannelli's most important | appointment was as the replacement for Palestrina as th |
an outsider with considerable means and the | appointment was controversial. |
the Bishop of Hereford in March 2004; this | appointment was the first time a bishop had been appoin |
This | appointment was renewed in 2002 and 2005. |
Heneker's next | appointment was to the command of the 8th Infantry Divi |
However, his | appointment was never formally confirmed by the U.S. Se |
Scott's | appointment was, at the time, the highest government co |
Theodosius' | appointment was, however, eventually blessed by the Met |
Prior to her | appointment, Weintraub was Of Counsel to Perkins Coie L |
Ultimately, this | appointment went to Jamshid Amouzegar, and Ansary becam |
However, the | appointment went instead to James H. Burnley, IV, of No |
n the U.S. Supreme Court but in the end the | appointment went to Hugo L. Black. |
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