「Prerogative」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Prerogative

1語右で並び替え

該当件数:85件

  • ior years, the Senate chose to exercise its prerogative allowing the body to refuse to seat any Sen
  • e practice as a barrister in the admiralty, prerogative, and high commission courts, and was appoin
  • d feminism, which argued that women had the prerogative and responsibility to combat international
  • upon divers Statutes concerning the King's Prerogative and the Liberty of the Subject.
  • ce, while refusing to discuss the limits of prerogative and liberty, he argued that the dispensing
  • he judges rejected his argument on absolute prerogative; and a scandal blighted his reputation the
  • completely vindicated the idea of the royal prerogative, and prevented any similar Ordinances from
  • ngly by Clarendon as an encroachment on the prerogative, and in May 1667 was made secretary to the
  • with at least as great dignity, power, and prerogative as the Earls enjoyed, but also afforded evi
  • He preached in favour of the royal prerogative at the time of the forced loan confrontatio
  • tes of Westminster and in 1495 on the Royal Prerogative, both of which were later commonly cited.
  • That the king hath no prerogative but that which the law of the land allows h
  • sired, like John Pym, to restrict the royal prerogative by a parliamentary constitution, and endeav
  • he further noted that exercise of the royal prerogative can be judicially reviewed under section 32
  • he episode showed Parliament that the Royal Prerogative could be up for sale.
  • ealy wrote that his argument that the royal prerogative could not be questioned " would have rejoic
  • rnor, Williamson served as the judge of the Prerogative Court of New Jersey.
  • ficial principal of the arches and judge of prerogative court of Canterbury.
  • In 1611 he became judge of the Prerogative Court of Canterbury along with John Bennet
  • born in Dublin in 1673, was a judge of the Prerogative Court and Chancellor of the Exchequer, as w
  • He was one of the three registrars to the Prerogative Court of the Province of Canterbury from 17
  • of Laws Master Keeper or Commissary of the Prerogative Court of Canterbury lawfully constituted by
  • and at the age of 26 he became judge of the prerogative court.
  • Laud used his authority over the prerogative courts to humiliate the gentry, who were la
  • Digest of Cases argued in the Arches and Prerogative Courts of Canterbury and contained in the R
  • Greatest Hits: My Prerogative debuted at the top of the DVD charts in Aus
  • mmendations the queen, mindful of the royal prerogative, deemed insufficiently orthodox.
  • While the use of the Royal Prerogative for national security reasons is considered
  • Using the Royal Prerogative for the first time since 1976, the governme
  • ate of Texas into as many as five states, a prerogative guaranteed to Texas as a condition of the f
  • hn Selden whose critical views on the royal prerogative he shared.
  • perty of anyone who had violated the king's prerogative in some way, such as conviction for a felon
  • t and since the office was created by Royal Prerogative in 1552, the British government said that t
  • ws; (3) that therefore it is an inseparable prerogative in the kings of England to dispense with pe
  • authority for the statement that the royal prerogative is placed in abeyance (is not used) when st
  • Act concerned foreign policy and the royal prerogative: it provided that following the death of Qu
  • the prerogative of mercy in terrorism cases
  • Cross border issues would remain the prerogative of the Westminster Parliament.
  • as at the Texas State Cemetery in Austin, a prerogative of all former legislators and their spouses
  • assage etc, something that was normally the prerogative of the Elector.
  • The Council had the prerogative of initiating resolutions and statutes, whi
  • not complete, the complete truth is not the prerogative of the human judge."
  • It was within the prerogative of the Oxford captain to deny Cambridge the
  • y the Earls of Cornwall with the rights and prerogative of a county palatine, as far as regarded th
  • Rohan was petitioned to exercise the Royal Prerogative of Mercy on behalf of the Queen, to commute
  • brary" but nevertheless its use was not the prerogative of a private group.
  • ming at "power without responsibility - the prerogative of the harlot throughout the ages".
  • , revelling in what he called "the glorious prerogative of private judgement, the birth-right of Pr
  • ers of the Royal Family are governed by the prerogative of the Sovereign.
  • that church, which until then had been the prerogative of the Patriarch of Antioch.
  • o a member of the Advisory Committee on the Prerogative of Mercy and acts as presiding officer duri
  • rthern Ireland Lord Wakehurst exercised his prerogative of mercy.
  • d heir apparent by right, as the historical prerogative of grand ducal dynasties).
  • ugh the individual bishops do not enjoy the prerogative of infallibility, they nevertheless proclai
  • Philippine Constitution was within the sole prerogative of Congress to establish.
  • redit, and affirming the responsibility and prerogative of individual institutions with respect to
  • vement] is not an attempt to arrogate man's prerogative of manhood; it is not even an attempt to as
  • , that the independence of Scotland was the prerogative of the Scots people, rather than the King o
  • d them not to interfere in matters of royal prerogative or they would risk punishment; to which pro
  • d them not to interfere in matters of royal prerogative or they would risk punishment, which provok
  • The Royal Prerogative permits the government to give the order to
  • tive law decision that first recognised the prerogative power to do whatever "was necessary to meet
  • arlis again argued that if there was such a prerogative power, it had been completely replaced by t
  • the EU, the Government transferred certain prerogative powers without statutority authority.
  • ward Vaughan, he attempted to undermine the prerogative powers of the Archbishop of Canterbury, at
  • As a bill modifying the monarch's prerogative powers, the Queen's consent was required be
  • ishes that it is not possible to create new prerogative powers.
  • In certain cases, prerogative relief may be available from the Supreme Co
  • the Queen's advisers were anxious to claim prerogative rights to the gold.
  • hings to the derogation, or contrary to the prerogative royal or jurisdiction, of the Crown and dig
  • us the Attorney General relied on the Royal Prerogative, supported by a precedent of Queen Elizabet
  • trative area and having regard to the royal prerogative, the chair of the county council is the "fi
  • It is my exclusive prerogative to destroy what I have personally built."
  • The Supreme Court therefore has the prerogative to decide itself which cases it shall hear.
  • Burger defended a state's prerogative to impose additional punishment for recidiv
  • d maintained it was not within parliament's prerogative to depose a monarch.
  • he Democratic Progressive Party secured the prerogative to propose legislation in the Legislative Y
  • un Belt champion, the organizers used their prerogative to invite the conference's second-place tea
  • states' regions names) as relics of Texas' prerogative to divide itself.
  • uakerism was the fact that "ministry" - the prerogative to speak during a Quaker meeting - was open
  • in the distant city of Buffalo, as was his prerogative under that state constitution.
  • n began, although no powers under the royal prerogative were thereby transferred to Parliament.
  • n was required in the exercise of the Royal Prerogative, when Henry Newlands had to select a new Pr
  • een, or of subjects, belong to the Queen by prerogative, with liberty to dig and carry away the ore
  • iament to define and strengthen the ancient prerogative writ of habeas corpus, whereby persons unla