「parliaments」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

parliaments

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  • one of the oldest of English moots or local parliaments, a legacy left over from the time of the Bi
  • started out in the late 1950s as one of The Parliaments, a doo wop barbershop quintet led by George
  • The OYP holds five regional parliaments across Ontario each year.
  • s one of a number of provincial youth model parliaments across Canada.
  • In 1664, it was repealed by the Triennial Parliaments Act 1664 (16 Cha.
  • performed important advisory functions for parliaments, administrative organs and courts concerned
  • essive terms from the 28th to 31st Canadian Parliaments after which he was defeated by Alain Garant
  • d "periodic elections" with the duration of Parliaments after 1988 being extended to four years.
  • damage to agriculture by voting in previous Parliaments against resolutions introduced in the agric
  • as Advisor on Institutional Development to Parliaments all over the world but primarily in Sub-Sah
  • He chairs Bangladesh Parliaments All Party Group on Climate Change and Envir
  • ens was a frequent attender at the Scottish parliaments, and contributed very generously to the dec
  • MP for Bridgnorth during the Long and Short Parliaments and also sat in King Charles I's Parliament
  • , educating citizens, the media, members of parliaments and Congress and other officials.
  • after serving in the 30th and 32nd Canadian Parliaments and became a Commissioner with the Canadian
  • n numerous advisory roles with governments, parliaments, and organizations, as well as his particip
  • f religion, the frequent convening of a new Parliaments and equality for all under the law.
  • sions for him as Lord Protector, tri-annual parliaments and an Other House of 40 to 70 members nomi
  • for Dover in 1720 and in the following two parliaments, and for Hedon, Yorkshire in 1734.
  • n amendment of August 1950 eliminated state parliaments and called for the election of parliamentar
  • tter work because with Tasmania facing hung parliaments and minority governments for the next decad
  • rmally a five-year limit on the lifespan of Parliaments and provincial assemblies in Canada, but th
  • He attended David's parliaments and frequently attested his charters.
  • and commerce, to the Federal and Tasmanian Parliaments, and to the Aboriginal community of Flinder
  • ic states had communist majorities in their parliaments, and in August, despite claims prior to the
  • The voter base of the local parliaments and the national parliament is assumed to b
  • Ashley sat in several parliaments, and was highly distinguished by favor of Q
  • s' work is limited to areas for election to Parliaments and Assemblies.
  • cy and pre-selections for State and Federal Parliaments are decided on a pro-rata basis of union me
  • ames used for constituencies in predecessor Parliaments) are those given in the legal instrument cr
  • Nonetheless, Parliaments are purportedly popular among smokers in th
  • , and was regularly summoned to the English parliaments as Earl of Angus.
  • ill in 1885, and was returned in subsequent parliaments as a Liberal Unionist, and from 1912 as a C
  • Representatives and of one of the Regional Parliaments at the same time.
  • Unlike with the UK and Canadian Parliaments, Australia's two parliamentary houses gener
  • pean Parliament must choose between the two parliaments because a "double mandate" is not permissib
  • iament are often described as the Mother of Parliaments because of the adoption of the Westminster
  • ved two terms in the 28th and 29th Canadian Parliaments before being defeated by Robert Wenman of t
  • etween both James I and Charles I and their Parliaments before the English Civil War.
  • eading families and a member of most of the Parliaments between 1597 and 1640.
  • tt (1671-1743) was MP for Andover for seven parliaments between 1708 and 1727.
  • t was represented in the three Protectorate Parliaments, between 1654 and 1659.
  • mber of the privy council 1557, sat in five parliaments between 1545 and 1571, Speaker of the House
  • Cromwell was a member of five successive Parliaments between 1571 and 1589.
  • See also: Fixed-term Parliaments Bill 2010
  • her in both the Victorian State and Federal Parliaments but did not become a Minister in either tie
  • een particularly prominent in his first two parliaments, but came to the forefront in the parliamen
  • This ratio is quite common in other parliaments, but there are significant exceptions.
  • stant to a number of ministers during these parliaments, but was never appointed to cabinet.
  • After serving in the 34th and 35th Canadian Parliaments, Clancy was defeated in the 1997 federal el
  • At this stage of their careers, the Parliaments consisted of George Clinton, Calvin Simon,
  • ummoned to send members to the Protectorate Parliaments during the Civil War period, but never at a
  • in Sir Simonds D'Ewes's Journals of all the Parliaments during the Reign of Queen Elizabeth, or in
  • The laws do recognize this; their parliaments enacted valid laws, and the parliaments are
  • Any of the courts or parliaments established to maintain the rights of such
  • is served in the 27th through 32nd Canadian Parliaments, except for his brief resignation during th
  • cture representing 'Louis XVI recalling the Parliaments exiled during the reign of Louis XV' is in
  • n all three countries, the elections to the parliaments followed the same scenario, dictated by fun
  • liament of 1571 for Rye, in five succeeding parliaments for Arundel, and in 1597 for Much Wenlock,
  • agh began lobbying in the Irish and British Parliaments for an official union between the two, conv
  • h public servant who served as Clerk of the Parliaments from 1974 to 1983. he was created a life pe
  • Parliament for Hawera in the 15th and 16th parliaments, from 1902 to 1908, having failed to win el
  • In 1977, Simon (along with other original Parliaments Fuzzy Haskins and Grady Thomas), left Parli
  • rivals were later elected to sit in British parliaments: Gil Paterson, representing the Scottish Na
  • cts with a wide range of partners including parliaments, government departments and local authoriti
  • nties who had been summoned to some earlier Parliaments had not been required to be chosen by elect
  • notes by both parties that their respective parliaments have ratified the treaty.
  • opean Parliament and the Dutch and Canadian Parliaments have issued reports and passed resolutions
  • After serving in the 35th and 36th Canadian Parliaments, he did not seek a third term of office, le
  • serving in the 31st, 32nd and 33rd Canadian Parliaments, he left federal politics in 1988 and did n
  • ment for Banbury in both the Short and Long Parliaments he took a prominent part in the attacks upo
  • ere were sometimes significant gaps between Parliaments held in this period, the dates of first ass
  • He was summoned to the Parliaments held by Richard II.
  • returned as MP for Ludgershall in both the parliaments held in 1640 but was expelled from the Long
  • This composition became the model for later parliaments, hence the name.
  • rning Without a Majority: Dilemmas for Hung Parliaments in Britain (Sheridan House, 1986) provides
  • It is one of the three territory unicameral parliaments in the country, the upper house, the Legisl
  • dissolved the separate English and Scottish parliaments in favour of a single parliament, located i
  • ts, but less common for prime ministers and parliaments in a parliamentary system of government.
  • Parliamentum; or, the old Manner of holding Parliaments in England(1659).
  • ince 1801 (earlier elections took place for parliaments in Great Britain and Ireland), though the r
  • e 1962 and 1965 elections produced minority parliaments in which no one party had a majority of sea
  • lization, and strengthen local governments, parliaments, independent media and non-governmental org
  • 1800) merged the separate British and Irish Parliaments into a single Parliament of the United King
  • In 1965, the Parliaments' line up consisted of George Clinton, Grady
  • institutions and civil society-governments, parliaments, local and regional authorities and NGOs.
  • ing his terms in the 27th and 28th Canadian Parliaments, McQuaid returned to provincial politics to
  • Role of national parliaments: Member states' national parliaments would
  • Eleven Parliaments met in this period, partly as a result of t
  • In the National parliaments, Musharraf received 252 votes, against Waji
  • otiations regarding a proposed union of the parliaments of Scotland and England.
  • e 1777 until 1780 and for Dorchester in the parliaments of 1790, 1796, 1802, 1806.
  • 1469 and was returned for the county to the parliaments of 1449 and 1460.
  • t for Essex in the eighteenth and twentieth parliaments of Edward III.
  • as Member of Parliament for Mitchell in the Parliaments of 1555 and 1558, and High Sheriff of Cornw
  • The Parliaments of England by Henry Stooks Smith (1st editi
  • MP for the borough of Haverfordwest in the Parliaments of 1597-98 (under Elizabeth I), 1604-11 and
  • th of his father in 1605, and he sat in the parliaments of 1613, 1615, and 1634.
  • Henry Stooks Smith, "The Parliaments of England from 1715 to 1847" (2nd edition,
  • nd Edward II, and attended the councils and parliaments of his time.
  • d into an international organization of the parliaments of sovereign states.
  • Henry Stooks Smith, The Parliaments of England from 1715 to 1847 (2nd edition,
  • gdalen Hall, Oxford, he was a member of the Parliaments of 1593, 1597-1598 and 1601, representing C
  • and the Rump Parliament, together with the Parliaments of the Commonwealth and the Protectorate (b
  • t two decades, he served as a member of the parliaments of SFR Yugoslavia and SR Macedonia and as a
  • He represented Truro in the Parliaments of 1614 and 1624-5, and either he or his fa
  • a Francophonie (APF), an association of the parliaments of Francophone countries around the world.
  • om Acts, as they require the consent of the parliaments of Aruba and the Netherlands Antilles.
  • In the parliaments of 1586 and 1588 he represented Morpeth; in
  • or, A treatise of the law and custom of the Parliaments of England, was a pocket manual for members
  • He represented Weymouth in the Parliaments of 1621, 1625 and 1626; then in the Long Pa
  • a former politician who was elected to the parliaments of both Northern Ireland and the Republic o
  • ment (See: General Index to the Acts of the Parliaments of Scotland, Edinburgh 1875).
  • He represented the City of Durham in the Parliaments of 1768, 1774, 1780, 1784 and 1790, and joi
  • t the parliament of Crimea appealed to both parliaments of Russia and Ukraine not to hurry in signi
  • ire; he also represented that county in the Parliaments of 1625 and 1628 and in the Short Parliamen
  • he County of Kent; he sat in the last three parliaments of Charles II, between 1678/9 and 1681 (the
  • uropean Parliament, members of the national parliaments of the European Union, representatives from
  • ament, but was elected for the Protectorate Parliaments of as one of the four members for the East
  • The Parliaments of England by Henry Stooks Smith (1st editi
  • 566, and represented Cornwall county in the parliaments of 1562-3, 1572, 1588, and 1592, and Liskea
  • of the House of Representatives and of the parliaments of the states are chosen directly and democ
  • Britain, the first after the merger of the Parliaments of England and Scotland in 1707.
  • The Parliaments of England (2nd ed.).
  • Not represented in parliaments of 1653, 1654 and 1656
  • Following a historic meeting between the parliaments of North Tyrol and South Tyrol in 1971, the
  • In the First and Second Parliaments of Oliver Cromwell's Protectorate, however,
  • R State Council, was being discussed by the parliaments of the republics.
  • arate Acts of Union were then passed by the parliaments of England and Scotland to ratify the Treat
  • He sat in the Parliaments of 1553 and 1569.
  • wed to send members to the First and Second Parliaments of the Protectorate, though the privilege w
  • attended most or all of the assemblies and parliaments of the following decade, but only for the p
  • He was again returned for Suffolk to the parliaments of 1678, 1679, and 1680, and to William III
  • He represented the City of Durham in the Parliaments of 1741(elected 3/4/1742),1747,1754 and 176
  • He attended the parliaments of 1464, 1467, 1468, 1469 and 1471.
  • He sat in both the Parliaments of England and Great Britain until his deat
  • nto a single united Kingdom, and merged the Parliaments of England and Scotland to form the Parliam
  • In the legislation of the Scots Parliaments of 1493 and 1503 requiring all seaboard bur
  • as Member of Parliament for Abingdon in the Parliaments of 1584-1585 and 1588-1589.
  • y in 1360, 1362, January 1376-7, to the two parliaments of 1380, in 1383, 1384, 1386, January 1389-
  • resented the borough of New Shoreham in the parliaments of 1624 (elected 21 January 1624) and of 16
  • Schedule 3 amended 25 other Acts of the Parliaments of the United Kingdom and Scotland.
  • of Perthshire, and represented Perth in the parliaments of 1656-8 and 1659-1660 and at the same tim
  • created by the Acts of Union, passed in the parliaments of both kingdoms in 1707 and 1706 respectiv
  • Durham during the second, third and fourth Parliaments of Charles II, and then again in the second
  • Russell sat in the Parliaments of 1410, 1411 and 1417 as a proxy for the A
  • bsequently also represented Cornwall in the Parliaments of 1601 and 1621, and St Mawes in 1624.
  • The Records of the Parliaments of Scotland to 1707 , K.M. Brown et al eds
  • He was member of the various parliaments of the Commonwealth, avowal conservative pr
  • He was elected to the 12th and 13th Parliaments of Upper Canada representing the 3rd riding
  • He was Radical Party representative in the Parliaments of Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and Serbi
  • The national parliaments of 143 countries are members of the IPU, an
  • In the Parliaments of 1453 and 1455 he served as a Trier of Pe
  • Henry Stooks Smith, The Parliaments of England from 1715 to 1847, Volume 2 (Lon
  • reelected for both the February and August Parliaments of 1679, and again in 1689 and 1690.
  • He sat in the Parliaments of 1614 and 1621 as MP for Penryn and that
  • Account of the Proceedings of the Four last Parliaments of Q. Elizabeth (1680) </ref>
  • The term People's Parliaments or People's Assemblies (Latvian: Tautas Sae
  • Many parliaments or other legislatures consist of two chambe
  • Such Liberal measures as shortening parliaments or adopting voting by ballot did not enjoy
  • nother work of Acherley's is entitled ‘Free Parliaments; or, an Argument on their Constitution: pro
  • He rebelled in the 1964-1970 parliaments over steel nationalisation.
  • November 1449, serving in twelve successive parliaments overall.
  • rvice to the Australian and New South Wales Parliaments, particularly through landmark reform of in
  • In his later Parliaments Phelips was one of the leading spirits in t
  • Like the Parliaments' previous single, Poor Willie/Party Boys, t
  • or a number of years he was the Chairman of Parliaments Public Accounts Committee.
  • period when MEPs were appointed by national parliaments rather than directly elected, serving from
  • (In practice the Scottish and Irish parliaments really disappeared in 1707 and 1800, and wh
  • As a result the People's Parliaments renamed themselves Supreme Soviets of the r
  • The Acts dissolved both parliaments, replacing them with a new parliament, refe
  • In 2000 he led the Parliaments report on antitrust policy, and was active
  • Parliaments represent a small market, making up only 1.
  • He served in the first and third Parliaments, representing New Plymouth in the former an
  • sented in the First and Second Protectorate Parliaments; returned two members for the Third Protect
  • r serving in the 29th through 33rd Canadian Parliaments, Schellenberger left federal politics in 19
  • During the 37th, 38th and 39th parliaments she was vice-chair of the Social Affairs co
  • oposed that each of the Australian colonial parliaments should enact legislation providing for the
  • r, and the oldest in any of its predecessor Parliaments since Francis Knollys in the sixteenth cent
  • ee singers who had been with Clinton in The Parliaments since the late 1950s, Haskins, Simon, and T
  • epresented by Conservative MPs in all but 2 parliaments since 1931.
  • Parliaments, sometimes as informally assembled as a "pa
  • were a single borough returning MPs to most Parliaments, sometimes called by one name and sometimes
  • cts originating in the Scottish and English Parliaments, supplementing the Acts of Union 1707, pass
  • United Nations, European Parliament, world Parliaments, Supreme Council of the Russian Federation.
  • ism at the Australian, British and Canadian Parliaments, the German Bundestag, and at the United Na
  • He held seats in three parliaments: the South Australian Legislative Assembly,
  • ustralian politician, was a member of three parliaments: the Western Australian Legislative Assembl
  • ergoing some slight alterations passed both parliaments, the Parliament of Scotland and the Parliam
  • e of Westminster 1931 which granted Dominon parliaments the power to enact or amend almost any legi
  • cordon sanitaire), or Israel, where in some parliaments the fragmentation and intransigence of some
  • He served in the 32nd and 33rd Canadian Parliaments, then left national politics in 1993 and di
  • cutive terms from the 22nd through the 24th Parliaments then did not seek another term as of the 19
  • secutive terms in the 29th to 32nd Canadian Parliaments then left federal politics in 1984 without
  • of cash "Sometimes cursing the King and all parliaments to hell".
  • The only member of the Parliaments to actually appear on the recording was gro
  • ieval kings established Stannary Courts and Parliaments to administer the law in Cornwall and part
  • uch, but the co-option of members of former Parliaments to serve in the House of Commons of the 1st
  • is currently the President of the European Parliaments Transport and Tourism Committee after servi
  • After serving in the 34th and 35th Canadian Parliaments, Tremblay left Canadian politics as he did
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