Search results for: "sent" (2092 results)
“assumption,” see Ouellette, supra note 2, at 370, but it is not— there is a theoretical explanation for the point. In the same sentence, Ouellette also
decision was handed down, Washington insiders were regaling one another with a saucy sentence that encapsulated the new legislative situation: “A
before E, except after C,” “never end a sentence with a preposition,” and so on), yet the particular form of words used to express the rules has no
sentiments ought to be challenged. D. The Limits of Politics The final critique of the funding cut-off suggests that, regardless of the tool’s normative
overlooked next sentence: “This does not sound remotely like a provision meant to tell a court what to do just in case the parties say nothing else.”52 In
grammar and spelling might be more or less accurate (“i before e, except after c,” “never end a sentence with a preposition,” and so on), yet the particular
Having an accountable and responsive government is good, but it has long been recognized that some degree of agency insulation from popular sentiment
England, however, carrying concealed weapons was uncommon because “the laws forbid it, and public sentiment condemns it so strongly that were the laws
prioritized monopoly rents as the most important spur to innovate, and echoed the prevailing sentiment that the high-tech sector must be maximally
explaining OSG’s change on whether the Ex Post Facto Clause applied to advisory guidelines in light of changed sentencing jurisprudence). E.g., United