53198 examples of cases in sentences

Most of the tools and implements are housed under cover, but poles and planks, broken carts and cases and barrels, lie all about in disorder; here and there a notice on a door declares "No admittance.

Teachers of theftChildren the dupes of the profligateAn effort at detectionAfflicting cases of early depravityProgress of a young delinquentChildren employed in theft by their parentsIngenuity of juvenile thievesResults of an early tuition in crimeThe juvenile thief incorrigibleFacility of disposing of stolen propertyA hardened childParents robbed by their childrenA youthful suicideA youthful murderer CHAPTER III.

What exists at present is fundamentally defective, especially by beginning too late, and as regards the plans and principles laid down for infants in many cases, much has been merely travestied, and many of the most essential parts entirely set aside or overlooked.

In such cases the memory is the only faculty exercised, and that at the expense of those that are higher.

The morbid inspiration is clearly the same in both cases, and there can be little doubt that Crabbe's poem owes its inception to opium, and that the frame work was devised by him for the utilisation of his dreams.

His aid is in constant requisition in severe cases, and certain it is that a cure not unfrequently follows upon his visit; but as the regular physicians always cease their attendance upon his entrance, and blood-letting and calomel are consequently intermitted, perhaps the cure is not so miraculous as it might at first seem.

In case of illness, the physician of the convent is called; and even then neither parent is allowed to see them, except, perhaps, in very severe cases.

In such cases the spire usually stood wholly within the outer boundaries, and parapets assisted to conceal the first springing of the spire.

Two ancient churches, which stood on the site of the present minster, had been successively destroyed by fire; and although, in the one case, this had been kindled by the torch of an invading army, and in the other by a thunderbolt, yet the infernal agency, in both cases, nobody ever thought of doubting.

Of course I shall choose extreme cases to illustrate the contrast between them.

But these are exceptional cases.

The moderation which has generally distinguished absolute monarchs at the commencement of their reigns, was doubtless in some cases assumed from policy; in the greater number, however, as is manifest from their history, it has been the natural workings of minds held in check by previous associations, and not yet hardened into habits of cruelty, by being accustomed to the exercise of power without restraint.

"No cases are known of parents wishing their children to be excused from such religious instruction, except with the Catholics, who desire that their children be excused from the devotional exercises, especially from reading the Protestant version of the Bible.

I soon became convinced that in this, as in most similar cases, the violence of party spirit had clouded truth; and the bitterness of defeat, in minds thus prejudiced, had sought relief in the too-common channels of violence and abuse.

With examples of one's own making, the quotation points may be used or not, as the writer pleases; but not on their insertion or omission, nor even on the quality of the separating point, depends in all cases the propriety or impropriety of using initial capitals.

Cases on administrative law.

Cases on damages.

SEE Crane, Judson A. Cumulative descriptive-word index and table of cases affirmed, reversed or modified, covering Current digest.

Reports of cases adjudged in the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia.

The cromlechs which have been excavated in many cases are found to contain the funereal urns of a people who burned their dead.

The golden or silver reliquaries, the jeweled manuscript-cases, the offerings of precious stones and rich ornaments laid on the altars: these things proved an irresistible temptation to the roving sea-kings.

THE GENERAL ADOPTION OF SUCH A SCHEME, WITH ALTERATIONS TO SUIT INDIVIDUAL CASES, WOULD, I THINK, BE A NAIL IN THE COFFIN OF BOLSHEVISM IN THE HOME.

BRIDLEGOOSE, JUDGE, a judge in Rabelais' "Pantagruel," who decided cases by the throw of dice.

GHEEL (12), a town in Belgium, situated on a fertile spot in the midst of the sandy plain called the Campine, 26 m. SE. of Antwerp; it has been for centuries celebrated as an asylum for the insane, who (about 1300) are now boarded out among the peasants; these cottage asylums are under government control, and the board of the patients in most cases is guaranteed.

the whole done under Mr. Gould's own eye, and in many cases by his own hand (1804-1881).

53198 examples of  cases  in sentences