23887 examples of objected in sentences

Lord Auckland objected to it, and I was not sorry to be spared the trouble of it.

After a brief statement of the existing equipment of the Observatory in respect of equatoreal instruments, the Address continues thus: "It is known to the Visitors that I have uniformly objected to any luxury of extrameridional apparatus, which would materially divert us from a steady adherence to the meridional system which both reason and tradition have engrafted on this Observatory.

But in this case I do not think the problem could fairly be objected to as puerilea more legitimate objection would I conceive be its extreme speciality.

In this letter, as on former occasions, he objected much to the large number of questions in "purely idle algebra, arbitrary combinations of symbols, applicable to no further purpose."

He also objected much to singing the responses to the Commandments.

From an artistic standpoint he strongly objected to the huge caravansary on which builder Hobbs and pious Jabez Balfour spent so much of other people's money.

And in like way he objected to the semi-detached villas.

She's the only one who can do it well," objected Migwan.

The Duke, however, objected to a commission as really superseding the Governor- General and being the Government.

The secret instruction which it was proposed to give to the Ambassadors is now abandoned, France having objected.

The latter work contains much correspondence the publication of which might have been objected to at the earlier date.]

I objected to sending a copy of the letter to Leopold, as that would as much lead to a reply as if they answered him directly.

telleth, how travelling by the highway side in Silesia, he found a nobleman, "booted up to the groins," wading himself, pulling the nets, and labouring as much as any fisherman of them all: and when some belike objected to him the baseness of his office, he excused himself, [3240]"that if other men might hunt hares, why should not he hunt carps?"

In the House of Peers, Lord Camden especially objected to the clause annulling a marriage between persons of full age; and in the Commons, Mr. Dowdeswell, who had been Chancellor of the Exchequer in Lord Rockingham's administration, dwelt with especial vigor on the unreasonableness of the clause which fixed twenty-five as the age before which no prince or princess could marry without the King's consent.

And he also objected to the "vindicatory part," as he termed the clause which declared those who might assist, or even be present, at a marriage contracted without the royal permission guilty of felony.

But the Colonies objected to Parliament laying on them such a tax as that imposed by the Stamp Act.

And he objected to the first clause (that which declared the power and right to tax), on the ground that if the ministers "wantonly pressed this declaration, although they were now repealing the Stamp Act, they might pass it again in a month."

At first the passengers objected to taking their seats with such a weight behind, lest they should meet with some accident, or be impeded in their progress.

Besides, Lady Maulevrier objected before to the idea of your travelling alone with Kibble.

Priam Farll was something of a dandy, and like all right-thinking dandies and all tailors, he objected to the suave line of a garment being spoilt by a free utilization of pockets.

Nor can such results be effectually guarded against in such a system without investing the Executive with a control over the banks themselves, whether State or national, that might with reason be objected to.

If the object to be accomplished is deemed important to the future welfare of the country, I can not allow myself to believe that the addition to the public expenditure of comparatively so small an amount as will be necessary to effect it will be objected to by the people.

Such precedents, never objected to and proceeding from such sources, afford a decisive answer to the imputation of inequality or injustice.

This measure is further objected to on the ground of improper inducements held out to the assenting chiefs by the agents of the proprietors of the lands, which, it is insisted, ought to invalidate the treaty if even the requirement that the assent of the chiefs should be given in council was dispensed with.

The old man objected strongly and earnestly to the price; he said, it was too much; he had not money enough to pay it; and begged them, with tears in his eyes, not to make him pay so much "for his old bones;" but they would not remit a cent.

23887 examples of  objected  in sentences