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अंग्रेजी-हिंदी > dismission उदाहरण वाक्य

dismission उदाहरण वाक्य

उदाहरण वाक्य
11.That includes $ 75 for the petition to probate the will in solemn form; $ 40 for publishing the notice to creditors; $ 31 for the letters of dismission; $ 10 for publishing the dismission notice; and about $ 10 for recording and related fees.

12.He retired from the arduous labors of a settled ministry with his dismission from this charge, Sept . 5, 1877, and removed his residence to Hartford, Conn ., where he died, without previous warning, of rupture of the heart, August 31, 1880, in his 71st year.

13."Your committee to whom was referred the motion to grant W . D . Mahan a letter of dismission [ sic ] and recommendation after the term of his suspension expires, have had the subject under consideration, and in view of all the surrounding facts, and in view of the interests of the Church, we recommend the following:

14.And be it further enacted, That the officers, non-commissioned officers, musicians and privates of the said corps, shall be governed by the rules and articles of war, which have been established by the United States in Congress assembled, or by such rules and articles as may be hereafter, by law, established : Provided nevertheless, that the sentence of general courts martial, extending to the loss of life, the dismission of a commissioned officer, or which shall respect the general officer, shall, with the whole of the proceedings of such casts, respectively, be laid before the President of the United States, who is hereby authorized to direct the same to be carried into execution, or otherwise, as he shall judge proper.

15.That gentleman, before the publication of his Reports, had certainly compared many of them with the records; and this is evident, not only from his own declaration in the preface to his second volume, but more especially as many of his statements of cases and decrees thereupon are taken, almost " verbatim ", from the Register's Books . " The reporter informs us that he was not able to procure a full statement of all the cases " cum aliis pertinentibus ", " for where the court have been of opinion to dismiss the plaintiff's bill, the register has only made a minute of the dismission, and the case at large has not been entered in the report office, the parties in the suit choosing not to be at the expense of it . "-and yet this is attributed to the " reporter's inaccuracy " and want of " fulness " in his statements of cases, which has been reiterated from the time of Lord Mansfield down to 1846, without one saving clause in the allegations.

16... . not the corruption, not the lack of independence, not the want of patriotism in the House of Commons, but the unwise and desperate exercise of the royal prerogative to choose its own Ministers, by the dismission of those who have the confidence of the people, and the appointment of those who have it not . . . . [ Pitt was ] a young man whose ambition is so restless, and boundless, that nothing will satisfy him but being first : while to gain the object of his passion, he cares little by what road he reaches it, and meanly submits to creep up the backstairs of " secret influence " . . . . At this crisis, nothing should divert the public from this single object, a " good government "  till that is again obtained all must be confusion and distraction in the country : nothing can make it again, but the return of the old Ministers to the government of the country . . . any other object, diverting us from that, is at this moment ill timed, though it may be good abstractly.

17.[. . . ] I must not however conceal from Your Excellency, that the Gentry, well disposed, and heartily desirous as they are, to serve the Crown, and to serve it with Zeal, when formed into regular Corps, do not relish commanding a bare Militia, they never were used to that Service under the French Government, ( and perhaps for good Reasons ) besides the sudden Dismission of the Canadian Regiment raised in 1764, without Gratuity or Recompence to Officers, who engaged in our Service almost immediately after the Cession of the Country, of taking any Notice of them since, tho'they all expected half pay, is still uppermost in their Thoughts, and not likely to encourage their engaging a second Time in the same Way; as to the Habitants or Peasantry, ever since the Civil Authority has been introduced into the Province, the Government of it has hung so loose, and retained so little Power, they have in a Manner emancipated themselves, and it will require Time, and discreet Management likewise, to recall them to their ancient Habits of Obedience and Discipline; considering all the new Ideas they have been acquiring for these ten years past, can it be thought they will be pleased at being suddenly, and without Preparation embodied into a Militia, and marched from their Families, Lands, and Habitations to remote Provinces, and all the Horrors of War, which they have already experienced; It would give appearance of Truth to the Language of our Sons of Sedition, at this very Moment busily employed instilling into their Minds, that the Act was passed merely to serve the present Purposes of Government, and in the full Intention of ruling over them with all the Despotism of their ancient Masters.

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