In 1279 and again in 1290 chartulary of Chertsey Abbey records that " shortly after one of these statutes vulgarly called Mortmain " in Ash, Surrey were held by Robert de Zathe with sufficient common pasture for his flocks and herds, while Geoffrey de Bacsete and his brother William had.
42.
He astutely, if vulgarly, invented a twisted, selective and self-serving interpretation of the Constitution and the state's ideology, Pancasila, in such a way that any challenge to his rule and " divinity " would be a threat to the fundamental principles of the nation.
43.
He observed that the golden rays emanating from the Virgin seemed to be of dust that was woven into the very fabric of the canvas, which he asserted was of " a coarse weave of certain threads which we vulgarly call " pita, " " a cloth woven from palm fibers.
44.
Moved by that spirit of charity, the Apostolic See has protected this same people against unjust vexations, and just as it reproves all hatreds and animosities between people, so it especially condemns hatred against the people elected by God, a hatred that today is vulgarly called'anti-Semitism'."
45.
"Bull---- ! " he screamed again and again as he stood on a platform in September 1992 and vulgarly displayed his solidarity with a rowdy, beer-swilling crowd of 10, 000 cops who spewed racial invective and illegally tied up traffic during a wild demonstration outside City Hall.
46.
Three of Earle's letters to Mrs . Howard, afterwards the Countess of Suffolk, are in the Suffolk Letters . Lady Mary Wortley Montagu speaks of him as a facetious gentleman, vulgarly called Tom Earle . & His toast was always God bless you, whatever becomes of me .
47.
To me, it gave off a faint whiff of fascism _ not just in Kubrick's use of Strauss'" Thus Spake Zarathustra " on the soundtrack and in the vulgarly Nietzschean theme of the birth of the Superman, but also in the whole scheme of astral conjunctions, alien interventions and progress through bloodshed.
48.
This belief was debunked when it was discovered that the term " cocktail ", as a type of drink, first appeared in print at least as far back as 1803 and was defined in print in 1806, as " a mixture of spirits of any kind, water, sugar and bitters, vulgarly called a bittered sling ".
49.
The campaign was stepped up in early 1645 with the publication of the " Directory of Public Worship ", which plainly stated that " Festival days, vulgarly called Holy days, having no Warrent in the Word of God, are not to be continued . " The final victory over the King also saw the victory over Christmas.
50.
The previous March, the paper commented that engineers thought it was " what is vulgarly known as a cinch, " and the paper ventured a prediction : " It is possibly fair to assume that by the time the connection across Bering Strait is completed, the Channel tunnel between England and France will be in full operation ."