allocution उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- On October 29, 1951 in his " allocution to midwives ", Pope Pius XII citing Pope Pius XI's Encyclical " Casti connubii " of December 31, 1930 declared
- Some episodes include legal proceedings beyond the testimony of witnesses, including motion hearings, ( often concerning admissibility of evidence ); jury selection; and allocutions, usually as a result of plea bargains.
- It is also customary for the new sovereign to make an allocution to the Privy Council on that occasion, and this Sovereign's Speech is formally published in " The London Gazette ".
- On Holy Thursday, 17 April 1916, just before his retirement Cormier delivered a speech to the'" Angelicum " entitled " Vie intime avec Jesus : allocution prononcee au College Angelique ."
- An industrious teacher and a singularly efficient examiner, Archer-Hind took no prominent part in the affairs of the university; but his occasional allocutions at university discussions and college meetings were incisive and epigrammatic.
- An "'allocution "', or "'allocutus "', is a formal statement made to the court by the defendant who has been found guilty prior to being sentenced.
- I urge the court strongly to exercise _ to take the waiver and do not permit allocution; it is testimony without cross-examination . . . Please don't do this your honor, I beg you ."
- Doctors of the Church Robert Bellarmine and Alphonsus Liguori, as well as modern theologians such as Francisco de Vitoria, Thomas More, and Francisco Su�rez continued this tradition; Pope Pius XII issued an allocution to medical experts to that effect.
- A significant portion of the plea agreement involved Vick cooperating with federal authorities pursuing other dog fighting cases and a complete allocution on his role in the Bad Newz Kennels, including detailing his role in the killing of dogs after the fights.
- Towards the Indian National Congress he declared himself uncompromisingly hostile, both in allocutions at divisional durbars and in a published correspondence with Allan Octavian Hume, formerly of his own service, the " father " of the new movement ( 1885 ).