Sentences with phrase «day debate on the subject»

Not exact matches

I will debate you toe - ti - toe on any topic you choose under the subject of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.
The objective of this approach is not to present the religious view on a particular subject, but to generate public discussion and debate about significant issues of the day from many different religious perspectives and viewpoints.
Second, the section on contextualization provides a thoroughly diverse examination of one of the most vigorously debated subjects of our day.
This means that any extension would not only be: - subject to a specific case being made by the Director of Public Prosecutions; - subject every seven days up to the agreed limit to the approval of a High Court Judge; - subject to the regular report of the independent reviewer with an annual debate in parliament; - but also be subject in each and every instance to a specific parliamentary notification procedure, to a further statement to parliament on the individual case, a review on the specific case by the independent reviewer and with the provision for this House to scrutinise and debate the report and all the circumstances.
Cameron also paid a warm tribute to the Lib Dem leader, with whom he has had a frosty relationship in the past, for bringing the matter to the Commons on a day set aside for a debate on a subject chosen by the third party.
OUT: Taboo subjects IN: Healthy debate Until recent years, discussing serious subjects on a date was considered to be a serious taboo, but these days, if you tend to stick to small talk on a first date then it's unlikely you'll form that deep connection that great relationships are built on.
And this is what I understand to be the meaning of our lawyers, when they say that these civil corporations are liable to no visitation; that is, that the law having by immemorial usage appointed them to be visited and inspected by the king their founder, in his majesty's court of king's bench, according to the rules of the common law, they ought not to be visited elsewhere, or by any other authority.53 And this is so strictly true, that though the king by his letters patent had subjected the college of physicians to the visitation of four very respectable persons, the lord chancellor, the two chief justices, and the chief baron; though the college had accepted this carter with all possible marks of acquiescence, and had acted under it for near a century; yet, in 1753, the authority of this provision coming in dispute, on an appeal preferred to these supposed visitors, they directed the legality of their own appointment to be argued: and, as this college was a mere civil, and not an eleemosynary foundation, they at length determined, upon several days solemn debate, that they had no jurisdiction as visitors; and remitted the appellant (if aggrieved) to his regular remedy in his majesty's court of king's bench.
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