Sentences with phrase «largely abolish it»

He would like them to be largely abolished simply because people thought they did a good work when they «have brought so many silver images into the churches».
Democracy, however, which has largely abolished this mimicry of kings, has for many folk only substituted mimicry of the mob.
These effects of Cy -3-g are largely abolished by pharmacological and genetic inhibition of AMPK.

Not exact matches

Which was largely successfully abolished.
Laws requiring that businesses be largely owned and controlled by citizens had to be abolished, along with laws of any kind favoring local business.
There was a strong movement for abolishing it, just as there has been in more recent times; and largely on the same grounds — its defective morality and the inadequate or misleading conceptions of God which are to be found in it.
In the struggle of the Reformation against all human mediators between God and man, this symbol was abolished, and, with that process of purification, the feminine element in everything of ultimate concern was largely eliminated.»
Mr Darling told MPs «helpful discussions» had taken place with business representatives, who have been largely opposed to government proposals to abolish the ten per cent CGT rate on the grounds it could deter entrepreneurship.
Instead of trying to squeeze in every facet of the man's storied life, Lincoln chooses to focus on the period as the Civil War drew to a bloody, heart - rending close and the president, who had chosen to form a cabinet made up largely of people who opposed him, was sticking to his campaign to abolish slavery.
Those numbers largely align with previous Law Times polls that suggest many readers weren't happy with either the articling task force majority's proposal for a law practice program as an alternative or the minority's suggestion to abolish articling in favour of a transitional training program.
While U.S. Steel is correct to say that a person can not be imprisoned for a civil debt for, as Justice Binnie held in R. v. Wu, [2003] 3 S.C.R. 530 (S.C.C.) at paragraph 2, «[d] ebtors» prison for impoverished people is a Dickensian concept that in civilized countries has largely been abolished», the Act does not provide for the possibility of U.S. Steel or any of its executives being sent to debtors» prison for the failure to pay a penalty imposed upon it.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z