Sentences with phrase «original public meaning»

The Constitution's original public meaning supplies the key, for the Constitution can not secure the people's liberty any less today than it did the day it was ratified.

Not exact matches

The original collection of short stories published in 1894 are now in the public domain, which means there's nothing stopping Warner Bros. from making a Mowgli story of their own.
And with more and more schools instituting Bring Your Own Device initiatives, ereading is gaining a lot of traction in public schools, meaning teachers can incorporate a lot of original content in the process.
No plot details have been made public, but in a joint statement Roy's UK and Indian publishers described the book as an «extraordinary» work of «generosity and empathy» that «makes the novel new — in the original meaning of novel.»
As it stands, Samsung is taking a very public backlash (and by public, we mean by people who intensely follow cellphone blogs) but are forging ahead with the launch of an updated variant of the original Vibrant.
More impressive visual fare like Resident Evil: Revelations or Metal Gear Solid: Snake Eater 3D shine, the 3D's much larger sweet spot meaning you're saved from that constant head realigning you have to do when playing the original 3DS on bumpy public transport.
With the original bush - hammered concrete substituted by foam, RIBA's latest installation alters perceptions of public space and reimagines what it means to play.
Its original meaning — «coming together through the binding of two ropes» — shifted as the public began inventing new definitions and merchandising the word, resulting in a massive body of work, not made by the artist, but instigated by Weist through her choice and placement of a word.
In fact, it wasn't until 1906, when public outcry from Upton Sinclair's book The Jungle meant new legislation.The original intention of the book was to portray the life of immigrants living in the U.S. but instead, the focus of the book became unsanitary conditions at a slaughterhouse in Chicago.
The Standard defines «maintenance» as activities meant to keep existing public spaces and elements in existing public spaces in good working order or to restore the spaces or elements to their original condition, for example, by painting or through minor repairs.
It further clarifies that a «public» refers to an indeterminate number of people (para. 32) and that a public is «new» if that communication is made using technical means different from those used in a previous communication; or, alternatively, that the communication is made to an audience which has not been taken into account when the original act of communication was authorized by the right holder (para. 33).
While the original intent of section 7 as a whole is arguably irrelevant, the framer's intended meaning of «principles of fundamental justice» is surely relevant since the phrase had no «public» meaning at the time of its adoption, and, aside from its inclusion in the Canadian Bill of Rights, was not a familiar term of art.
In this assessment a court has to consider the role of the user and whether his intervention was made knowingly and whether it was necessary to give access to the content; a court has to further ask whether the act of communication to a «public» is made to an indeterminate number of individuals where that number has a certain magnitude, and whether this communication uses technical means different from those of the original act of communication; and finally, whether the act of communication to the public serves to generate profits for the user.
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