Sentences with phrase «period after passage»

But the period after passage of the bill was especially impressive.

Not exact matches

They can be traced through many passages of poetry and prophecy in the Old Testament; they had a flourishing career in the «apocalypses» which pullulated in the period just before and just after the beginning of the Christian era; and they lived on.
A series of ritual passages define (1) the «before,» (2) the period of training that is «betwixt and between,» and (3) the «after» in which the transformation of the person is complete.
Ministers were forced to abandon a key vote guaranteeing the passage of the Lords reform bill through the Commons over a 14 - day period after it became clear it would have been roundly defeated by Tory rebels voting with the Labour party.
The case, reported in the New England Journal of Medicine and submitted to the Guinness Book of World Records, involved a guy who, after consuming dairy, experienced «70 passages in one four - hour period
I would agree with you that if the new Charter's have to run a certain standard, those charter's already in place should be required to comply with the new standards in a certain period of time (perhaps 1 - 2 academic years after passage so that the charter school may properly adjust).
After your statement is posted on the closing date, you usually have a grace period of at least 21 days (since the passage of the Credit CARD Act of 2009) before you're required to make at least the minimum payment on the statement's balance and before interest begins accruing on your balance.
In most states, after passage of a period of time specified by a «statute of limitations,» a debt collector loses its right to pursue in court authorization to garnish a debtor's wages or a bank account or place a lien on his or her property.
Though the public policy behind statutes of repose is based on the policy judgment that a potential defendant should have no reasonable expectation of responsibility for injuries that occur after the passage of a number of years, the Court held that such a policy rationale does not apply to asbestos cases because: (1) the potential dangers associated with asbestos exposure were well known by 1971; and (2) the typical latency period from asbestos exposure to disease is much longer than the six - year window for filing personal injury claims under the statute of repose.
The changes are expected to come into effect on 1 January 2018, following a period of around six months to allow practitioners and others concerned to prepare for commencement of the relevant amendments after yesterday's passage of the Bill.
If spouses sign an affidavit of consent, they may obtain grounds for a divorce after the passage of a mandatory 90 - day cooling off period.
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