Sentences with phrase «so sacrosanct»

His opinion is so sacrosanct that when he suggested that commodious underground parking be added to the project — given Calgary's winter temperature can drop to -40 C — nobody bemoaned the suggestion.
The Claimant, a teacher with an unblemished work record, held her marriage vows to be so sacrosanct that she was not prepared to divorce her Head Teacher husband even after he was convicted of sex offences (making indecent images of children and voyeurism) She was dismissed by her employing school and claimed unfair dismissal and indirect religious discrimination.
For example, just last term, the U.S. Supreme Court held that a defendant's constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel under the Sixth Amendment is so sacrosanct that violation of the right is grounds for overturning a conviction, even in the absence of showing of actual prejudice.
Over the past decade, lawyers have convinced courts that the confidentiality of communications between lawyer and client and the duty of loyalty is so sacrosanct that government can rarely if ever override it.
Churchill was a night owl, but he took two baths and a two hour nap every afternoon, which he claimed allowed him to be twice as productive as the normal person Naps were so sacrosanct to Churchill that he unapologetically kept a bed in the House of Parliament.

Not exact matches

So we have learned that the law, sometimes mistakenly equated with justice, can not be considered sacrosanct.
White House reporters say theynever saw President Eisenhower so angry as he was the day photographers invadedthe sacrosanct trophy room at the Augusta National.
His decision to hand her the crucial voiceover narration — the sacrosanct domain of so many a private dick, that reflexive phallic fount of wisdom, wisecracks, and exposition — may go a long way toward determining how people react to this film.
So I say bravo to summer vacation; let's keep it sacrosanct.
Despite so much negative research surrounding the effectiveness of retention, it is the sacrosanct ideology of many education reformers, Mr. Bush is certainly not alone, that getting tough on children is the only way they will improve.
Publishing has traditionally treated the manuscript as sacrosanct and so built the print book «container» around an author's words.
Many critics see these objects as evocative of the desperation of the poor, Black urban class, but Hammons reportedly saw a sort of sacrosanct or ritualistic power in these materials, which is why he utilized them so extensively.
The Claimant's strong Christian ethic meant that she held her marriage vows to be sacrosanct and so was unable to comply.
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