Sentences with word «xxxi»

P.E and Cross F.L Anglicanism SPCK 1962 p. xxxi.
this is what really like xx the shoes r amazing, gives a lot of sex appeal;) llooks so fab with that nail polish and tatoo xxxi like when you can see the bra xxx hugs
Each leg to a point below the knee xxxi.
[xxxi] Doris Lane Butler, «1957 «MOMENTUM» Exhibition Speeds City's Art Pulse: Show Features Chicago School of Expressionism.»
Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1968, xi, xiv, xviii, xxvii, xxx, xxxi.
When Jeremiah speaks of the new covenant by which the true Israel of the future shall be constituted, he gives as its outstanding feature, «They shall all know Me, from the least of them unto the greatest of them, saith the Lord» (xxxi.
[xxxi] These are the very provisions the state relies upon today to deny special education services to Michael, Rachael, Skyler, and other special needs kids whose parents choose religious schools.
Chicago, Museum of Contemporary Art; Miami Art Museum, Baltimore Museum of Art; Studio Museum in Harlem and Birmingham Museum of Art, Kerry James Marshall: One True Thing, Meditations on Black Aesthetics, October 2003 - April 2005, xxxi (illustrated).
«To say that s 51 (xxxi) is irrelevant to such a law is correct, but it is to state a conclusion rather than a reason for the conclusion.
A «reasonable amount of compensation» will be paid for any acquisition of property if the requirement for just terms compensation in section 51 (xxxi) of the Constitution applies.
Section 51 (xxxi) of the Constitution of Australia gives the federal Parliament the power to acquire property «on just terms».
Whether the requirement for just terms compensation in s 51 (xxxi) of the Constitution applies to laws made for the territories under s 122 of the Constitution.
In the High Court, the plaintiffs claimed that the Commonwealth had acquired Aboriginal property rights on other than just terms, in breach of the guarantee offered to property - holders in s 51 (xxxi) of the Constitution.
The Commonwealth claimed that because the intervention legislation was made under the Territories power of the Constitution (s 122), [109] the safeguard of just terms for the acquisition of property in s 51 (xxxi) of the Constitution did not apply.
Whether intentional or not, it has the effect of capitalising upon numerous complexities and doubts surrounding the meaning of section 51 (xxxi), to the advantage of the Commonwealth and to the disadvantage of Aboriginal people whose sole valuable asset is frequently their property rights.»
The requirement under the NT (SG) A normally applies to the acquisition of property in the Northern Territory, which, if the property were in a State, would be an acquisition to which paragraph 51 (xxxi) of the Constitution applied.
[87] There are many measures which in one way or another impair an owner's exercise of his or her proprietary rights which involve no acquisition such as pl (xxxi) speaks of.
In relation to s 51 (xxxi), there are numerous situations in which a diminution of rights or restriction of use will not amount to an acquisition of property.
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