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24 Sentences With "having recourse to"

How to use having recourse to in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "having recourse to" and check conjugation/comparative form for "having recourse to". Mastering all the usages of "having recourse to" from sentence examples published by news publications.

EU chief executive Jean-Claude Juncker said he could not imagine people not having recourse to the European Court of Justice.
EU officials say Italy can still benefit from the single currency but must reform its economy so that it can recover international competitiveness without having recourse to the currency devaluations on which it relied in the last century.
The wonder is that valetudinarians have not more frequently availed themselves of the advantages it offers, instead of having recourse to watering-places.
Afterwards, it mentions some traits/virtues of him; his uprising background, his martyrdom and passions circumstances, the grief of all the universe, beings of heaven/earth, due to his sensations. Eventually, it is ended with tawassul (having recourse) to Ma'sum Imams and likewise du'a (suplication) to Allah.Ziyarah Nahiyah Muqaddasah (audio) cafebazaar.
22 February 1648/9). In 1695 an Act was passed to build a permanent register of 30000 men for ready call-up by the navy, "without having recourse to the barbarous and unconstitutional practice of pressing".Adam Anderson (1787). An historical and chronological deduction of the origin of commerce..., pp. 624–625.
3, (2002), p. 148 > I think it my duty to say that some of the works are much damaged by > ignorant or careless moulding – with oil and lard – and by restorations in > wax and resin. These mistakes have caused discolouration. I shall endeavour > to remedy this without, however, having recourse to any composition that can > injure the surface of the marble.
Because of political instabilities in Haiti, he was forced to leave school and to educate himself without having recourse to a teacher. His most famous works are Choucoune, a lyrical poem praising the beauty of a Haitian woman, and Chant National, a lyrical historic poem which became as popular as the presidential hymn. Durand worked as a teacher before being elected to Congress in 1885. He was subsequently re-elected six times for this position.
He was not > called upon to stake his life upon "a reasonable chance to get away". If he > had done so he may well have figured as the deceased at the trial, instead > of as the accused person. Moreover, one must not impute to a person who > suddenly becomes the object of a murderous attack that mental calm and > ability to reason out ex post facto ways of avoiding the assault without > having recourse to violence.
NOÉ21 promotes energy transition to fight climate change. It evaluates solutions (centre of expertise) and advocates them to decision makers (think tank), through research, seminars, animations in schools and public events. Together with the Green Party of Switzerland and Greenpeace, NOÉ21 is currently evaluating having recourse to the judiciary to protect climate. Adèle Thorens, "Les Verts explorent la voie judiciaire pour préserver le climat", Le Temps, Friday 4 December 2015 (page visited on 26 May 2016).
The third essay is devoted to the refutation of the teachings of Karaism and to the history of the development of the oral tradition, the Talmud. Judah ha-Levi shows that there is no means of carrying out the precepts without having recourse to oral tradition; that such tradition has always existed may be inferred from many passages of the Bible, the very reading of which is dependent upon it, since there were no vowels or accents in the original text.
The king swore not to leave one of them alive. Admirable indeed were the effects of Grace of Baptism. As each one in turn was asked whether he or she were Christian, whereas a negative answer would at once have placed their lives in a safety so generous were these neophytes that far from having recourse to subterfuge, they boldly confessed the Faith. Fathers and mothers answering for their little ones to whom age has yet denied the power of speech.
Scheurer-Kestner was at this point of his inquiry when Leblois, who had met him at dinner one evening, conceived the idea of having recourse to him as the medium by which to save Dreyfus and, through Dreyfus, Picquart. Going to Scheurer-Kestner's house, Leblois told all he knew, and showed him Gonse's letters. Scheurer-Kestner was finally convinced, and swore to devote himself to the defense of the innocent (July 13, 1897). But he was much puzzled as to what course to pursue.
He referred to him as the "Consul Intruder". He particularly attacked the Consul for enriching himself from funds sent from France for the needy, accusing him of spending 12000 francs for the road in front of his residence to be paved "so that his lady belles could be comfortable when calling on him". Like many Maronite bishops, Bostani and the Maronites "were in the habit of having recourse to the consuls of France as if they were French themselves", stating that "their blood had been mixed for many generations".
The more fearsome a mafioso's reputation is, the more he can win disputes without having recourse to violence. It can even happen that a mafioso who loses his means to commit violence (e.g. his soldiers are all in prison) can still use his reputation to intimidate and provide protection if everyone is unaware of his weakness and still believes in his power. However, in the tough world of the Mafia, such bluffs generally do not last long, as his rivals will soon sense his weakness and challenge him.
Reviews following the premiere were rather mixed, although Budden seems to suggest that there were more unfavorable ones than the reverse.Budden, p. 453 However, one contemporary critic, writing in the Gazzetta Musicale states: :This is a work at once religious and philosophical, in which sweet and tender melodies follow one another in the most attractive manner, and which achieves...the most moving dramatic effects without having recourse to bands on the stage, choruses or superhuman demands on vocal cords or lungs.Gazzetta Musicale, 4 December 1850, in Osborne, p.
Recognizing themselves as gay or bisexual, these young people believe that their attraction to same-sex people, while present, does not allow them to have homosexual relationships. They say that their Christian conversion did not instantly change their sexual desires. They insist that the church should always reject homosexual practices, but that it should welcome gay people. There are also believers gathered in Christian organizations of evangelical orientation, such as Your Other Brothers or Voice of the Voiceless, who claim they have not been attracted to homosexuality since their new birth, without having recourse to a conversion therapy.
In 1705 the panel of merchants which had arbitrated in the case of the Ouzel Galley was formally established as a permanent arbitration body to deal with similar shipping disputes that might arise. It was hoped that the new body could resolve such disputes without having recourse to the courts, which would have resulted in excessive legal fees. Not only did the Ouzel Galley Society take its name from the famous vessel, but its membership was also regulated to match that ship's complement of forty men. The society's members bore naval titles such as captain, coxswain, boatswain, etc.
He establishes a dialogue with the life and work of Conrad, in particular his novel Nostromo, and with the Colombian history of the 19th century, especially the building of the Panama Canal. His narrator has a picaresque and sarcastic tone, constantly addressing the reader, having recourse to anachronisms, exaggerations and improbability whenever it suits his yarn; according to Spanish novelists Juan Marsé and Enrique Vila-Matas, Vásquez creates a powerful dialogue between the narrator and the reader, as well as between fiction and history. The Secret History of Costaguana is also an indirect comment on Vásquez's relationship with the work of Gabriel García Márquez.
On a second arrest for not conforming to an edict, of which he seems to have been ignorant, he was taken from his bed, maltreated in various ways, and led before the provost as a spy. His considerable property was confiscated, but instead of having recourse to the law, he said: “I made them to understand that I should permit everything to happen to me that the Lord should ordain.” Sower's one protest was against being labeled a traitor. The remainder of his old age was spent, except when visiting churches within his jurisdiction, at Methacton, where, assisted by his daughter, he supported himself at binding and selling remnants of his publications.
One paper finds that present-day Canadians born in communities that historically lay outside the reach of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (Mounties) seem to inherit a violent code of honour that drives their behaviour. From the viewpoint of anthropologists, cultures of honour typically appear among nomadic peoples and among herdsmen who carry their most valuable property with them and risk having it stolen, without having recourse to law enforcement or to government. Due to the lack of strong institutions, cultivating a reputation for swift and disproportionate revenge increases the safety of one's person and property against aggressive actors. Thinkers ranging from Montesquieu to Steven Pinker have remarked upon the mindset needed for a culture of honour.
One of the prosecution witnesses in the trial of Thomas Hardy claimed that Baxter had said 'there is not a man in the Society who believes that a Parliamentary Reform is all we want; and without having recourse to the sanguinary measures of the French Revolution, may be brought about in a few hours. He did not wish the King or any of the Royal Family to be killed. They may be sent to Hanover; but at the fame time some blood must unavoidably be shed, on account of the insults offered to the people, which human nature could not bear.'. However, following the acquittals of Hardy , John Horne Tooke, and John Thelwall, the authorities took no further action and he was released in the December.
In the appendix to The Shadow of the Torturer, he says: > In rendering this book—originally composed in a tongue that has not achieved > existence—into English, I might easily have saved myself a great deal of > labor by having recourse to invented terms; in no case have I done so. Thus > in many instances I have been forced to replace yet undiscovered concepts by > their closest twentieth-century equivalents. Such words as peltast, > androgyn, and exultant are substitutions of this kind, and are intended to > be suggestive rather than definitive. This character of the fictional "translator" of his novel provides a certain insight into Wolfe's writing: all of his terms—fuligin, carnifex, thaumaturge, and so on—are real words.
Moreover, atomic explosives can be produced from a > few grains of metal powerful enough to destroy whole cities. I'm telling you > this for a fact: the alchemists have known it for a very long time... I > shall not attempt to prove to you what I'm now going to say but I ask you to > repeat it to Mr. Helbronner: certain geometrical arrangements of highly > purified materials are enough to release atomic forces without having > recourse to either electricity or vacuum techniques... The secret of alchemy > is this: there is a way of manipulating matter and energy so as to produce > what modern scientists call 'a field of force'. The field acts on the > observer and puts him in a privileged position vis-à-vis the universe. From > this position he has access to the realities which are ordinarily hidden > from us by time and space, matter and energy.
Talking shortly after the destruction of the World Trade Center in September 2001, at the General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops in the Vatican Archbishop Concessao spoke of another form of terrorism, which he called "the terrorism of an unjust economic system which grinds to death thousands of people every day". Archbishop Vincent has been critical of the government for failing to prevent discrimination against Christians of Dalit origin based on their religion. He has said that the communal forces attacking Christians use a methodology borrowed from the Nazis, "spreading false accusations, creating an atmosphere of suspicion and hostility and then having recourse to violence to frighten the people to change their religion". When the National Integration Council was reconstituted and held an inaugural meeting in August 2005 the Christian minority rights leader John Dayal and the Reverend Valson Thampu presented a statement signed by Archbishop Vincent calling for equal rights for Christian Dalits and for an end to violence inspired by ethnic and religious divisions.

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