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32 Sentences With "made a citizen"

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

Sophia the robot was made a citizen of Saudi Arabia last month, but a lot of people weren't happy about it.
As a result he was made a citizen of Canada, Israel, Australia and the United States; awards and institutes were set up in his honour, and streets and parks named after him.
Mr Koyama was the first Japanese person to be made a citizen of Huế.
In return he was made a citizen of the Republic of Siena. He probably returned to Greece in the expedition of Demetrius of Thessalonica and William VI of Montferrat in 1225, which ended in failure.
In 1916 she was made a citizen of England. Although a major art patron, she is most remembered as a hostess for the cultural elite, including Henry James, Virginia Woolf, Roger Fry and Augustus John.
Branca was born on 22 April 1571 in Sant'Angelo in Lizzola. From 1616 Branca was employed at the Sacra Casa (Virgin’s Holy House) in Loreto. He was made a citizen of Rome in 1622. He died on 24 January 1645 in Loreto.
Hans Folz. Hans Folz ( 1437 – January 1513) was a German author of the late medieval or early Renaissance period. Folz was born in Worms. He was made a citizen of the city of Nuremberg, Germany in 1459 and master barber of the city in 1486.
A man comes to take Frank. Karel tells Sylvia he is in the country illegally but expects to be made a citizen. Karel is arrested, as Pander is turning him in for money. Murphy intervenes, and the police sergeant (Sidney Toler) makes calls to arrange a marriage license and to hire a minister (Donald Meek).
It is unknown whether Vespucci was ever aware of these honours. In 1505, he was made a citizen of Castile by royal decree and in 1508, he was appointed to the newly created position of chief navigator for Spain's Casa de Contratación (House of Trade) in Seville, a post he held until his death in 1512.
He was born in Montabone near Acqui. He is said to have been a pupil of Lorenzo Sabbatini. He started painting in Milan, then worked in Pavia, where he was made a citizen. He also painted in Casale, Novara, Vercelli, Alessandria, and Turin, and Genoa His best work, Deposition from the Cross is at the church of San Gaudenzio, Novara.
He was often a speaker at the annual reunions of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade in New York City. On March 30, 2008, Mattson was one of 11 veterans of the Lincoln Brigade present at the dedication of a monument to the Brigade on the Embarcadero in San Francisco, California."Berkeley California", Veljeysviesti Online June- July 2008. On August 26, 2009, Mattson was made a citizen of Spain.
27 The institute and residency program in emergency medicine he helped establish have become world leaders in research and education in the specialty24,25, and on his departure from the University he was granted an honorary professorship and was made a citizen of the City of Pittsburgh. He continues as an adjunct professor within the School of Medicine and the School of Health Sciences and Rehabilitation at the University of Pittsburgh.
Decker was made a citizen of Basel on 8 June 1635 and took over Schröter's presses in the Truckerstuben zum Feigenbaum, which then remained in operation until 1745. On 2 July 1635 Decker was made 'Academiae Typographus' or official printer to the University of Basel, founding the University's publishing house Linda Maria Koldau: Frauen – Musik – Kultur: Ein Handbuch zum deutschen Sprachgebiet der Frühen Neuzeit. Böhlau, Köln 2005, S. 534 (Digitalisat).
Several citizen organizations and neighbors opposed the construction of this bridge. The reasons were several: from the lack of a comprehensive urban mobility plan, its cost, its construction without having previously made a citizen consultation and the lack of the permits required for its construction. Some of these organizations launched the "Pass it AUN better" campaign, which was intended to be the counterpart of the "Pass it better" campaign promoted by the Jalisco State Government.
Atumano was praised by his contemporary, Frederick III of Sicily, for his "innate goodness and praiseworthy character" and by his twentieth-century biographer as "no common scholar." Coluccio Salutati, the famous Florentine humanist, praised him to Petrarch as a vir mult[a]e venerationis: most venerable man. He was made a citizen of the Republic of Venice. Even the Antipope Clement VII referred to him as of bon[a]e memori[a]e (good memory).
Following the collapse of France in 1940 Douglas left the Riviera and made a circuitous journey to London, where he lived from 1942 to 1946. He published the first edition of his Almanac in a tiny edition in Lisbon. He returned to Capri in 1946 and was made a citizen of the island. His circle of acquaintances included the writer Graham Greene, the composer Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji and the food writer Elizabeth David.
In 1879 he published a book on the republic of San Marino, entitled A Freak of Freedom, and was made a citizen of San Marino; in the following year appeared Genoa: How the Republic Rose and Fell, and in 1881 a Life of Giuseppe Garibaldi. He spent considerable time in the Aegean archipelago, of which he wrote in The Cyclades; or, Life among the Insular Greeks (1885). Theodore Bent receiving visitors at the Dilmun burial mounds in Bahrain.
Galligan argued that a military council in 2012 had allowed Hasan to keep his beard for the duration of the trial and dismissed the Army's actions as vindictive. On August 28, 2014, his attorney said Hasan had written a letter to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, then head of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). In the letter, Hasan requested to be made a citizen of the Islamic State and included his signature and the abbreviation SoA (Soldier of Allah).
He had resigned his see in a letter to Pope John XXIII because he felt that vigorous work belonged to far more active men than he was and that he felt his work was taking its toll upon his health. In 1963 he was made a citizen of Ceará in honor of all his work. In 1968 he broke his femur and this forced him to remain in a wheelchair for a period of time. He died in 1974 and his remains are interred in the Fortaleza Cathedral.
Pedro de Ayala, the Spanish envoy and Cabot's contemporary in London, described him in a letter to the Spanish Crown in 1498 as "another Genoese like Columbus". John Cabot's son, Sebastian, said his father originally came from Genoa. In 1476 Cabot was made a citizen of the Republic of Venice, which required a minimum of fifteen years' residency in the city; thus he must have lived in Venice since at least 1461.J.A. Williamson, The Cabot Voyages and Bristol Discovery Under Henry VII (Hakluyt Society, Second Series, No. 120, CUP, 1962), pp. 33–34.
In choosing categories for the Game and then particular contests once the main category is selected, the intelligent player uses his knowledge of his opponent, trying to play to the opponent's weaknesses and his own strengths. Of course, his ability to do so is limited because half the grid is in the opponent's hands. Every year, the top-ranked players are entered into a Tourney. The final winner of the Tourney is immediately made a Citizen and given a small percentage of the annual Protonite production equal to about one kilogram at the moment of Citizenship.
Four launches with doctors carrying medicines, sophisticated portable X-ray and echo-cardiograph machines, provided by the French author Dominique Lapierre move along the waterways of the Sundarbans to its furthest corners. Residents of such places as Sandeshkhali, Basanti, Gosaba and Kultali have expressed their gratitude to him for his support when he came in 2004. Since 1981, Lapierre has dedicated half of his royalty earnings from his books to sustain a humanitarian movement in the slums of Kolkata and the deprived areas of rural Bengal. For his work, Lapierre was made a citizen of honour of Kolkata.
Four launches with doctors carrying medicines, sophisticated portable X-ray and echo-cardiograph machines, provided by the French author Dominique Lapierre move along the waterways of the Sundarbans to its furthest corners. Residents of such places as Sandeshkhali, Basanti, Gosaba and Kultali have expressed their gratitude to him for his support when he came in 2004. Since 1981, Lapierre has dedicated half of his royalty earnings from his books to sustain a humanitarian movement in the slums of Kolkata and the deprived areas of rural Bengal. For his work, Lapierre was made a citizen of honour of Kolkata.
Roman soldiers were trained to stab with these swords instead of slash, always keeping their shields in front of them, maintaining a tight shield-wall formation with their fellow soldiers. To motivate the Roman soldier to come within two metres (6 ft) of his enemy (as he was required to do with the gladius) he would be made a citizen after doing so, upon completion of his term of service. Roman infantry discipline was strict and training constant and repetitive. The manipular legion was an improvement over the phalanx on which it was based, providing flexibility and responsiveness unequalled before that time.
In the 1940s, Hasenpflug began developing an industrial clientele but the field was off limits to him as an 'enemy alien' during the war and he had to transition to child portraiture. At the end of the war, Hans was made a citizen in Australia. In the 1950s, he was a printer at Latrobe Studios with Bruno Benini whose entry into fashion he encouraged.Bruno Benini: Creating the Look”, Powerhouse Museum 31 July 2010 to Feb 2011 Henry TalbotSusan van Wyck, Henry Talbot Fashion Photographer: Out of Sight, National Gallery of Victoria article replaced him there when he moved back to Sydney to open his own commercial illustration studio in Drury Lane in Mosman.
As part of this invitation he regularly lecturered British diplomats, commercial attaches and embassy staff on international trade regulation and current international law issues. McDermott was awarded the Freedom of the City of London, being made a Citizen and Liveryman of the City in 2006 for his professional work, especially his advice to successive Lord Mayors of London. In 2006, McDermott accepted an appointment as a commercial litigator with a law firm in the Cayman Islands specialising in financial crime, anti-money laundering and anti-corruption practice in a number of offshore jurisdictions. McDermott advised on large, complex, multi-jurisdictional litigation disputes and appeared before the Summary Court, the Grand Court and the Court of Appeal of the Cayman Islands.
Jean du Quesne, the younger (1575–1612) was the son of Jean Du Quesne, the elder, a particularly well-documented Huguenot refugee from Flanders. Of noble extraction, Jean Du Quesne the elder escaped to England during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I following the Low Country persecutions of Protestants under the Duke of Alba, originally settling in Canterbury where he served as an elder of the French Church. Jean Du Quesne the younger was the first English- born member of what later was known as the "Du Cane" family, which ultimately became a leading London family of trade, insurance and finance that was closely connected to the Bank of England and the East India Company. Born in London, Du Quesne was made a citizen in 1600.
He was probably related to the sculptor Hans Leinberger, who also lived in Landshut, but the relationship is unclear. It appears certain that he took his first lessons from Leinberger, however, then was apprenticed to Hans Wertinger, the court painter for Duke Louis X. After that, he travelled to Regensburg, where he studied with Albrecht Altdorfer and had a hand in creating the woodcuts for the "Triumphal Procession" of Emperor Maximilian I. Around 1520, his style is noticeable in a panel painting, "The Conversion of Saint Paul", in the Bishopric of Naumburg- Zeitz. In 1522, he appears in Leipzig, where he created the "Epitaph for Valentin Schmidburg" (a medical doctor who had also served as a city counselor and syndic), which is now in the Museum der bildenden Künste. A year later, he was made a citizen of Leipzig.
Accordingly, Marsilio was made Captain General of the City by a compliant General Council but the overall ruler was now Cangrande, who rode triumphantly into Padua on 10 September 1328 Cangrande was received enthusiastically by the populace who now craved any kind of stability. To cement the new order Jacobo da Carrara's daughter Taddea was betrothed to Cangrande's nephew Mastino della Scala, the wedding itself taking place at a great Curia at Verona in November 1328. This, Cangrande's most significant triumph, was seen as a huge boost for the Ghibelline cause, weakened as it had been by the death of Castruccio Castracani earlier that year. Even cities under Guelph control such as Florence wrote to congratulate Cangrande and, in March 1329 he was made a citizen of Venice, an honour rarely granted at the time to people from outside that city.
In L'Amateur d'Art, there was reference to his "hitherto much ignored talent"; and he was being admired as a "true painter" with a "serious heart", a "profound interior life". During 1948 to 1954 Brusset travelled to Caracas, Venezuela and San Juan, Puerto Rico and spent time in the United States with his exhibition Paris by Brusset under the patronage of the cultural attaché of the French embassy in Washington, D.C.. As a result of their successful exhibition of his works acquired by the Delgado Museum of Art in New Orleans, Brusset was made a Citizen of Honour of the town and Colonel of the Guard of Honour of the Lord Governor of Louisiana, an honour never previously conferred upon a foreigner. The exhibition then visited many cities, including Memphis, Dallas, San Francisco, New York, Miami, Montreal and Toronto. In 1955 Brusset returned to France, where an exhibition of his ceramics presented at Cannes won him the award of the L'Academie Internationale de la Ceramique of Geneva.
Oskar Dieter Alex von Rosenberg-RedéFull name as given on passenger manifest, on 21 October 1939; accessed on ancestry.com on 5 January 2012 was born in Zurich, Switzerland on February 4, 1922, the third and youngest child of (1878–1939), a banker from Austria-Hungary.Baron de Rede Daily Telegraph; September 7, 2004 His father – whose mother was Hungarian and father unknown – had been adopted by a banker named Rosenberg and made a citizen of Liechtenstein, then created a baron in the Hungarian nobility by the Emperor of Austria in 1916.This was a genuine title, though since it was not of a rank sufficient to appear in the Almanach de Gotha, its validity was often questioned. Redé's mother was Edith von Kaulla (1890—1931), a member of an ennobled German Jewish family"The Baron with the Midas touch — A life of living large ...", New York Social Diary, April 10, 2011 that had been part- owners of the Royal Württemberg Court Bank (″Königlich Württembergische Hofbank″, founded by Karoline Kaulla and Raphael Kaulla).
In his declaration, Plaviuk proclaimed that the current Ukrainian state is the lawful successor to the Ukrainian People's Republic and a continuation of its authority and state traditions. For his achievements in Ukrainian community and political affairs in the diaspora, Mykola Plaviuk was awarded the St. Volodymyr the Great Medal by the Ukrainian World Congress, and the Taras Shevchenko Medal by the Ukrainian Canadian Congress. In 1993, via extraordinary decree by President of Ukraine Leonid Kravchuk, Mykola Plaviuk was made a citizen of Ukraine. In 1996, by presidential decree Ukrainian President Leonid Kuchma conferred upon Mykola Plaviuk the State Order of Merit, 3rd Class "…for his personal contribution to the development of Ukrainian statehood, and his active community and humanitarian involvement…." In 2007, through presidential decree President of Ukraine Viktor Yushchenko conferred upon Mykola Plaviuk The Order of Prince Yaroslav the Wise, 1st Class for his contributions as a “…public and political leader, President of the UNR in exile 1988-1992, for his selfless service to the Ukrainian people, and distinguished personal achievements in the revival of Ukraine’s independence.

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