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7 Sentences With "meet the expense of"

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

Following her death in 1951, her estate was valued at some £431,501. Her will, proved 4 April 1951, established the Constance Goetze Bequest to the Royal Academy of Music that supports graduates of exceptional talent to acquire a good instrument and to meet the expense of those graduates first recital in a London concert hall.
Under the will of his distant (half second cousin twice removed) kinsman Edmund Wylde (1618-1695) sometime MP for Droitwich Thomas inherited considerable estates including Glazeley, ShropshireWill of Edmund Wylde of Inner Temple, City of London, Date 2 January (1695/)1696, Catalogue reference PROB 11/435 enabling a career in parliament. He was Member of Parliament for Worcester in nine parliaments from 1701 to 1727 and a commissioner of the excise for Ireland from 1727 to 1737 being unable to meet the expense of re-election to parliament.
Prime Minister Hassan Diab announced that 5 August, the day after the explosions, would be a national day of mourning. The Lebanese government declared a two-week state of emergency. President Aoun said the government would provide support to displaced people, and the Ministry of Health would meet the expense of treatment for the wounded. Marwan Abboud, the governor of Beirut, said he arrived at the scene to search for firefighters who were on the site attempting to control the fire that was raging before the second explosion.
The Mayborn Campus Center is named for its benefactor, the late Temple Daily Telegram publisher, Frank Mayborn The Cottage Home System, the first work- study program for women in a college west of the Mississippi, was instituted on the new Belton campus in 1893 by Elli Moore Townsend, wife of the serving president. Its aim was to provide more affordable housing for women students who could not meet the expense of dormitories. The women students earned financial assistance by growing vegetables, raising livestock, and hand making crafts and quality clothing items. Initially the cottages were modest wood frame residences.
Indeed they seem to be distinguished only by their laziness and lack of enthusiasm." On May 3, 1879, The Chronicle wrote that the Athletic Association had appointed committees to select the players for the university football team, to select uniforms for the team, and "to obtain subscriptions to meet the expense of sending the team to Chicago." On May 17, 1879, The Chronicle devoted its front page to coverage of the upcoming football game in Chicago. The paper reported that a team of 22 players had been selected and had decided to practice "after supper, when the campus would be free, and it would not interfere with study.
The Hùng kings were transformed into thành hòang (tutelary spirits) sanctified by imperial orders and by popular feeling stemming from long traditions of ancestor worship.Ibid. Over time, the worship of Hùng kings evolved; they acquired sons-in-laws who became Mountain Spirits, when migrating south with the territorial expansion, and transformed themselves into Whale Spirits when near the sea. Land was also provided to temples in Phú Thọ province, the site of the main Hung temple, to meet the expense of Hùng kings worship. As late as 1945, the Nguyên court continued to delegate officials to oversee rituals in the Hùng kings temples of Phú Thọ.
The conditions which led up to the Eureka Stockade arose mainly from the actions taken by the Government in supervising the various goldfields. To meet the expense of securing order and to restrain unauthorised mining on Crown land, a local Act of January 1852 imposed on all diggers a licence fee of 30 shillings per month, the penalty for mining without a licence being £6 for the first offence and afterwards imprisonment for terms up to six months. Clause 7 of this Act also appropriated half the fine to the use of the informer or prosecutor, a provocative and irritating provision. In December, 1853, an amending Act reduced the fee to £1 per month, but did not alter the diggers' greatest grievance, that they could be imprisoned for not having the actual licence on them, though their possession of one could be proved from the official record.

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