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44 Sentences With "onely"

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

He is told that Mary is "not permitted to ride farre abroad but onely suffered on foot or in a Coche to take the ayre and use some such exercise neere the howse where she shall lye," and chastised him for allowing Mary to accompany him on a hunting expedition.
" Three hundred and sixty-six years ago, in an uncanny trailer for Marvel, he wrote, "There are some that are not pleased with fiction, unless it be bold, not onely to exceed the work , but also the possibility of nature: they would have impenetrable Armors, Inchanted Castles, invulnerable bodies, Iron Men, flying Horses, and a thousand other such things, which are easily feigned by them that dare.
Bushehr University of Medical Sciences was founded in 1983 under the name Narjes and started onely with 25 students of midwifery. In 1995, after many developments it changes its name to Bushehr University of Medical Sciences by an official permission from the Ministry of Health and Medical Education (Iran). Today Bushehr University of Medical Sciences trains over 1500 students in 17 different fields of medical sciences. It is not offers onely education but also health service to people of its province.
67–68 > This in hast, is onely to give you notice, of a skirmish we had, wth > Breartons and ye Nantwich forces, I cannot as yet certify of any p'ticular > passage, onely thus far be satisfied for ye present; the relation of it is > not very good neither is it very bad, this much I would request you yt wth > all Speede, you will send unto Whitchurch all ye Churgieons you can possible > p'vide for wee are in grt want of them. Brereton's account of the skirmishCorbet, p.326-7 avers that the force he sent to occupy Nantwich was a mere fifty dragoons. When the Royalists tried to lay an ambush, the local people kept the Parliamentarians informed.
The Sad Encomium includes an early use of the expression "lost thou art not, onely gone before" (stanza 26). Margaret's sister Elizabeth, widow of Sir John Morgan of Chilworth near Wonersh, Surrey (died 1621),Will of Sir John Morgan of Chilworth (P.C.C. 1621). Genealogical Gleanings in England, II, p. 871.
One of his most important contributions was his work with botanist Thomas Johnson in producing a revised and corrected edition of John Gerard's Herbal (1597), arguably the greatest herbal of its time, in 1633. Johnson called him his "onely assistant". He also translated a Latin version of Dioscorides's work, De Materia Medica, and Theophrastus' Historia Plantarum (1623).
The church may date from the 13th century. A sundial set into the east wall is inscribed Re- edified 1648. The west end gallery has an inscription This loft was erected at the onely charge of Sir Philp Gell, Baronett. Anno Domini 1704 by consent of the parish at a meeting in Carsington: for the use of his tenants in Hopton.
Historically, municipal councils (such as the Corporation of London) or charitable establishments would be the primary examples of corporations. In 1612, Sir Edward Coke remarked in the Case of Sutton's Hospital,Case of Sutton's Hospital (1612) 10 Rep 32; 77 Eng Rep 960, 973 > the Corporation itself is onely in abstracto, and resteth onely in > intendment and consideration of the Law; for a Corporation aggregate of many > is invisible, immortal, & resteth only in intendment and consideration of > the Law; and therefore it cannot have predecessor nor successor. They may > not commit treason, nor be outlawed, nor excommunicate, for they have no > souls, neither can they appear in person, but by Attorney. A Corporation > aggregate of many cannot do fealty, for an invisible body cannot be in > person, nor can swear, it is not subject to imbecilities, or death of the > natural, body, and divers other cases.
Her account-book of family expenditure and many letters were preserved in the Swarthmoor Manuscripts. She died at Goosehays, 9 June 1714, and was buried with her husband at Barking. To Nathaniel Mead, a lawyer and politician who was knighted, his "dear and onely child", Mead left by will his estates in London, Middlesex, Kent, Essex, and Surrey. He left also legacies to the poor among Quakers and others.
The band was founded as Crownfall at the end or the 1990s, but was renamed Sensa Anima just before they released their debut album Synthetic (2000). This was their onely release, and has since not done much to mention. In 2000 they won Spellemannprisen in the category Hard rock for the debut album Synthetic. The band members Kildahl, Andersen, Stokland and Berglie have all played within Old Man's Child.
There have also been many editions in English. In 1628 Edward Coke published The First Part of the Institutes of the Lawes of England. Or, a Commentarie upon Littleton, Not the Name of a Lawyer Onely, but of the Law it selfe, commonly called "Coke [up]on Littleton". There have been about 25 editions of Coke upon Littleton and about 90 editions of The Tenures without the commentary.
In 1595, after Cooke's death, William Segar, Norroy King of Arms, sided with Dethick, criticising Cooke for his inability to write clearly and for making many grants of arms to "base and unworthy persons for his private gaine onely."Wagner 1967, p. 207.Rockett 2000. Ralph Brooke, York Herald and sometimes deputy to Cooke, complained in 1614 that Cooke had granted more than 500 new coats of arms during his tenure.
On the parapet of the south front, a verse from Psalms 127:1 is etched in old English characters: "Except the Lord build the house: their labour is but lost that build it." Further verses "Love God onely," "Honour and obey the Queen," and "Eschew evil and do good" are carved onto the colonnade. At the time of Griffith's Valuation in 1868, the property was valued at only £130 (); in 1906 the buildings at Adare Manor were valued at just £182 ().
On 23 June and again on 7 July he petitioned (writing also to George Monck, 1st Duke of Albemarle) for liberty to go out on bail, as the plague was then raging in London. His petition was repeated on 2 February 1666, and he gained his liberty soon afterwards. On his release he mixed in controversial talk with London clergy, who respected his learning and sincerity. With his publication in reply to Justification onely upon a Satisfaction (1668) by Robert Ferguson he drops out of notice.
These cantos, CVII, CVIII, CIX, consist mainly of "luminous details" lifted from Coke's Institutes, a comprehensive study of English law up to his own time. In Canto CVII, Coke is placed in a river of light tradition that also includes Confucius, Ocellus and Agassiz. This canto also refers to Dante's vision of philosophers that reveal themselves as light in the Paradiso. In Canto CVIII, Pound highlights Coke's view that minting coin "Pertain(s) to the King onely" and has passages on sources of state revenue.
Everyone—including servants and slaves—could and did hunt, so there was no social distinction to be had. In 1691, Sir Francis Nicholson, the governor of Virginia, organized competitions for the “better sort of Virginians onely who are Batchelors,” and he offered prizes “to be shot for, wrastled, played at backswords, & Run for by Horse and foott.”Quoted in Nancy L. Struna, "The Formalizing of Sport and the Formation of an Elite: The Chesapeake Gentry, 1650-1720s." Journal of Sport History 13#3 (1986) p 219.
Everyone—including servants and slaves—could and did hunt. Poor men with a good rifle aim won praise; rich gentlemen who were off target won ridicule. In 1691, Sir Francis Nicholson, the governor, organized competitions for the "better sort of Virginians onely who are Batchelors," and he offered prizes "to be shot for, wrastled, played at backswords, & Run for by Horse and foott."Quoted in Nancy L. Struna, "The Formalizing of Sport and the Formation of an Elite: The Chesapeake Gentry, 1650-1720s." Journal of Sport History 13#3 (1986) p 219.
Hilde has been given various leading roles at the theatre, among others; the main role as Edith Piaf at Agder Theatre. She has also been hired to write and arrange music for various locale theatre productions. Jazz musician - recordings: 'Round Chet's Midnight (1999), Playsong – The Music of Bill Evans (2001) Hildes BossaHefte (2003), her onely Norwegian album, On The Corner (2006), An Evening in Prague (2007), recorded in Prague, with Prague Philharmonic Orchestra. In 2013 she released the album Short Stories, and in 2017 the album Quiet Dreams.
Ignatius His Conclave is a 1611 work by 16/17th century metaphysical poet John Donne. The title is an example of "his genitive" and means the conclave of Ignatius. The work satirizes the Jesuits. In the story, St. Ignatius of Loyola, the founder of the Jesuits, is found to be in Hell: > But Ignatius Layola which was got neere his chaire, a subtile fellow, and so > indued with the Divell, that he was able to tempt, and not onely that, but > (as they say) even to possesse the Divell, apprehended this perplexity in > Lucifer.
In 1595 Segar sided with Dethick, criticising Cooke for his inability to write clearly and for making many grants of arms to "base and unworthy persons for his private gaine onely."Wagner, Heralds of England, p. 207 In 1596, Segar accompanied the Earl of Shrewsbury to invest Henry IV of France with the Order of the Garter, witnessing Henry's famed Royal entry into Rouen. Sir Walter Raleigh, portrait by William Segar, 1598, in the National Gallery of Ireland As Norroy, Segar carried the Sword of state in the funeral procession of Elizabeth I (1603).
In 1555, he edited The Auncient Historic and onely trewe and syncere Cronicle of the warres betwixte the Grecians and the Troyans … translated into Englyshe verse by J. Lydgate, Thomas Marshe, London, 1555, folio. Lydgate's work had already appeared in print under the title of The hystory, sege, and dystruccyen of Troy (1513). Braham prefixes a preface of very high interest. He criticises adversely Caxton's uncritical Recueil des Histoires de Troye; speaks in high praise of William Thynne, who had recovered the works of Chaucer; and desired to emulate Thynne's example with respect to Lydgate.
The Faithfull Surveyour (Cambridge, 1658); The faithful surveyor : teaching how to measure all manner of ground exactly, by the chain onely: also, thereby to take distances of a mile space, and the situation of any building. Shewing likewise the making and use of a new instrument, called a pandoron; which supplies the use of the plain-table, theodelite, quadrant, quadrat, circumferentor, and any other observing instrument. As also divers secrets for conveying and clensing of water, flowing and draining of grounds, quenching houses on fire, &c.; With an appendix unfolding errours in board and timber-measure: with directions for making a carpenters rule.
The account claimed, "Hereford-shire for a morris-daunce puts downe, not onely all Kent, but verie neare (if one had line enough to measure it) three quarters of Christendome". Cawte quotes further accounts describing complaints to the local magistrates about disruptive morris dancers in Longdon, disrupting the Sabbath day from 1614 to 1617 and another account of dancers in Much Wenlock in 1652, causing a disturbance in an ale house at Nordley. Later records from Shrewsbury mention payment to the "Bedlam Morris" in 1688 and 1689. The dance depends on the numbers available, as at Brimfield.
The two versions of the title page of The Passionate Pilgrim (3rd ed., 1612) Actors John Heminges and Henry Condell knew and worked with Shakespeare for more than 20 years. In the 1623 First Folio, they wrote that they had published the Folio "onely to keepe the memory of so worthy a Friend, & Fellow aliue, as was our Shakespeare, by humble offer of his playes". The playwright and poet Ben Jonson knew Shakespeare from at least 1598, when the Lord Chamberlain's Men performed Jonson's play Every Man in His Humour at the Curtain Theatre with Shakespeare as a cast member.
His only known publication is Horologiographia (1593).Horologiographia. The Art of Dialling: teaching an easie and perfect way to make all kinds of Dials vpon any plaine Plat howsouer placed: VVith the drawing of the Twelue Signes, and Houres vnequall in them all. Whereunto is annexed the making and vse of other Dials and Instruments, whereby the houre of the day and night is knowe. Of speciall vse and delight not onely for Students of the Arts Mathematicall, but also for diuers Artificers, Architects, Surueyours of buildings, free-Masons, Saylors, and others, London, 1593 (other editions appeared in 1626 and 1652).
Another theory has it that Lady Godiva's "nakedness" might refer to her riding through the streets stripped of her jewellery, the trademark of her upper class rank. However, these attempts to reconcile known facts with legend are both weak; in the era of the earliest accounts, the word "naked" is only known to mean "without any clothing whatsoever". A modified version of the story was given by printer Richard Grafton, later elected MP for Coventry. According to his Chronicle of England (1569), "Leofricus" had already exempted the people of Coventry from "any maner of Tolle, Except onely of Horses", so that Godiva ("Godina" in text) had agreed to the naked ride just to win relief for this horse tax.
Britain and Morocco during the embassy of John Drummond Hay, 1845-1886 by Khalid Ben Srhir p.15 The exchanges started 40 years of a shifting Anglo-Moroccan alliance related to European conflicts, trade issues, Barbary Coast pirates and the exchange of captives. England Socinians wrote letters for Mohammed bin Hadou to remit to Mulay Ismail, in which they praised God for having "preserved your Emperor and his people in the excellent knowledge of that truth touching your belief in a onely sovereign God, who has no distinct [...] or plurality of persons", and praising "Mahomet" for being "a scourge on those idolizing Christians".Religious toleration: "the variety of rites" from Cyrus to Defoe by John Christian Laursen p.
Fish's pamphlet cries out to the king on behalf of the poor and accuses the Roman Catholic Church and its clergy of increasing their miseries. > Most lamentably compleyneth theyre wofull mysery vnto youre highnes youre > poore daily bedemen the wretched hidous monstres (on whome scarcely for > horror any yie dare loke) the foule vnhappy sort of lepres, and other sore > people, needy, impotent, blinde, lame, and sike that live onely by almesse, > howe that theyre nombre is daily so sore encreased that all the almesse of > all the weldisposed people of this youre realme is not half ynough for to > susteine theim, but that for verey contreint they die for hunger.Fish, > Simon. Supplycacion for the Beggar.
First Folio. Act IV, scene i, line 3-6. John Dryden discusses the unity of time in this passage criticizing Shakespeare's history plays: > ... they are rather so many Chronicles of Kings, or the business many times > of thirty or forty years, crampt into a representation of two hours and a > half, which is not to imitate or paint Nature, but rather to draw her in > miniature, to take her in little; to look upon her through the wrong end of > a Perspective, and receive her Images not onely much less, but infinitely > more imperfect then the life: this instead of making a Play delightful, > renders it ridiculous.Dryden, An Essay of Dramatick Poesie (1668), para. 56.
He sailed from Harwich on 31 May 1578 in the fleet of 15 sailing ships of the Frobisher expedition. In describing the company, chronicler Richard Hakluyt called Wolfall "one Maister Wolfall, a learned man, appointed by her Majestie's Councell to be their Minister and Preacher," who, "being well seated and settled at home in his owne countrey, with a good and large liuing, hauing a good, honest woman to wife, and very towardly children, being of good reputation amongst the best, refused not to take in hand this paineful voyage, for the onely care he had to saue soules and to reforme these infidels, if it were possible, to Christianitie."William Stevens Perry, The History of the American Episcopal Church 1587-1883 (Boston, 1885) vol.1, p.
The castle is recorded as having fallen into disrepair in a 1337 survey of the possessions of the Duchy of Cornwall. It was extensively repaired by order of the Black Prince but declined again following his death in 1376. By the time the antiquary John Leland saw it in the 16th century, it had fallen into ruin and had been extensively robbed for its stonework; as he put it, "the timber rooted up, the conduit pipes taken away, the roofe made sale of, the planchings rotten, the wals fallen down, and the hewed stones of the windowes, dournes, and clavels, pluct out to serve private buildings; onely there remayneth an utter defacement, to complayne upon this unregarded distresse." Henry VIII converted the castle's parkland back into ordinary countryside.
The first part of Evelyn's letter describes the details of the problem with the air pollution in London and its effect on human health. He explains that many philosophers believed that air was the most important for the soul and the Earth for we benefit it and therefore it is necessary for survival by the respiration of clean air through the lungs: > It is not without some considerable Analogy, that sundry of the Philosophers > have named the Aer the Vehicle of the Soul, as well as of the Earth, and > this frail Vessell of ours which contains it; since we all of us finde the > benefit which we derive from it. Not onely for the necessity of common > Respiration and functions of the Organs; but likewise for the use of Spirits > and Primigene Humors, which doe most neerly approach that Divine particle.
Milton connects four Scriptural passages (Genesis 1:27–28, Deuteronomy 24:1, Matthew 5:31–32 and 19:2–9, and I Corinthians 7:10-16) in order to argue that Scripture supports the legalization of divorce. In addition to this argument, the work is targeted at Herbert Palmer, who attacked Milton's The Doctrine and Discipline in a sermon to Parliament, and pamphlets published in support of Palmer's position. In particular, Milton claims:Patterson 2003 p. 288 > The impudence therefore, since he waigh'd so little what a gross revile that > was to give his equall, I send him back again for a phylactery to stitch > upon his arrogance, that censures not onely before conviction so bitterly > without so much as one reason giv'n, but censures the Congregation of his > Governors to their faces, for not being so hasty as himself to > censure.Milton 1959 p.
However William intended to travel to Ireland, and so another Act was necessary to provide for the administration of the kingdom while he was abroad. The Act declared that "whensoever and as often as it shall happen that his said Majestie shall be absent or continue out of this Realme of England It shall and may be lawfull for the Queens Majestie to exercise and administer the Regall Power and Government of the Kingdome of England Dominion of Wales and Towne of Berwicke-upon-Tweede and the Plantations and Territories thereunto belonging in the Names of both their Majestyes for such time onely dureing their joynt Lives as his said Majestie shall be absent or continue out of this Realme of England any thing in the said Act [the Bill of Rights] to the contrary notwithstanding".
Over and above the archeus, he believed that there is the sensitive soul which is the husk or shell of the immortal mind. Before the Fall the archeus obeyed the immortal mind and was directly controlled by it, but at the Fall men also received the sensitive soul and with it lost immortality, for when it perishes the immortal mind can no longer remain in the body. Van Helmont described the archeus as "aura vitalis seminum, vitae directrix" ("The chief Workman [Archeus] consists of the conjoyning of the vitall air, as of the matter, with the seminal likeness, which is the more inward spiritual kernel, containing the fruitfulness of the Seed; but the visible Seed is onely the husk of this."). In addition to the archeus, van Helmont believed in other governing agencies resembling the archeus which were not always clearly distinguished from it.
Musically, the album take inspiration from many sources, but especially prominent is the inspiration from the British ska and new wave, but it is also possible to sense components from funk, which at the time was not often played in Norway. The central position of the Farfisa on the record, also gives the album a unique sound. Lyrically, the album was one of the first innovative and poetic rock 'n roll albums in Norwegian language (at the time you heard onely English lyrics in this genere, also by Norwegian artists), and spun over issues such as party and drunkenness («Du sklei meg så nær innpå livet») by relatively gloomy visions («Hong Kong», «Blank») to soisale and political contemporary reflections («Dødelige drifter», «Oppvekst», «Materialtretthet»). In competition of the all-time 100 best Norwegian album by Morgenbladet in the autumn of 2011 Materialtretthet was number 6.
In a letter written on January 4, 1712 Le Jau described an Etiwan ceremony: "40 of them trimd painted and dress'd in their fineryes Coming from the Woods near a little hut Supported upon Pillars all painted and adorned. There after a paus and a speech 3 young men holding one another under the Arms begun a Dance followed by the rest in a long train, & serpenting abt. sevl. times with pritty motion, Steps and figures, they had rattles for their Musick, and sung after a Pause onely four Notes saying the same again" An elderly Etiwan man who was present at the ceremony explained to Le Jau that the three dancers who were holding each other's arms represented three men from whom all the other dancers were descended. He also explained that the little painted square hut represented a ship and Le Jau noted that the story reminded him of Noah's Ark, which he then shared with the Etiwan man.
I know she dun an awful weaked thing when she kill Miss Belote and I hear that the people at the penetintry wants to kill her but I is praying night and day on my knees to God that he will soften your heart so that She may spend the rest of her days in prison. they say that the whole thing is in yours Hands and I know if you will onely save my child who is little over sixteen years old God will Bless you for ever … If I was able to come to see you I could splain things to you better but I cant do nothing but pray to God and ask him to help you to simpithise with me and my truble : I am your most umble subgeck, : Charlotte Christian. After the Governor declined this request, Christian took her seat in the electric chair, where she was electrocuted in the state prison in Richmond. She was 17 years old.
In William Camden's topographical survey of Great Britain and Ireland, published in 1586, the diamonds are described: > The one of them which on the East-side overlooketh the river beareth the > name of S. Vincents rock, so full of Diamants that a man may fill whole > strikes or bushels of them. These are not so much set by, because they be so > plenteous. For in bright and transparent colour they match the Indian > Diaments, if they passe them not; in hardnesse onely they are inferior to > them, but in that nature herselfe hath framed them with six cornered or > foure cornered smooth sides, I thinke them therefore worthy to be had in > greater admiration. The other rocke also on the West-side is likewise full > of Diamants, which by the wonderfull skill and worke of nature are enclosed > as young ones within the bowels of hollow and reddish flints, for heere is > the earth of a red colour.
The Acts of the Privy Council record that Northumberland paid Ferrers £50, and that the entire entertainment cost about £500. Ferrers is reported by the chronicler Richard Grafton to have outdone his predecessors: > in shew of sundry sightes and devises of rare invention, and in act of > divers enterludes and matters of pastime, played by persons, as not onely > satisfied the common sorte, but also were very well liked and allowed by the > counsayle and other of skill in the like pastimes. Ferrers was reappointed as Lord of Misrule to devise entertainments during the 1552-1553 Christmas season, and as in the previous year there were jousting, a mock midsummer show, a visit to the city of London, and various masques, and on Twelfth Night a triumph of Cupid, Venus, and Mars, devised by Sir George Howard, Master of the Henchmen, and produced by Ferrers. Ferrers was rewarded by a grant of an estate at Flamstead.
In 1607, he compiled a law dictionary, The Interpreter, in which he exalted the king's prerogative; he was prosecuted before the House of Commons by Sir Edward Coke, who had a hostile history with Cowell. He was saved from imprisonment only by the interposition of James I. His book was burnt by order of the House of Commons. The suppression order read in part: :When Men goe out of their Element, and meddle with Things above their Capacitie, themselves shall not onely goe astray and stumble in Darknesse, but will mislead also divers others with themselves into many Mistakings and Errours.. the Proofe whereof wee have lately had by a Booke written by Docteur Cowell.. by medling in Matters above his reach, he hath fallen in many Things to mistake and deceive himselfe.. in some Poynts very derogatory to the supreme Power of this Crowne; In other Cases mistaking the true State of the Parliament of this Kingdome... Many copies survived the burning and have been reprinted. A copy of the 1607 printing can be found at the Lilly Library in Bloomington, Indiana.
Gower has also been given his share of appreciation. A 15th-century treatise printed by Caxton describes "his bookes, called Confessionalle" as :Ful of sentence / set ful fructuosly :That hym to rede / shal gyue you corage :He is so ful of fruyt, sentence and langage ::(Book of Curtesye, 327-329: Furnivall 1868) In some cases he is praised and damned at once; Jonson (1640) considers him dangerously attractive, and liable to damage young writers who might be tempted to imitate his style: > ...beware of letting them taste Gower, or Chaucer at first, lest falling too > much in love with Antiquity, and not apprehending the weight, they grow > rough and barren in language onely Peck (2000) interprets this as unambiguous praise. And even the structure of his work has been declared perfect by some: Coffman (1945:58) argues that > [it] has a large integrity and unity based on a defense of [Gower's] ethical > scheme for the universe... Gower tells in the Prologue exactly what he is > going to do. He does it well.
Icon of Saint Mary Magdalene depicted as one of the Myrrhbearers with the words "Christ is Risen" in Greek at the top, depicting her discovery of the empty tomb The 1549 Book of Common Prayer had on July 22 a feast of Saint Mary Magdalene, with the same Scripture readings as in the Tridentine Mass and with a newly composed collect: "Merciful father geue us grace, that we neuer presume to synne through the example of anye creature, but if it shall chaunce vs at any tyme to offende thy dyuine maiestie: that then we maye truly repent, and lament the same, after the example of Mary Magdalene, and by lyuelye faythe obtayne remission of all oure sinnes: throughe the onely merites of thy sonne oure sauiour Christ." The 1552 edition omitted the feast of Saint Mary Magdalene, which was restored to the Book of Common Prayer only after some 400 years. Modern Protestants honor her as a disciple and friend of Jesus.H.D. Egan, An Anthology of Christian mysticism, Pueblo Publishing Co. (1992), pp.407ff.
The so-called Navigation Act 1696 (7 & 8 Will. 3 c. 22), long- titled An Act for preventing Frauds and regulating Abuses in the Plantation Trade, became effective over in the next few years, due to its far reaching provisions; the act is short-titled the Plantation Trade Act 1695. It contains new restrictions on colonial trade, and several different administrative provisions to strengthen enforcement and consolidate the earlier acts..Reeves 1792, p.81-91 In tightening the wording of the 1660 act, and after noting the daily "great abuses [being] committed ... by the artifice and cunning of ill disposed persons", this act now required that no goods or merchandise could be imported, exported, or carried between English possessions in Africa, Asia and America, or shipped to England, Wales, or Berwick upon Tweed, except in "what is or shall bee of the Built of England or of the Built of Ireland or the said Colonies or Plantations and wholly owned by the People thereof ... and navigated with the Masters and Three Fourths of the Mariners of the said Places onely".

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