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26 Sentences With "passed judgement"

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

The Berlin court passed judgement late last month but the verdict was only made public this week.
All he saw was someone trying—and failing—to fit in, and that he passed judgement while wearing $80 day-glo parachute pants added insult to injury.
The trade in slaves was made punishable by law and a Court of Admiralty was established to try offenders on 10 July 1684 thereby replacing the Court of Judicature that had been established by Streynsham Master in which the Agent passed judgement over interlopers and slave traders. On 8 August 1684, Madras was elevated to a Presidency and Elihu Yale made its First President.
When the king found out, he ordered Harclay's arrest. Edmund was one of the judges who passed judgement on Harclay, who was hanged, drawn and quartered for treason. With Harclay gone, Edmund was given responsibilities for the defence of the northern border, but the situation remained untenable. On 30 May 1323, Edmund was on the council that agreed to a thirteen-year truce with Scotland.
Tchaikovsky had only submitted his setting to the Moscow Office of Sacred Censorship. Legal proceedings were initiated against Jurgenson, and 143 of his plates of the Liturgy were confiscated. The Chief Administration for Printed Matter authorised publication, but Bakhmetiev continued his campaign against Jurgenson, who counter-sued Bakhmetiev. Jurgenson won his case in June 1879, and the Interior Minister passed judgement in December 1879 in favour of Jurgenson.
Analysis: Najaf battle raises questions - Yahoo! News, January 30, 2007 Iraqi officials, including Najaf deputy governor Abdel Hussein Attan, had claimed that the group had links with al-Qaeda, but given that Sunni jihadists are fiercely anti-Shia, this seemed unlikely.Bizarre tale of Shia messianic cult plot, BBC, 30 January 2007 After the battle, Iraqi police rounded up hundreds of sect members and put them on trial. On September 2, 2007, the criminal court passed judgement on 458 accused.
In 1957, her outspoken criticism of the harsh regime of Major-General Iskander Mirza, and the forced resignation of Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy, culminated in a six-month government ban on the Mirror, issued on 9 November. This ban, she was privately informed, would be withdrawn if she publicly apologised. She refused to do this and, on the advice of the well- known lawyer A.K. Brohi, appealed to the Supreme Court of Pakistan. After Brohi's intervention on her behalf, the Supreme Court passed judgement in her favour.
Three years of her letters were preserved by her cousin. She continued to write until she married in 1711 She passed judgement of on the Liberal (Whigs) battles with so-called churchmen including Nathaniel, Lord Crewe, bishop of Durham the Tory administration in Newcastle. Her independent view of the trial of the allegedly seditious cleric Henry Sacheverell is considered historically valuable. The preservation of the letters is thought to be due to Liddell's warnings of legal proceedings which caused her cousin to keep them safe.
From Castile, Boso moved into Catalonia, where he held his second council at Girona on 22–23 April 1117. Although the acts of this council do not survive, Boso's letter to Bishop Odo of Urgell announcing the council does. At the council he also passed judgement in a dispute between Olegarius and the abbot of Sant Cugat del Vallès, the record of which also survives. It is probable that it was while he was at this council that Boso signed the acts of the diocesan council of Girona held at Vilabertrán in November 1100.
When Mephisto asks why they should concern themselves with a minor annoyance, Satannish reveals he is quite impressed by Illyana.X-Infernus #1 Along with the other Lords of Hell, he passed judgement on Meggan; he was also amused to hear of the Duke of Hell, Doctor Plokta, being defeated.Captain Britain and MI:13 Annual During the Fear Itself storyline, Satannish appeared at the Devil's Advocacy where they talked about the Serpent's threat on Earth.Journey Into Mystery #627 In the pages of Avengers Undercover, Satannish appears as a member of the Shadow Council's Masters of Evil.
Allen was sympathetic to the feminist cause and saw his novel as a way to promote women's rights. It certainly created an immediate popular sensation - Flora Thompson for instance describing how, in small-town Hampshire, "copies were bought and handed round until practically everyone of mature age in the village had read and passed judgement on it".Quoted in Richard Mabey, Dreams of the Good Life (Penguin 2015) p. 44 However, the novel was also controversial right from the start, with conservative readers as well as feminists criticizing Allen for the heroine he had invented.
In the meantime Morgan, resenting a slur upon his brother's wife by Alexander Chapman (McKim), fell him with a blow. A mulatto who hated Chapman was lurking nearby and choked the prostrate man to death. Morgan, thinking he was a murderer, fled in panic and hid in his sister-in-law's room, where he was found by his brother Pearson. Pearson at once passed judgement and did not want to hear explanations, but later after learning the truth upon hearing the confession of the mulatto, he sought forgiveness and promised to banish jealousy from his life.
The defeat of Simon de Montfort ended the provision of Magna Carta for rule by Parliament. After the Lord Edward (later Edward I) escaped from the town's gaol, where he had been taken by baronial rebels, and where he almost died in 1268, he compelled his enemies to sign a truce at Westminster by 1270. The office of Bailiff was eventually superseded by a Mayor, but the legalistic character of the office at least offered an appellate forum. As an officer of the king's court, the Bailiff also passed judgement on cases in camera, commissioned investigations, and enforced collection.
After taking office in August 2002, President Álvaro Uribe put forward several constitutional reforms. The Congress approved the proposals on 20 December 2002, but also suggested several changes, including reducing the size of the Chamber of Representatives and the Senate by a fifth rather than creating a unicameral Congress, and forcing parties that received less than 2% of the vote in elections to disband. Uribe subsequently signed the changes into law, and they were submitted to the Constitutional Court on 22 January 2003. On 9 July the Court passed judgement that the referendum was valid, but that four questions were not acceptable.
The main concerns were with the suitability of the people who passed judgement on whether a book would be censored or not and with the absence of clear, objective criteria or guidelines for determining whether something should be censored or not. This public furor was in part triggered due to the somewhat arbitrary censorship of the aforementioned Forever Amber. In response to this concern, a committee led by Ian Gordon was established in 1953 to review and provide advice on whether a book should be censored. However, this committee had very little power, and it was not mandatory to consult the committee or to listen to its recommendations.
While this was taking place, Roger Goulet was authorized to negotiate with Riel and the Métis on behave of the Canadian Government. On March 3, 1870, he served on the tribunal that passed judgement on Thomas Scott, an Orangeman from Upper Canada who was accused of treason, as he was a supporter of the Canadian government's claiming of Métis land. Scott also protested violently against the Métis and was accused of voicing racial and anit-Catholic opinions. Goulet voted with the majority to impose a death sentence, and on March 4, 1870, Elzéar escorted Scott to the firing squad along with other members of the court, where Scott was then executed.
The trail which was started in 1996 is still in process and the fate of many innocent people has been hanging without a certainty. Laloo Prasad Yadav is the only person on whom the Lok Sabha debated for a complete session as the official agenda. As of now, Lalu Prasad Yadav has been awarded a three-and-a- half-year jail term and a five-lakh fine by the CBI court on 6 January 2018. On 24 January 2018 the court passed judgement for the third case and has awarded a five-year jail term and imposed a fine of ₹10,00,000/- Rupees One Million on Lalu Prasad Yadav.
In 1994, he was suspended after an inquiry committee headed by a High Court judge found him guilty of various charges including overstepping of authority and specifically of making "willful mistatements". In 1995, the Bhartiya Janta Party and Shiv- Sena combined to take up Khairnar's cause in the run up to elections and managed to wipe out the Congress. While the suspension was being contested in court, Khairnar was variously harassed; he was even asked to vacate his house of 15 years to make way for a swimming pool superintendent. Eventually, the High Court passed judgement ordering the reinstation of Khairnar, but the new government refused to comply.
Despite the verdict of the meeting, Lancashire's committee remained of the opinion that Mold bowled legally; the Lancashire president A. N. Hornby and several of Mold's teammates also publicly backed the bowler. Opinions among other players and in the press varied as to the fairness of Mold's bowling, but sympathy was expressed for the damage to Mold's career and reputation, while Pelham Warner suggested that it was unfair to ban Mold completely. Some critics believed that the captains should not have passed judgement at all. The MCC, responsible for the laws of cricket and the organisation of the English game, were asked to adjudicate by several county committees.
On 18 October 2017, Akombe resigned from her position as a commissioner of the IEBC during a time when the country was in a crisis following the Supreme Court nullification of the 2017 Kenyan Election. On 1 September 2017, the Supreme Court of Kenya passed judgement that declared the 8 August 2017 Presidential Elections results null and void. The court ruled that the IEBC had failed to meet the requirements set within the constitution for a free and fair elections and ordered a repeat of the elections within 60 days. As a consequence, IEBC set to conduct fresh elections and announced a new election date as 17 October 2017, and later pushed it to 26 October 2017.
The CBF legal consultants agreed with this view, and the presidency of CBF then finally agreed to recognize both Flamengo and Sport as 1987 champions. Accordingly, on February 21, 2011, CBF issued a declaration recognizing Flamengo as 1987 national champions, along with Sport Recife. Sport Recife, however, took the matter to court once more: it argued before the Federal Court that had passed judgement in the 1980s that its ruling was now being breached by CBF. Sport Recife managed to persuade the federal judge that the earlier judicial ruling declaring it as the 1987 champion prevented CBF from diminishing its title in any way, and that accordingly CBF could not recognize Flamengo or any other team as champions, or even joint champions.
Charlie Livermore, "Transorma Sorting Marks""The Facer-Canceller Revolution", Machine Cancel Forum 222, October 2007 Maurice Moise Levy had recently left the Defence Research Board to set up a Canadian subsidiary of ITT Corporation known as FEMCO, short for "Federal Electric Manufacturing Co." Turnbull met with Levy in April 1952 and asked him if a sorting machine was possible, Levy immediately answered "yes." Levy followed this up with a proposal for a $100,000 contract for detailed engineering development. After the NRC examined the proposal and passed judgement that it seemed possible, Turnbull pressed for development of the system. Under further pressure from the opposition and problems staffing the Toronto office, Postmaster General Alcide Côté announced the project in July 1952.
In the midst of the Hundred Years' War between French and English kings, Christine published the dream allegory Le Chemin de long estude in 1403. In the first person narrative she and Cumaean Sibyl travel together and witness a debate on the state of the world between the four allegories – Wealth, Nobility, Chivalry and Wisdom. Christine suggests that justice could be brought to earth by a single monarch who had the necessary qualities. In 1404 Christine chronicled the life of Charles V, portraying him as the ideal king and political leader, in Le Livre des fais et bonnes meurs du sage roy Charles V. The chronicle had been commissioned by Philip the Bold and in the chronicle Christine passed judgement on the state of the royal court.
In Prechristian Medieval Ireland prior to the earliest written manuscript. Law was practised by hereditary judges known as bards or fili, who passed on information orally down the generations, they held the positions of Ollam to a provincial High king or rí.The bards, library Ireland In pre-Norman times, it was the King who passed judgement, when necessary, following recitation of applicable law and advice from the Brehon. While originating in oral legal history, it is a common belief that Brehon law enacted the first piece of copyright legislation in relation to written text in world legal history. It involved a bitter dispute around 561 AD between Saint Colmcille and Saint Finian over the authorship of a manuscript called "St Jerome’s Psalter".
Retrieved 13 May 2012 However, Courtney was acquitted of the murder in 2006 after the judge in his Diplock court trial ruled that there were flaws in the evidence provided by McCullough's family and an anonymous "witness A".Loyalist cleared on murder charge Following his release, the Court of Appeal passed judgement that his acquittal had been unsound and ordered a retrial. At the retrial Courtney was given an eight-year prison sentence after confessing to the manslaughter of McCullough.Top loyalist given eight years from bbc.co.uk His version of events, which was accepted by the court, was that Courtney believed he was to be involved only in a knee-capping of McCullough but that another person present had actually done the killing.
Her wide-ranging publications in this journal are those of a daring feminist aesthete: she wrote sexually subversive poems about haunted lovers, an erudite essay on Icelandic poetry, and a short story exploring the corrosive effects of class divisions on human relations. In the fall of 1872, as her association with Dark Blue was ending, she began reviewing contemporary poetry and fiction for the Athenaeum, where over the next 15 years she passed judgement on a wide range of contemporary writers, ranging from William Morris to Margaret Oliphant. At the end of 1871 she published Selections from the Poems of Percy Bysshe Shelley for the Tauchnitz Collection of British Authors, containing an introductory "Memoir" of Shelley's life. In the following year, she brought out her translation of David Strauss's The Old Faith and the New: A Confession, which established her reputation as a daring freethinker, following in the footsteps of George Eliot, who had translated The Life of Jesus in 1853.

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