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7 Sentences With "pays the penalty"

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

Aishwarya "Aishu", is the only daughter of Lokayukta DCP Kshetrapal. She travels to Hubli to attend the marriage of her friend, Chitra's sister, where she happens to meet Shivanna and falls in love with him. Shivanna works as a servant in Chitra's family for two years and his sincerity and loyalty has made the orphaned Shivanna a member of their family. Kshetrapal who reaches Mandya threatens to take action against a wealthy landlord, Shankarappa, unless he pays the penalty for violating the laws and fooling the government causing the latter to plot against him.
Newer types of notice exist for disorder, environmental crime, truancy and noise. A fixed penalty notice is not a fine or criminal conviction because of the distinction that the recipient can opt for the matter to be dealt with in court instead of paying. However, if the recipient neither pays the penalty nor opts for a court hearing in the time specified, it may then be enforced by the normal methods used to enforce unpaid fines, including imprisonment in some circumstances. Civil penalties such as a Penalty Charge Notice (PCN) are a similar legal construct used for issuing on-the-spot fines.
The doctrine of the limited scope (or extent) of the atonement is intimately tied up with the doctrine of the nature of the atonement. It also has much to do with the general Calvinist view of predestination. Calvinists advocate the satisfaction theory of the atonement, which developed in the writings of Anselm of Canterbury and Thomas Aquinas. In brief, the Calvinistic refinement of this theory, known as penal substitution, states that the atonement of Christ pays the penalty incurred by the sins of men--that is, Christ receives the wrath of God for sins and thereby receives in himself the penalty of the sins of men.
Phaedrus prefaces his Latin poem with the warning that the one 'who takes delight in treacherous flattery usually pays the penalty by repentance and disgrace'. One of the few who gives it a different interpretation is Odo of Cheriton, whose lesson is that virtue is forgotten in the pursuit of ambition.The Fables of Odo of Cherington, John C. Jacobs, Syracuse University Press 1985, pp.149-50; there is a limited preview in Google Books Babrius has the fox end with a joke at the crow's credulity in his Greek version of the story: 'You were not dumb, it seems, you have indeed a voice; you have everything, Sir Crow, except brains.
In terms of its controls and handling, Flight International observed that the P.136's boat hull makes little imposition on its flight characteristics: "As a landplane, it behaves as well as any comparable light twin, except that it pays the penalty of slightly lower cruising speed incurred by its marine capabilities"; the publication also praised its "excellent manoeuvrability" and ability to perform a "very steep approach".Lambert 1958, p. 488. All of the flight control surfaces had a fabric covering, these typically being mass-balanced. As common amongst flying boats, both the control wheel and pedal travel are large, aiding in take-off runs to avoid water-based obstructions such as buoys.
Burrows and Wallace, p.447 Ironically, it was the landowners like Moore, who fought the grid most insistently, who made the most money from exploiting it. Edith Wharton bemoaned "...rectangular New York ... this cramped horizontal gridiron of a town without towers, porticoes, fountains or perspectives, hide-bound in its deadly uniformity of mean ugliness," while her friend Henry James wrote that: > New York pays the penalty of her primal topographic curse, her old > inconceivably bourgeois scheme of composition and distribution, the > uncollected labor of minds with no imagination of the future and blind > before the opportunity given them by their two magnificent water-fronts. > This original sin of the longitudinal avenues perpetually, yet meanly > intersected, and of the organized sacrifice of the indicated alternative, > the great perspectives from East to West, might still have earned > forgiveness by some occasional departure from its pettifogging consistency.
For instance "Paid the Penalty: Slumach, the Murderer of Louis Bee, Pays the Penalty of his Crime," Daily Columbian, 16 January 1891. The Vancouver Daily World commented: “There was much sympathy for Slumach among those who witnessed his execution. It was thought that the Government might, with just clemency, have extended a reprieve to him, for he certainly would not have lived very long in confinement, and the fact that he never ran across law and order in any shape until the latter years of his long life made many hope that he would be allowed to finish his career in the confinement of the penitentiary.”"Hanged at Royal City," Vancouver Daily World, 16 January 1891 There may have been feelings of sympathy for the old man at the hanging, but there is only one request for clemency on file and in the time preceding his execution the newspapers and their readers seemed indifferent about Slumach's fate.

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