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35 Sentences With "take the liberty"

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

It's like people just take the liberty to do whatever they want.
Retailers take the liberty to brand all sorts of promotions during the year as Black Friday sales.
Regional governments should not take the liberty of collecting "historically overdue taxes" without central permission, the cabinet said.
Given her lead, some political observers argue Clinton could take the liberty of not agreeing to further debates with Sanders.
Vindicated by growth, these businesses take the liberty to redesign more of our online lives than any of us have asked for.
And if we take the liberty message to voters — and I think young voters in particular — I think we will see the numbers flip.
From now until August, there will be more flexibility as you take the liberty to address your mental health, in whatever ways you choose.
So I will take the liberty of asserting that women should in no case give up the power of reproduction in the name of production.
Cruz went out of his way to refuse to endorse the Republican nominee Donald J. Trump in what I'm gonna take the liberty of calling, 'vote-your-conscience-gate'.
" If I may take the liberty to augment a Twitter quote of comedian Tim Heidecker, "If you didn't care for [Cameraperson] then genetically you are not a human being.
As the brave soul who ventured to try this first, I will take the liberty to speak for the entire group when I say Natural Light's hard seltzer is appallingly bad.
Anyway, it's ridiculous that the speeches-on-Wall-Street thing is becoming an issue for you in the primary so let me take the liberty of offering you some free campaign advice.
"As former state attorneys general, we take the liberty of reminding Americans as we remind ourselves — that events can call out the worst in us — and the best," the attorneys general wrote in a letter obtained by Buzzfeed.
I'm going to go ahead and take the liberty of speaking for all of the folks on the Committee and say that I appreciate your hauling up here to be with us today during what's still very much an [unintelligible] time.
Three, I'll take the liberty of ascribing to Macron this unstated thought: His euro area reform program would also make it impossible for Germany to boss people around; the administrative setup he proposes would unfailingly and routinely enforce the rules of the monetary and fiscal union.
Rays > of light emanate from her head, around which is a ring of twelve stars. An > imperial crown adorns her head, without, however, hiding the stars. Under > her feet is the moon. Although it is a solid globe, I take the liberty of > making it transparent so that the landscape shows through.
In an article on Sant 'Ilario in the weekly paper Die Zukunft, Hausdorff acknowledged in expressis verbis his debt to Nietzsche. Hausdorff was not trying to copy or even exceed Nietzsche. "Of Nietzsche imitation no trace", says a contemporary review. He follows Nietzsche in an attempt to liberate individual thinking, to take the liberty of questioning outdated standards.
I take the liberty of observing there are a million of them. "That does not matter", he answers firmly; "we must imitate the Askari and exterminate them!" I hope he will calm down'.The Ciano Diaries 1939–1943: The Complete, Unabridged Diaries of Count Galeazzo Ciano, Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs, 1936–1943 (2000) Vidussoni was abruptly replaced by the ruthless squadrista Carlo Scorza in early 1943.
The report suggested that "The class of ship, which I take the liberty of observing as most suitable for this service, would be a seventy-four, of about the same dimensions as Bellerophon in the river Medway, being of easy draft of water and lofty between decks."John Capper. Report to Lord Sidmouth (16 October 1815). as cited in Cordingly. Billy Ruffian. p. 287.
Entomologists David Grimaldi and Michael S. Engel consider him "the most influential paleoentomologist of his generation" (Grimaldi and Engel 2005 p. 143). He has been memorialized frequently with patronyms, including the hanging fly Bittacus carpenteri Cheng, 1957,F. Y. Cheng. 1957. Revision of the Chinese Mecoptera. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology 116(1): 1-118; 113: "I take the liberty to name the species in honor of Professor F. M. Carpenter, who has allowed me to describe the species." the fossil parasitic wasp Carpenteriana tumida Yoshimoto, 1975,Carl M. Yoshimoto. 1975.
Using the dramatic device of a play within a play, the director has chosen 11 female actors to enact this juxtaposition. It shows how a set of Haryanvi females take the liberty of the absence of males in their house to perform the banned play Draupadi, but end up finding a reflection of Draupadi's life in theirs. Veteran film and TV actor Rakesh Bedi has also been seen in this women-oriented production. Atul's another popular play Wo Lahore shows the internal conflicts in an ordinary Indian family against the backdrop of the freedom struggle and social beliefs of the Partition.
Minor crimes were often delegated to seigneurial courts where fines of up to 500 livres could be handed down. The seigneurial courts, would often then take the liberty of modifying their legislation to reflect trends in crime and would adopt measures for more effective punishments. More serious crimes automatically necessitated "recollement," a procedure which allowed the accused to challenge witnesses and for the latter to confirm their testimonies. The "extraordinary procedure" also provided for the use of torture as one way of extracting confessions in serious cases; torture was also used to induce the accused to name accomplices.
92–97 in Crititcal Essays on Joel Chandler Harris Boston: G.K. Hall. . In 1904 Harris wrote four important articles for The Saturday Evening Post discussing the problem of race relations in the South; these highlighted his progressive yet paternalistic views. Of these, Booker T. Washington wrote to him: > It has been a long time since I have read anything from the pen of any man > which has given me such encouragement as your article has. ... In a speech > on Lincoln's Birthday which I am to deliver in New York, I am going to take > the liberty to quote liberally from what you have said.
They are, or have all been, linked to Royal Copenhagen where it all started or maybe, should I say, some of it got started. Today, I want to express a strong wish that in the future much more consideration be given to the environment in all areas than has previously been the case. And, of course, also in the field of design in order to safeguard our beautiful but fragile earth—something that my generation, unfortunately, has not been very dedicated to. And now, as we are assembled in this house [The House of Industry], I will take the liberty of addressing my opinion to the Industries.
Although it is not known how Haydn and Marianne met, their friendship originated in correspondence: having arranged the Andante movement of one of Haydn's symphonies for piano, she sent a copy of her work to the composer, asking him to critique it. Here is the text of her letter, dated 10 June 1789:Translation from Robbins Landon (1959, 85). According to Robbins Landon (1959, xxi), Marianne had trouble with German spelling; her orthography was "several grades more appalling than Haydn's". : [three crosses] : Most respected Herr v[on] Hayden, : With your kind permission, I take the liberty of sending you a pianoforte arrangement of the beautiful Andante from your so admirable composition.
In the end Mussolini would be forced to ask him for > help, he says, then he would perhaps appoint him Governor of Northern Italy, > and make the Apennines the German frontier! Hitler is also prepared to > accord Russia-provided she makes peace-frontiers which a decent German > government would not have to grant even today; he is dreaming of another > victory nearer home. In view of this national disaster which is now becoming > obvious and into which we have been led by an insane and godless leadership, > which disregards human rights, I take the liberty of making a last appeal to > you, Field-Marshal. You may be sure that it will be the last.
The first movement opens with the four-note motif discussed above, one of the most famous motifs in Western music. There is considerable debate among conductors as to the manner of playing the four opening bars. Some conductors take it in strict allegro tempo; others take the liberty of a weighty treatment, playing the motif in a much slower and more stately tempo; yet others take the motif molto ritardando (a pronounced slowing through each four-note phrase), arguing that the fermata over the fourth note justifies this. Some critics and musicians consider it crucial to convey the spirit of [pause]and-two-and one, as written, and consider the more common one-two- three-four to be misleading.
General Edward Braddock The Congress of Alexandria is sometimes noted as the beginning of intercolony dialogue and of the political tension between the colonies and Britain over issues of taxation. Ten years before the Stamp Act of 1765, Braddock wrote from Carlyle House to Thomas Robinson, a British official that "I cannot but take the liberty to represent to you the necessity of laying a tax upon all his Majesty's dominions in America, agreeably to the result of Council, for reimbursing the great sums that must be advanced for the service and interest of the colonies in this important crisis."Richard Henry Spencer. The Carlyle House and its Associations--Braddock's Headquarters--Here the Colonial Governors met in Council, April, 1755.
Roe Head, Mirfield, Miss Wooler's school Disputed photograph taken about 1855; sources are in disagreement over whether this image is of Charlotte Brontë or of her friend, Ellen Nussey. Ellen Nussey around 1855, at the time of the death of Charlotte. A letter from Charlotte Brontë to her friend, Ellen NusseyIn this letter dated 21 April 1844, the day of her 28th birthday, she thanks her friend Nell for the gift, returns the gesture by sending her some lace: "I hope" she adds "they will not peck it out of the envelope at the Bradford Post-office, where they generally take the liberty of opening letters when they feel soft as if they contained articles". In 1831, 14-year-old Charlotte was enrolled at the school of Miss Wooler in Roe Head, Mirfield.
The Almanack's Review of Artists who Administer to Wants and Conveniences of the Table, pages 272–273, provides detailed documentation of condiments available in Regency-era London "Italian warehouses": :Let us now pass fom the subject of culinary apparatus to that of condiments.... As soups generally take the lead at table, we take the liberty of recommending vermicelli; that from Genoa is esteemed the best. The Anderina and Cagliari pastes (pastas) are excellent ingredients for thickening soups, and for converting veal-broth into delicious white soup. The flavour will be much improved by the addition of lean ham fried. For the convenience of those whom travel or business compels to dine hastily, there are tablets of portable soup to be had of various flavours, which dissolve quickly in hot water, and form an extemporaneous dish of the most nutritious kind.
The land distribution views of both Johnson and Rutledge coincided with those of philanthropist James Edward Oglethorpe (1696-1785) and his group of 114 colonists who anchored in Charleston in January 1733, having sailed from Gravesend England aboard the ship Anne with a mandate to found a colony for the "worthy poor" in what is now the State of Georgia. Certainly, James Oglethorpe thought highly of Andrew Rutledge. In 1739, when the post of Chief Justice became available, Oglethorpe wrote to the authorities in England, recommending Rutledge for the position. To the Duke of Newcastle, Oglethorpe wrote: > I take the liberty of laying before you that Andrew Rutledge, who was bred > to the study of law in England, is a very worthy and deserving man; that he > hath acquired a very great character in Carolina; and that he is > distinguished by his zeal to His Majesty's person and government.
For video games, these expanded versions, also referred as "complete editions", will have additions to the gameplay or additional game modes and features outside the main portion of the game. As is the case with certain high-profile Japanese-produced games, the game designers may take the liberty to revise their product for the overseas market with additional features during the localization process. These features are later added back to the native market in a re-release of a game in what is often referred as the international version of the game. This was the case with the overseas versions of Final Fantasy VII, Metal Gear Solid and Rogue Galaxy, which contained additional features (such as new difficulty settings for Metal Gear Solid), resulting in re-released versions of those respective games in Japan (Final Fantasy VII International, Metal Gear Solid: Integral and Rogue Galaxy: Director's Cut).
As you furnished the Certificate as to the cause of his death, I > take the liberty of asking you whether what I have heard is true, and > whether you yourself ascertained that he was a woman and apparently had been > a mother? Perhaps you may decline answering these questions; but I ask them > not for publication but for my own information. Your faithful servant George > Graham McKinnon's response was as follows: > Sir, I had been intimately acquainted with the doctor for good many years, > both in London and the West Indies and I never had any suspicion that Dr > Barry was a woman. I attended him during his last illness, (previously for > bronchitis, and the affection for diarrhoea). On one occasion after Dr > Barry’s death at the office of Sir Charles McGregor, there was the woman who > performed the last offices for Dr Barry was waiting to speak to me.
All this had prompted the "raising of another Regiment to consist of one thousand men" to defend Dantzig and the ordering of "the Wet Trenches round the City to be open'd and made free of Ice, which is already done, so the Inhabitants are not now afraid of any sudden surprise." By May the Russians were camped about 19 miles (30 km) to the south of Danzig and, having been denied access to enter the city, were "in want of many things, necessary for an Army marching out of their own Dominions". The first part of 1759 saw several defeats of the Prussians, and France was planning to invade Britain. In September 1759 Corry was in Hamburg reporting the victory of the Anglo-German army under Prince Ferdinand, the Prussian field marshal, over 60,000 French troops, at the Battle of Minden, "I take the liberty to acquaint your Lordship that the Battle agained by Prince Ferdinand the beginning of last Month, has been of vast detriment to the French Army, I having met on my way hither from Amsterdam, at least one thousand Deserters".
Sir, I heartily join with > Mr. Morris in his Request; and am with great Respect, Your very hble Servt. > John DickinsonLetters of Delegates to Congress: Volume 2 September 1775 - > December 1775 --Robert Morris and John Dickinson to Oswell Eve, located in > the Library of Congress On January 11, 1776, Eve signed a contract with Committee of Secrecy of the Continental Congress to supply gunpowder at $8 per hundredweight, with Congress supplying the niter. Because Eve had complied with the request of Congress and allowed Revere to pass through his powder manufactory, thus allowing him to obtain sufficient information that enabled him to set up a powder mill at Canton, Eve petitioned Congress for a reward: > In Committee of Safety, Philadelphia, May 3, 1776. SIR: This Committee > having considered the petition of Mr. Oswell Eve, are of opinion it should > be laid before the honourable Congress; and they take the liberty of sending > it to you for that purpose; at the same time, they certify that Mr. Eve has > at different times, upon the recommendation of this Board, shown his works > and improvements to such gentlemen as were appointed from this and the > neighbouring Colonies to view the same.

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