Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

16 Sentences With "trespasses on"

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

Doctors&apos groups and abortion rights supporters say a ban on counseling women trespasses on the doctor-patient relationship.
It isn't only manners that are at stake when one person trespasses on another's privacy and distance, it's morality.
Who owns virtual space, and what recourse does a museum have if an outside party "trespasses" on its virtual space?
Scientist Bruce Banner was conducting experiments on radioactivity when a teenager trespasses on government property where the experiments are being held.
So, when a Saudi journalist and critic goes missing in Istanbul -- and both states blame the other -- the story trespasses on one of the great fault lines of regional power politics.
As part of his irrational reaction to the end of his marriage, Thomas Chippering returns to his (fictitious) home town, Owago, Minnesota. Emotionally spent, he trespasses on the backyard of the house where he grew up. The current resident, Mrs. Robert (Donna) Kooshof, finds him but is surprisingly attracted to him.
Jackson says that two pounds were stolen from a blazer in the Pavilion. Another student, Barrett, trespasses on the land of Sir Alfred Venner to collect bird eggs. He discovers the stolen trophies in a poacher's hideout in a hollow tree. A groundskeeper chases Barrett away and comes across Plunkett, who also trespassed.
Slade grows frustrated at Copper for constantly wandering off to play, and places him on a leash. While playing with Copper outside his doghouse, Tod awakens Chief. Slade and Chief chase Tod until they are stopped by Tweed. After an argument, Slade threatens to kill Tod if he trespasses on his farm again.
The church was designed by James Piers St Aubyn, and was funded by the Reverend Arthur Dalgarno Robinson. It was consecrated in 1867. In 1988, the church was used as a location in episode 15 of series 4 of The Bill, "Trespasses". On 19 May 1994, the church was designated a grade II listed building.
A committee investigated, concluding that: "Eakins has used his position as an artist and his authority as a teacher to commit certain trespasses on common decency and good morals." His honorary membership in the club was revoked. The charges of sexual misconduct and incest were unproven,Henry Adams, Eakins Revealed (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005), p. 60. but Eakins's personal reputation was ruined, something from which he never totally recovered.
She even tangled with Grumpy on occasion whenever he trespasses on her territory. She also had her own egg that hatched into her son Junior. There were also a number of species that did not appear closely related to known Earth life, mostly in the third season. These included a large venus-flytrap-like plant capable of consuming prey the size of a large rodent using a paralytic poison, a two-headed Elasmosaurus- like creature (LuLu), and a fire-breathing Dimetrodon-like creature (Torchy).
In an attempt to push Graham into becoming a serial killer, Lecter sends Randall Tier (Mark O'Brien), a psychotic former patient, to kill Graham. However, Graham kills and mutilates Tier instead – just as Lecter had hoped he would. Later, Graham attacks Freddie Lounds after she trespasses on Will's property and discovers Tier's preserved remains. He and Lecter share a meal of what appears to be her flesh: however, it is subsequently revealed that Lounds is alive and is working with Graham and Crawford to draw Lecter out and capture him – the human flesh they consumed belonged in fact to Tier rather than Lounds.
Husting was the first United States senator from Wisconsin to be elected by a direct vote of the people, defeating ex- Governor Francis E. McGovern at the November, 1914, election by 967 votes. He succeeded Isaac Stephenson as United States senator on March 4, 1915, and served in the Senate from 1915 until his death.The Wisconsin blue book, 1917 Madison: Democrat Printing Co., State Printer, 1917; p. 495 He was chairman of the Committee on Fisheries during 1917 and chairman of a special committee investigating trespasses on Indian lands during his entire time in the Senate.
Robbie is a 13-minute-long film made by British Transport Films in 1979 and revised in 1986. Although it is not strictly a Public Information Film, it is often considered to be so by fans of the genre. The film, which was shown in schools all over Great Britain, is based around a young boy suffering a disfiguring and/or fatal accident when he trespasses on a railway line, with three different versions being made to demonstrate the dangers of both electrified and non-electrified lines. When it was first released, all three versions were narrated and introduced by Peter Purves, later replaced by Keith Chegwin when the films were revised.
Shuttlesworth and C. T. Vivian led a group of around 50 supporters to Downtown's Monson Motor Lodge at about 12:40 PM. King observed the operation from a waterfront park over the road; Again, Brock met the integrated group at the doors and again announced his was a segregated business. By now, suggests Colburn, after almost daily marches to and trespasses on his business—combined with equal pressure from segregationists not to surrender—had worn away Brock's usual calm and pleasant demeanor leaving his irritable and short-tempered. He had also received death threats. Warren has described it as being a "rather comical scene, arranged primarily for its news value", particularly due to Brock's "frantic, comical antics".
Self-portrait – one form of artist's self-identification According to Stevie Davies, Anne's depiction of the woman as fee-earning artist "trebly trespasses on the domain of the masculine: female artists dabbed in water-colours or sketched decoratively in pen and ink; ladies did not engage in trade; and, besides, tools of her trade [legally belonging to her husband] in this case count as stolen." Melinda Maunsell believes that Helen is "both revealed and concealed by her artistic hand; providing her with an acceptable means of expression within her social construction, the artists hand also offers a form of independence, a possibility of earning a living, in a period when a woman had virtually no independent power base in any sphere." The story of Helen Graham, according to Samantha Ellis, may have inspired Emily Mary Osborn's painting Nameless and Friendless (1857), which depicts a widow attempting to make a living as an artist. Nicole A. Diederich has argued that in The Tenant Anne Brontë constructs marriage and remarriage as a comparative and competitive practice that restricts Helen's rights and talents.

No results under this filter, show 16 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.