Sentence examples for considerable privileges from inspiring English sources

Exact(5)

Under the Mamlūk dynasty, however, the head of the Aḥmadiyyah at times enjoyed considerable privileges and was treated as a dignitary.

Many of these holdings came from donations of the king to deserving officers and civil servants, considerable privileges being connected with such grants.

At home, the East Prussian administration was secularized, but considerable privileges had to be conceded to the nobility before they would confirm his rule and grant him funds to govern.

During Magnus's reign a national law code was established (c. 1350), providing for the election of the king, preferably from among the royal sons, and a new town law code was written that gave the German merchants considerable privileges.

The title appears first to have been assumed during the late Middle Ages by certain of the ricos hombres, or powerful magnates of the realm, who had by then acquired vast influence and considerable privileges, including one that of wearing a hat in the king's presence which later became characteristic of the dignity of grandee.

Similar(53)

The Church of England represents the state — it has the imprimatur of officialdom and, because of this, considerable privilege and status.

When her considerable privilege is revoked, and she's forced to return to the poor Brooklyn neighborhood she fought so assiduously to escape, she has to learn to live with at least one of her many selves.

But even if Mulvey's talent has been nourished by considerable privilege relative to some, the success of the 28-year-old's debut solo album, First Mind – which brought him another Mercury shortlisting – is well earned.

A child of considerable privilege himself, my 95-year-old friend, Grafton Trew, easily puts the blame on fear, "Those 'high-tone' Negros, they know the truth.

Aside from the party's rabid, unrepentant transphobia and homophobia, what Jenner doesn't see (or is too blinded by her considerable privilege to see) is that the trans people she's fighting for aren't just trans.

I'm worried that casualised academic labour means that the only ones who get permanent academic jobs are those able to tough out several years of fraught, unstable work – and I worry that the people able to do that are those with considerable financial privileges, without caring responsibilities, without financial dependents and those mentally resilient enough to cope".

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