Sentence examples for embodied a principle from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

The decisions of this court, rendered since the 11th Amendment, have consistently held that that amendment embodied a principle of national public policy whose enforcement may not be avoided by indirection or subterfuge.

Similar(59)

"It is very difficult to distinguish [Neilson's claim] from the specification of a patent for a principle, and this at first created in the minds of some of the court much difficulty; but after full consideration, we think that the plaintiff does not merely claim a principle, but a machine embodying a principle, and a very valuable one.

It embodied a set of principles, a critique of the dominant culture, a way of life.

This approach seemed to embody a central principle of "The Death and Life of Great American Cities," the influential critique by Ms. Jacobs that was published when planners were enamored of superblocks.

Courts' appeal to the patient's right to decide seems to suggest that the standards embody a fundamental principle.

If such movements are executed to embody a mathematical principle then such tracking allows us to study the mathematical thinking processes that an individual is going through.

First, the history makes clear that many Republicans did not share Lash's interpretation of Article IV's Privileges and Immunities Clause as simply embodying a nondiscrimination principle.

Smeaton, a professional engineer, embodied an important new principle in its construction whereby masonry blocks were dovetailed together in an interlocking pattern.

Many participants' accounts, while at times aligning with democratic principles, largely embodied a more technocratic approach to PP/PE in research funding decisions, seeking to find subsets of the public who could effectively contribute relevant experiential or contextual expertise to research plans and funding decisions.

A good definition or poem must be one (a) whose expressed meaning matches the actual meaning that was grasped in a pre-articulated way and (b) which satisfies some criterion of form (embodies an explanatory principle or satisfies poetic form).

A bill backed by the committee's chairman and the ranking Democrat embodies an important principle by offering essentially the same drug benefits to the elderly whether they stay in the traditional Medicare program or join private plans.

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