Sentence examples for has traditionally granted from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

It assumes continued equality in relations between Washington and Paris that the United States has traditionally granted France as a matter of sufferance to an old friend.

Springer Nature has traditionally granted personal free access for five years to the winner of the Karen Harvey Prize of the American Astronomical Society Solar Physics Division (AAS/SPD).

Similar(58)

Unlike the law of some continental European countries, no defense has traditionally been granted to an offender who voluntarily desists from committing the intended harm after that person's conduct has reached a point beyond mere preparation.

But because it takes time for the head football coach's ideas to permeate the entire franchise, and because it is hard to rebuild a football roster overnight, the head football coach has traditionally been granted a grace period to instill his theory.

"The Australian government has traditionally provided grants for infrastructure," he will say, according to his speech notes.

At the first call, the non-significance of variables whose importance has traditionally been taken for granted, such as ASA status, Surgical Time or Discharge Time, should be emphasized.

"Presidents have traditionally started granting commutations and pardons relatively early in their presidency, and they did it on a fairly regular basis throughout the course of their [time in office]," he tells Broadly.

The program is a substantial departure for the Ford Foundation, which has traditionally made much smaller grants.

FARM-Africa, an NGO which has traditionally relied upon donations and grants to support its programmes, has tapped into that model by establishing Sidai, a social enterprise which offers livestock and veterinary services to farmers across Kenya on a commercial basis.

The commerce clause has traditionally been interpreted both as a grant of positive authority to Congress and as an implied prohibition of state laws and regulations that interfere with or discriminate against interstate commerce (the so-called "dormant" commerce clause).

We'll see how that works out with granting access or not, which has traditionally been the carrot and the stick.

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