Sentence examples for use of courts from inspiring English sources

Exact(6)

Packages include unlimited use of courts, access to the spa and a daily children's programme of activities.

In five regions a law even blocks the use of courts to compel authorities to cough up.

But the government might save money, even in the small pilot, in reduced use of courts and emergency rooms.

Presley's estate, whose sole heir is his daughter, Lisa Marie, would not rake in what it does were it not for Elvis Presley Enterprises' aggressive licensing, marketing and use of courts to secure publicity rights.

Why should the 1percentt enjoy limited liability, special tax breaks, use of courts, and police and military protection if We the People are not getting well-made goods and high-quality services, well-paying jobs with good benefits, good schools and the rest of the things called for in the original bargain that created corporations in the first place?

Be sure to have some super fit organizers willing to run around on the day of the tournament to take care of all logistics including keeping the flow moving, getting teams on and off courts on time, making use of courts that suddenly become free, etc.

Similar(53)

"There has been discussion of a greater use of court orders to block some sites, but it will be difficult to decide whether responsibility will lie with the Home Office or internet service providers".

He makes extensive use of court documents from the trial of the Holy Land Foundation, a Texas-based Muslim charity convicted in 2008 of channelling money to the Palestinian group, Hamas.

The earliest record of the use of court fools dates from the 5th dynasty of Egypt, whose pharaohs attached great value to Pygmies brought from the mysterious lands to the south, apparently employing them as dancers and buffoons.

SOPA would expand the ability of the government and private companies to hold Web sites responsible for content the companies believe infringes on their copyrights, allowing greater use of court orders and lawsuits that could ultimately shut down the sites.

The U.S. Norris-LaGuardia Act (1932) made it easier for workers to picket by restricting the use of court injunctions against strikes, but the Taft-Hartley Act (1947) outlawed mass picketing.

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