Vasari, again, should only be cited as witness when he speaks of works of art which he has actually seen.
The advocates of the tax might havecited the original character of land grants to which feudal service was annexed and which were forfeited by the failure of absentees to perform it.
The examples of Austria-Hungary and the connection of Norway with Sweden, cited by him as proofs that a conjunction of two Parliaments worked well, would be generally taken not as encouragements but as warnings.
Whereupon he citedthe mayde to appere, her frendes promised that she should according to the Lawe, make her apperance.
Dixon's Histories; Pollard's Cranmer and England under Somerset; other authoritiescited in Dict.
As a preacher he was overworked, and when he imported an assistant from Hampshire, the Bishop of Winchester cited the latter for non-residence.
Noyades of Carrier, fusilades of Collot d'Herbois, are cited as examples very suitable for imitation in adequate emergencies.
A fact cited by Mr. Lewes,[37] that of the fecundity of a cross called Leporides, bred by M.
The facts or fancies cited by Mr. Galton in proof that praying is of no use are the following: 1.
Referring to the Consistorial Acts, cited above, it appears that in 1545 Dr.
The reporter of the following case, quotes also MONRO, as having cited examples of this kind of aneurism.
A few cases, of which perhaps Ranke is the most conspicuous, may indeed be cited of historical writers whose reputations are built on foundations so solid and so impervious to attack as to defy criticism.
Glark” is retained; but there is no mention of this case in the TABLE OF CASES CITED beginning on page vii.
The old Mahomedan case, cited by Puffendorf with approbation, is very much to the point.
I have not advanced this assertion without inquiry; and I doubt not but that the passages cited by Mr. Jones and Dr.
Revelation of Peter, upon which the above-mentioned Clemens Alexandrinus is said by Eusebius to have written notes; and which is twice cited in a work still extant, ascribed to the same author.
In some of the above-cited examples, Porphyry, speaking of Saint Matthew, calls him your Evangelist; he also uses the term evangelists in the plural number.
A variety of this story is cited from a Cawnpore newspaper, in the "Asiatic Journal," Vol.
This story is cited as the authority for three proverbs that have come into use in Tamil.
Here is substantially the proverb of friendship cited by Aristotle, “One soul in two bodies,” at least two thousand years before the days of the Greek philosopher.
Cited in Drake’s The Witchcraft Delusion in New England, I.
Cited from Castor, in Plutarch, in Wilkinson’s Anc.
Croniques de France, 1516, feuillet c c i j, cited from Soane, in Notes and Queries, supra.
Examples could be cited in Belgium, Holland, Norway, Spain, etc.
Many other examples of tierceron vaulting could be cited both in France and elsewhere, but they would add nothing of importance from a structural standpoint.
The double-aisled abbey church of Souvigny, which has a clerestory, might be cited as an exception to this statement, but judging from the narrowness of its inner aisles (Fig.
Simple ridge ribs appear, for example, in Lichfield cathedral, liernes at Worcester, while tierceron vaults could be cited in great number.
A vault of similar character may be noted in the name of Amiens and numerous other instances could be cited outside of the chevet vaults.
Thus many examples might be cited of lierne and tierceron vaulting in all degrees of complexity, especially in England,[336] while fan vaulting is to be seen in the abbey church of Bath (cir.
Nor was this rib a continuation of a ridge rib in the choir, for in the instances just cited no such rib was employed.
The translation is mainly that of the 'Biographies of Distinguished Men' cited above, and much of the felicity of style is necessarily lost in translation; but the substance of solid and lucid exposition from a master's hand remains.
Nearly eight hundred writers and twenty-four hundred separate writings are referred to and cited in this disorderly encyclopedia, most of them now lost and forgotten.
This was obtained for him by Lord Granville, after Cleland had been cited before the Privy Council, and pleaded poverty as the reason for such authorship.
I'd bet my shirt he'll stand to pay the price for every man that's cited on that list.
One day Carp's name would be cited on the black list.
In addition to the above cited and other restrictive measures, some ameliorative provisions are also found.
Notwithstanding these remonstrances, the queen's appeal was received at Rome; the king was cited to appear; and several consistories were held, to examine the validity of their marriage.
He was cited by the pope to stand his trial at Rome; and though he was known to be kept in close custody at Oxford, he was, upon his not appearing, condemned as contumacious.
The two legates, meanwhile, opened their court at London, and cited the king and queen to appear before it.
When Lambert was citedbefore these prelates, they endeavored to bend him to a recantation; and they were surprised when, instead of complying, he ventured to appeal to the king.
There is a story of his severity against this abuse; and it seems to merit praise, though it is commonly cited as an instance of his avarice and rapacity.
These words have been, and are, again and again cited against me, as if a confession that, when in the Anglican Church, I said things against Rome which I did not really believe.
Cited before the Inquisition in 1306 as a heretic, a magician and an Atheist, he ably defended himself and was acquitted.
He was also imprisoned there for some time, and afterwards citedat Westminster.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "cited" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: accused; blamed; charged; impeached; implicated; impugned; inculpated; indicted; involved; taxed