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Example sentences for "deprivation"

Lexicographically close words:
depressions; depressive; depressor; depriue; depriued; deprivations; deprive; deprived; deprives; depriveth
  1. This and the deprivation of our men are very forcibly shown in the following account of Major-General Hood:[64] "On the morning of the 15th my forces were again in motion.

  2. The other members of this turbulent faction were unwilling, by so bold a measure, to incur that deprivation of their livings with which William would probably have visited them.

  3. Oxford, 1849) grieves over 'this deprivation of the liberties of the English clergy.

  4. Now deprivation is always the attribute of some hypostatic substance, instead of itself being substance.

  5. So intelligible matter is still a form of Being, and we still hold to monism; as intelligible matter may participate in the good; while matter physical remains evil, being a deprivation of good, not possessing it.

  6. Deprivation is matter, and is without qualities, i.

  7. I know not why it was that among the few for whom I had so much respectful regard, I never had associated the idea of early deprivation with Lady Douglas.

  8. His state was truly pitiable--all his fine faculties lost in paralytic imbecility, and yet not so entirely so but that he perceived his deprivation as in a glass darkly.

  9. No deprivation attending their affliction is more severely felt by them than the special deprivation which thus ensues; and which exiles their sympathies, in a great measure, from all share in the familiar social interests of life around them.

  10. Where there is light there is life, and any deprivation of this principle is rapidly followed by disease of the animal frame, and the destruction of the mental faculties.

  11. One of the most refined and exquisite methods of torture is long continued deprivation of sleep.

  12. Brady by name, the Court, in 1946, returned to the fair trial principle enunciated therein when it held that no deprivation of the constitutional right to the aid of counsel was disclosed by the record in Carter v.

  13. Cases disposing of the contention that restraints on picketing amount to a denial of freedom of speech and constitute therefore a deprivation of liberty without due process of law have been set forth under Amendment I.

  14. As applied to actions for personal debts, a repeal or extension of a statute of limitations effects no unconstitutional deprivation of property of a debtor-defendant in whose favor such statute had already become a defense.

  15. To effect it, no violence was necessary, no deprivation of natural right, but rather an enlargement of it by a repeal of the law.

  16. Be it enacted by the General Assembly, that no crime shall be henceforth punished by deprivation of life or limb,* except those hereinafter ordained to be so punished.

  17. The last of them, particularly, is an enjoyment, the deprivation of which with us cannot be calculated.

  18. Not a doubt of his success occurred to the baronet; who saw, in one blow, the darling scheme of his old age demolished, in the deprivation of Camilla.

  19. He was at the feet of Indiana, to whom he was pouring forth his ardent lamentations at this long deprivation of her sight.

  20. We repined, my Camilla, at the deprivation you sustained at that period.

  21. The woe it expressed could be excited by nothing less than the deprivation of every worldly expectation, and a single glance was an answer to a thousand interrogatories.

  22. Melmond, inexpressibly wretched at the deprivation of all hope of Indiana, at the very period when fortune seemed to favour his again pursuing her, dreamt not of this partiality.

  23. They could reach their position only by pledging and keeping up unceasing and awful self-deprivation and self-mutilation.

  24. Followers he had to bait with golden hopes; and for that matter it was but natural and right that after more than fifty years of poverty and deprivation he should also think somewhat of comfort and wealth for himself.

  25. But this deprivation does not press so much upon the poor as upon a great portion of the middle-classes.

  26. But unluckily the deprivation is felt by the very class which would benefit the most, and confer the most benefit, by being admitted on reasonable terms to such exhibitions of high art.

  27. The bishops' deprivation of an authority they had too often disgraced and misused, vested the government of the Church in the presbyterate; and the national sentiment approved of the change.

  28. No cases of eviction or deprivation are recorded.

  29. In a short time a sentence of deprivation was issued against Bonner, Heath, Day and Gardiner.

  30. Complete deprivation and imprisonment were prescribed for the second offence, and the third offence was to be punished by life-long imprisonment.

  31. The complete extinction of the old hierarchy by death, deprivation and imprisonment, left the way open for the appointment of bishops favourable to the religion.

  32. The most monstrous absurdity of this claim was that the ecclesiastical tribunal had no power to impose any but ecclesiastical punishments, that is to say, penance, excommunication, or deprivation of orders.

  33. For five years it continued, to the great misery of England, for the nation was deeply religious, and felt most keenly the deprivation of all its spiritual privileges.

  34. Her service is an object of purchase; and in English law "we have evidence that it was originally so among ourselves: in an action for seduction the deprivation of a daughter's services is the injury alleged.

  35. The laws of Theodosius II and Valentinian II enumerate as many as thirty-two different heresies, all punishable, the penalties being such as deprivation of civil rights, exile, corporal punishment and death.

  36. She placed her hand on her eyes, as if to shut out the horrid certainty; the temporary deprivation of sight but increased the acuteness of her impression, consequently, her uneasiness.

  37. Another deprivation that she would keenly feel would be the music her soul loved.

  38. It was interposition between the federal government and its depositories; it was deprivation of revenue; it was an act the recurrence of which should be carefully guarded against in future.

  39. She did; it was a great deprivation to her to have lost the opportunity of mentioning casually to her Gablehurst friends--and Lady Harriet especially--that she would shortly be leaving them to occupy a throne.

  40. One of these was she was no longer invited to take part in the daily drives, a deprivation which would alone have consoled her for much worse penalties.

  41. It was significant of the change of feeling in Germany that the ecclesiastical electors, who had seen nothing amiss in the deprivation of Frederick, had not a good word to say for this concession to Wallenstein.

  42. Again, they complained of the deprivation of their religious habits and the sacraments of the church, and desired that the Master and the heads of the order should be called thither also.

  43. The pope menaced with deprivation all those who had not attended, and, in his famous bull of Unam sanctam, asserted that every human being was subject to the Roman pontiff.


  44. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "deprivation" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    abnegation; abridgment; absence; banishment; beggary; bereavement; blank; cost; curtailment; damage; debit; declension; declination; declining; deficiency; deficit; degradation; denial; deposition; deprivation; destitution; destruction; detriment; disadvantage; disagreement; disclaimer; dismissal; disobedience; displacement; dispossession; dissent; drought; emptiness; exclusion; exile; expense; expulsion; extradition; famine; firing; forfeit; forfeiture; gripe; hardship; imperfection; incompleteness; indigence; injury; lack; liquidation; loss; mendicancy; nay; necessity; need; negation; negative; nonentity; nothingness; nullity; omission; ostracism; outlawry; overthrow; pauperism; penury; perdition; pinch; privation; purge; recantation; rejection; removal; repudiation; retention; retirement; robbery; ruin; sacrifice; shortage; shortcoming; spoliation; starvation; subtraction; suspension; transportation; undoing; unreality; vacancy; vacuum; void; want