All these offenders--insane criminals and the morally insane whose irresistible tendencies are detrimental to the community--should be confined in special institutes to be cured, or at any rate segregated for life.
Only children over seven were admitted to the Institutes founded by Don Bosco.
Johnston's Institutes of the Civil Law of Spain, p.
See an interesting note in Johnston's Institutesof the Civil Law of Spain, London, 1825, p.
On religious wars, as naturally recognized in barbarous times, see the curious and important work, Institutes of Timour, pp.
He has studied Calvin's Institutes of Theology, and knows enough of St. Augustine to caricature his teaching.
Montucla speaks of a mathematical treatise of the thirteenth century written in verse; an Englishman versified the Institutes of Justinian, and a Pole wrote a rhyming work on heraldry.
Erskine, in his Institutes of the Law of Scotland, understands the law in the Digest De Extraordinariis Cognitionibus as authorizing a suit for the fee of a physician or advocate without a previous agreement for a specific sum.
The current distribution of the common law under its larger heads was made by Hale and Blackstone after that of the contemporary civilians, which is founded upon that of the Institutes of Justinian.
In the Protestant,| The Institutes of Calvin, which belong to the preceding part of the century, though not entitled Loci Communes, may be reckoned a full system of deductive theology.
His Institutes are still in the hands of that numerous body who are usually denominated from him.
Without the over-strained phrases and wilful paradoxes of Luther’s earlier writings, the Institutes of Calvin seem to contain most of his predecessor’s theological doctrine, except as to the corporal presence.
The French do not claim, I believe, to have produced at the middle of the sixteenth century any prose writer of a polished or vigorous style, Calvin excepted, the dedication of whose Institutes to Francis I.
And it is said that he thought nothing requisite for the Institutes but short clear notes, which his thorough admirers afterwards contrasted with the celebrated but rather verbose commentaries of Vinnius.
The author has conducted teachers' institutes in the Middle West for county superintendents who had never attended an institute or taught a term of school.
Professor of the Institutes of Medicine and Materia Medica in Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia; Attending Physician to the Philadelphia Hospital, &c.
Professor of theInstitutes of Medicine and Materia Medica in Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia; Attending Physician to the Philadelphia Hospital, &c.
I told him that I disapproved of Mechanics' Institutes in general, and especially of the way in which this one is conducted, and that I had resolved long before that none of my family should ever set foot in it.
For the preaching ought to be nothing but an explanation of the words of Christ when He institutes the mass and says: "This is My body.
The institutes of ancient Buddhism set apart the days of new and full moon to be observed by the Sramanas or monks, by fasting, confession, and listening to the reading of the law.
One of the "reforms" of Tsongkhapa was the absolute prohibition of marriage to the clergy, and in this he followed the institutes of the oldest Buddhism.
Timur in his Institutes mentions a suit of armour given him by the King of Georgia as forged by the hand of the Psalmist King.
Standard making by normal schools, state universities, hospitals, or other educational and correctionalinstitutes under direct state management.
To give these stations greater efficiency, the Government encouraged the formation of farmers' institutes in every electoral district for the hearing of lectures from experts which it provided, and for discussion or business.
Of late, those institutes have occupied my thoughts as representing the readiest means of collecting liberal ideas into a profitable focus.
How should I like my sister to be roving the country, and acting at Literary Institutes 'with a poodle dog?
Professional institutes and clubs also serve to increase the sum of general learning.
These lectures might be delivered in each town, or the agent might hold meetings of the nature of institutes in a number of towns centrally situated.
Plato institutes a Nirvana for the ills of marriage, of offspring, of property: and he realizes it by the slow death through inanition of the desire for love, for children, for property.
Defn: Of or pertaining to the Institutes or laws of the Roman Justinian.
Institutes of medicine, theoretical medicine; that department of medical science which attempts to account philosophically for the various phenomena of health as well as of disease; physiology applied to the practice of medicine.
Institutes of Justinian; Coke's Institutes of the Laws of England.
Defn: One who libels; one who institutes a suit in an ecclesiastical or admiralty court.
The unlettered barbarians willingly accepted the aid of the lettered clergy, still chiefly of Roman birth, to reduce to writing the institutes of their forefathers.
Law) Defn: The person who institutes and carries on a criminal suit against another in the name of the government.
That which institutes or instructs; a textbook; a system of elements or rules; an institute.
The heart, like all other organs of the human body, is ruled by laws, and medical science, with its institutes and methods, is kept busy to cure the consequences of the disturbance of these laws.
Of or pertaining to the Institutes or laws of the Roman Justinian.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "institutes" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.