After the usual exchange of stipends and tributes, Roderick returned to his home in the west; and thus, with the treaty of Ferns, ended the comparatively unimportant but significant campaign of the year 1169.
A scale of curates' stipends where the incumbent is non-resident is provided by law, varying according to the annual value of the benefice and other circumstances, and the bishop may direct that the curate shall reside in the parsonage house.
Are her professors still paid the stipends she fixed for them; or do the readers and the preachers divide between them the large estates she left?
The judicial bench was to be purged of partial men; and if necessary, lawyers with increased stipends would be sent from England.
Kirk of God, sould not be defraudit of their appointit stipends, neither zet in any wayes sould be molestit in their functioun; zet nottheless universallie they want ther stipends appointit for diverse tymes by past.
To requyre payment to ministers of therestipends for the tyme by past, according to the promise made.
In the terrible disorders of the times the royal stipends had been withdrawn.
The stipends of Methodist ministers in those days were very small.
It was therefore resolved to increase the stipends to a hundred crowns.
Shall we shrink from the avowal of truths because despotism and ignorance have granted stipends to the propagators of falsehood, and because those stipends might be endangered?
And priests, little weighing the sacrifice of a contrite spirit, betook themselves to places where they could get larger stipends than in their own benefices.
In common with those in worldly professions and businesses the survivors among the clergy appear to have demanded larger stipends than they had previously obtained for the performance of their ecclesiastical duties.
To receive fixt stipends by which they may be compensated for their services" considered.
If you have no exclusive clause, there may be danger of creating offices or augmenting thestipends of those already created, in order to gratify some members if they were not excluded.
By stipends and scholarships promising younger members from among the foreign-born groups should be encouraged to qualify as home teachers and as classroom and extension instructors in these fields.
In addition to scholarships enabling young persons to take courses of considerable length, there might be stipends enabling older women of judgment and experience to qualify for certain forms of service by shorter courses.
The granting of stipends to graduate students who would work at institutions approved by the committee and who would do practice teaching with such groups.
One responsible officer, called procurador, was kept in the city of Mexico to buy supplies for the missions from stipends due, and from the drafts given to the friars by the presidio commanders for goods furnished to the presidios.
As early as 1875 a law was passed withholding from Jewish students the stipends they had hitherto received from a fund set aside for that purpose.
It opened elementary schools, and expended large sums on stipends for students, and the publication of useful and scholarly books.
Some re-adjustment of stipends after a new enquiry seems, therefore, likely to be proposed.
The stipends of assistants in secondary schools are often unwisely and wastefully low.
To lower stipends till the hungry mouth Shall to the belly say: "We must go hence Or else we perish," were a shrewd device.
More often there was a separate schoolmaster who served as curate, entering holy orders for the purpose; for by this economy of labour two meagre stipends were put together, and the rector might even effect an economy on the one.
Previous rectors had drawn the tithes of the parish, and pocketed the large margin that remained, after the stipends of the worthy curates who did their work had been paid.
The curates we suppose stuck to their posts, though where their stipends came from is a problem.
The stipends of the cura and of the other evangelical workers are paid from the royal treasury of Manila, as are also the salaries of the governor and the presidios.
A Boston town meeting of October 28 had been concerned with the report that "Stipends are affixed by order of the Crown to the offices of the Judges of Superior Court.
For these honest stipends must be appointed; and provision must be made for those that are poor, and are not able by themselves, nor by their friends, to be sustained at letters, especially such as come from landward.
There their names and number must be taken and put in roll; and then may the wisdom of the kirk appoint stipends accordingly.
If equal stipends be appointed to all those that in charge are so unequal, one would suffer penury, or another would have superfluity and too much.
Her malice extended in like manner to Cambuskenneth; for there she cancelled the stipends of as many of the Canons as had forsaken Papistry.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "stipends" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.