His last formal suspensivemeasure was that of Spires (Speyer) in 1544, when he was marching against Francis.
Camilla could not endure to keep her sister a moment in this suspensive state, and made an excuse for quitting the table that she might instantly seek the manuscript.
He found no longer any difficulty in promising not to act with precipitance; his confidence was gone; his elevation of sentiment was depressed; a general mist clouded his prospects, and a suspensive discomfort inquieted his mind.
The duration of the Presidency is fixed at four years; the salary of the individual who fills that office cannot be altered during the term of his functions; he is protected by a body of official dependents, and armed with a suspensive veto.
The President is, moreover, provided with a suspensive veto, which allows him to oppose the passing of such laws as might destroy the portion of independence which the Constitution awards him.
He is armed with a veto or suspensive power, which allows him to stop, or at least to retard, its movements at pleasure.
In some feature stories the writers attempt to hold their readers' interest by making the narrative suspensive throughout.
The King has only a suspensive veto on Bills enacted by the Storthing, which therefore become law, if passed in their original form by three successive triennial Parliaments.
An excessive use of the suspensive participle is French and objectionable: e.
Moreover, it speedily came into conflict with the king, who vainly endeavored to use his constitutional right of suspensive veto in order to check its activities.
The king could affix a suspensiveveto to the acts of the Cortes.
In order to exclude the intervention of the king in favour of a suspensive veto, he accepted the argument that the Constitution was in the hands of the Assembly alone.
The Ministers themselves were unable to insist on the absolute veto in preference to the suspensive thus defined.
They resolved, on September 21, that the suspensive veto should extend over two legislatures.
They demanded in return that the Senate should have only a suspensive veto on the acts of the representatives, that there should be no right of Dissolution, that Conventions should be held periodically, to revise the Constitution.
In respect to measures generally, the king possessed only a suspensive veto; that is to say, any measure passed by three successive legislatures acquired, without the royal sanction, the force of law.
The President of France, on the other hand, possesses only a suspensive veto.
The president is, moreover, provided with a suspensive veto, which allows him to oppose the passing of such laws as might destroy the portion of independence which the constitution awards him.
He is armed with a suspensive veto, which allows him to stop, or at least to retard, its movements at pleasure.
The duration of the presidency is fixed at four years; the salary of the individual who fills that office cannot be altered during the term of his functions; he is protected by a body of official dependents, and armed with a suspensive veto.
Shall that negative be absolute, or suspensive only?
The result was, that the King should have a suspensive veto on the laws, that the legislature should be composed of a single body only, and that to be chosen by the people.
Lafayette, who imagined himself to be copying the American constitution, proposed that the king should have a suspensive veto.
The King was denied all initiative, being granted merely a suspensive veto, and in the reform of the judicial system the prestige of the lawyers was also destroyed.
It is a committee which can dissolve the assembly which appointed it; it is a committee with a suspensive veto--a committee with a power of appeal.
By referring a legislative enactment to a referendum vote he exercises what is in effect a suspensive veto.
The Reichsrat, while it cannot take any positive part in enacting legislation, has the right to vote disapproval of any measure enacted by the Reichstag, and such disapproval acts as a suspensive veto.
He had but one attribute, the suspensive veto, which consisted of his right to suspend, for three years, the execution of the Assembly's decrees.
Then follows another disappointment with suspensive or rising inflections denoting surprise with agitation, and then new realization ONE WAY OF LOVE All June I bound the rose in sheaves.
Note the suspensive intense rise upon "heaven" and the falling on "hell.
If, at the expiration of forty days, one-tenth of the primary assemblies in one-half of the departments vote No, there is a suspensive veto.
The people have a suspensive veto and, finally, a definitive veto, which they may exercise when they please.
They have determined that the King shall have a suspensiveand iterative veto: that is, that after negativing a law, it cannot be presented again till after a new election.
The National Assembly have decided that their executive shall be hereditary, and shall have a suspensive negative on the laws; that the legislature shall be of one House, annual in its sessions and biennial in its elections.
This chamber was to sit for two years, the King having no authority to dissolve or prorogue it; and it was to possess full legislative power subject to the King's suspensive veto.
The lower house was to initiate legislation; the upper one was to do little more than to exercise the suspensive veto which the Constitution of 1791 had given to the King.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "suspensive" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.