These laws, and others, to extend and improve commerce, were passed during the reign of James I.
Many of the difficulties occurring in the rebel States, between white men and black men, between the old masters and the freedmen, grow out of these laws.
It is manifestly and avowedly the object of these laws to confer upon Negroes the privilege of voting and to disfranchise such a number of white citizens as will give the former a clear majority at all elections in the Southern States.
Of these laws or uniformities, the most comprehensive are those supplied by mathematics; the axioms relating to equality, inequality, and proportionality, and the various theorems thereon founded.
Accordingly, it is to assertions supposed to be contradictory to these laws, or to some others coming near to them in generality, that the word impossibility (at least total impossibility) seems to be generally confined.
These laws, it will be recollected, we have elsewhere called the municipal or civil laws, as distinguished from the political or fundamental law of the state.
These laws are of two kinds, the written or statute law, and the unwritten or common law.
The object of these laws was to secure to Great Britain alone the trade of the colonies.
If these laws are in their nature wrong, the states as well as congress should be prohibited from passing them.
The necessity of reserving space for specific cases illustrative of history and practice permits only a scanty summary of the most important of these laws.
These laws, like those of the royal patronage, not only gave to the civil government a commanding position with relation to the church, but they established the magistrates as the supervisors and guardians of the church courts.
In case the audiencia were governing ad interim it could designate magistrates from the outside to try cases, but the power of the audiencia, as provided by these laws, was secondary to that of the governor if he were present.
Whoever assented to the President's plan of reconstruction assented to these laws, and, beyond that, assented to the full right of the rebellious States to continue legislation of this odious type.
It is to be feared that these military officers, looking to the authority given by these laws, rather than to the letter of the Constitution, will recognize no authority but the commander of the district or the General of the Army.
And as to the doubtsomeness of these laws, he saith, (1.
These laws have, no doubt, a universal significance, and may be translated into problems of life.
It is impossible not to feel freer at the accession of so much power as these laws bring us.
Public sentiment was wholly opposed to these laws and no such objections ever have been made in Legislatures even to woman suffrage as were urged against allowing a wife to own property.
When the attention of a distinguished jurist of Wyoming was called to these laws he said the question never had been raised, but there would be no objection to changing them.
It is not possible to make in these introductory paragraphs an adequate digest of these laws in various States.
These laws, it will be remembered, were enacted at the time of the alleged Popish Plot, and in consequence of the perjured evidence given by Titus Oates (S478).
These laws rendered it difficult for landholders to evade their feudal duties to the King (S150) by the sale or subletting of estates.
These laws may be regarded as the foundation of the English system of landed property; they completed the feudal claim to the soil established by William the Conqueror.
The Gould dynasty thus intends to accomplish the repeal of these laws by coercion.
If this is freely accorded, these laws are no burden to the railroads.
In the meantime railroad managers tried their utmost to render, by shrewd manipulation, these laws obnoxious, and they finally succeeded in having them repealed or so amended as to render them largely ineffectual.
The railroads claimed that a State did not have the right to prescribe rates and refused to be bound by these laws.
Analysis is continually taking place merely as a result of the working of these laws.
These laws apply in all cases of habit formation, whether they be the purposeless habits of children or the purposive habits of maturity.
However, there are some suggestions which should be borne in mind in the application of these laws to this field.
To raise power of appreciation from low levels to high, from almost nothing to a controlling force, needs but the application of these laws.
Two or three suggestions as to aids in the application of these lawsmay be in place.
I therefore suggest that an inquiry be directed especially to the effect of the workings of the antitrust laws in these particular fields to determine if these evils can be remedied without sacrifice of the fundamental purpose of these laws.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "these laws" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.