-
...." Webster'sThird New International Dictionary 1687 (1966) (hereinafter Webster's). So, for examp..." is charged with "the apprehension of allegedoffenders as well as crime detection a...
-
...We begin with the dictionary definition of "assault." See id. (citing Webster's... of force" inflicting "a reasonable apprehension" of harm; "an attempt to commit battery"; "a batte...
-
For it is his life that we are ultimately considering. If in some of the film's early scenes we seem to be witnessing events from the couple's shared viewpoint, from the time Fiona enters the retirement home, we are clearly looking through [Grant]'s eyes and will continue doing so until the final fade-out. This has interesting implications on many levels of the film, not least that of the performers. I don't believe I've ever seen Canadian star [Gordon Pinsent] before, but his work as Grant is little short of masterful. It's a brave, solid, expertly controlled performance and never more so than when he gazes at Fiona with his understandable blend of tenderness and apprehension.
Is she a great actress? I was so enraptured by [Julie Christie] way back when that I never stopped to ask this...
... Thomson's judgment in his Biographical Dictionary of Film: "She is, sadly, obvious in her efforts, l...
-
... he can do so without hindering the apprehension, prosecution, conviction or punishment of another ...The dictionary defines "impede" as "to interfere with or get in t...
-
...Webster, An American Dictionary of the English Language (1828) (defining "procure"... if Woodcock was "in fact under the apprehension of death," id. , at 504, 168 Eng. Rep., at 354, o...
-
...; (2) the nature of the sites where apprehension and then detention took place; and (3) the practic.... . detention." See Black's Law Dictionary 728 (8th ed. 2004) (defining habeas corpus as "[a]...
-
This monograph is a case study of newspaper competition in New Hampshire between the province's official newspaper and an upstart Whig challenger in the period marked by contention over the Stamp Act (1765-1766) and over the tight oligarchical reign of the Wentworth family. The case study is grounded in the civic republican tradition articulated by Bernard Bailyn and Gordon Wood as well as the revisionist scholarship since the 1960s that takes the role of the "little people" seriously. It maintains that the competition between the two newspapers contributed to, and opened up, the public spaces in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, to a wider compass than might have been predicted if one follows the standard Habermasian argument for the develop of a bourgeois public sphere. In part, these more d...
... to rank or gentility [Oxford English Dictionary). Recognizing the news value of colonial manufactu... gathering was precipitated by "an Apprehension that the Stampt Papers would be distributed the ne...
-
... A [1] In the Dictionary Act, Congress provided definitions for a number of..., the lack of any intent to cause an apprehension of future harm--shown from both words and context-...
-
... Realist act of representation, the apprehension that Courbet's painting, for instance, involved a ... had, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, entered the English language to describe someone ...
-
...Webster's Third New International Dictionary 1598 (1961) (defining "otherwise" to mean "in a di... their vehicles at the time of apprehension. I suspect that many DUI statutes do not require p...