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"demurral" Definitions
  1. the act or an instance of demurring

33 Sentences With "demurral"

How to use demurral in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "demurral" and check conjugation/comparative form for "demurral". Mastering all the usages of "demurral" from sentence examples published by news publications.

It's easy to see that attitude as standard executive demurral.
Clinton's demurral is especially noteworthy because she did participate in 2007.
Brown's demurral adds to the importance of the decisions facing Joe Biden and Beto O'Rourke.
Misinterpreting Candice's demurral that "three's a bit of a crowd," Tracey invites her cousin Ola as well.
A demurral this categorical would normally put an end to the buzz, but Ryan has a unique history.
For some Senate lawmakers, however, Kavanaugh's demurral on the abortion law could help him win their votes for confirmation. Sen.
In reply, Frederick Yarger, Colorado's solicitor general, argued that Mr Phillips's demurral "depended entirely on the identity of the customer who was ordering the cake".
The demurral raised questions for the Saudis about the American commitment to Saudi security, which has underpinned the strategic layout of the Persian Gulf for decades.
All three played down the significance of their demurral from the letter, and it's certainly too early to read much into it other than political caution.
But Redford's demurral can seem like protesting too much — especially this year, when the documentaries section includes films about police brutality, ISIS, Gawker's shutdown, and Trump himself.
His demurral on Tuesday raised the possibility that the situation has shifted and the White House knows more than the public or Congress about what Mr. Mueller said.
The confluence of Obama's action and Putin's demurral will test Trump right from the jump, as moving for steadier relations with Moscow will now come at a heightened domestic cost.
The most level-headed demurral came from Debra Ann Livingston, who dissented from a 2-1 decision against Mr Trump at the Second Circuit Court of Appeals on December 3rd.
Justice Department officials have said that they have not shared the report or briefed the White House on its contents, so the demurral raised the possibility that the situation had shifted.
The intent of the column was to soothe a riled female id; if the woman couldn't resolve her conflict—by ending an unhappy marriage, for example—the professor counselled wifely demurral.
In any case, when he appeared at her door that night, she jumped him, despite his attempted demurral, and her chapter ended with them having sex in the hallway (while Sabine slept inside).
Without seeing Mr. Mueller's underlying report, he said, it was impossible to evaluate the merits of both Mr. Mueller's demurral and Mr. Barr's decision to make a definitive statement in favor of Mr. Trump.
Spicer's demurral came after he scoffed at estimates by the Congressional Budget Office that 24 million more people would be uninsured by 2026 if the GOP bill becomes law than if Obamacare stayed in place.
Mr. Barr's latest criticism of the special counsel's office reignited the debate over Mr. Mueller's choice and shows how his demurral allowed Mr. Barr to initially control the narrative about the report's most important findings.
It is also, she has said, a playful reference to Apple's Remind Me Tomorrow button, which allows users to delay a software update indefinitely, should they choose to keep clicking it—a modern metaphor for the demurral of the overwhelmed.
It borrowed from Boy Scout law (helpful, friendly, courteous, kind) and served as a polite Midwestern demurral to the notion that New Yorkers went out to eat in order to be intimidated by frighteningly attractive servers whose cheekbones could slice shallots.
The Oscars have been caught flat-footed by the persistent demurral of stars unwilling to participate in the once-obligatory step-and-strut, the designer name-checking, the preshow interviews, the scrutiny of the relentless likes of Joan Rivers that left on-air talent floundering.
It will not be pleased by another demurral on February 20th, when only Justice Clarence Thomas noted his displeasure with the high court's refusal to hear a challenge to a Californian law that requires the buyer of a gun to wait 10 days before taking possession.
He befriends the main character, an urchin named Thomas and reveals that he is a messenger from God (referred to as Riathamus here), and that Demurral is a Shadowmancer, a sorcerer who can control the dead. Despite not believing in God, Thomas agrees to assist Raphah in regaining the Keruvim because he wants revenge on Demurral for evicting him and his dying mother from their home. They pursue Demurral and the Keruvim with the assistance of Thomas's tomboy friend Kate and the mysterious smuggler, Jacob Crane. During the story, Raphah, Kate and Jacob Crane, who all for their own individual reasons did not believe in God, do come to believe in him.
The main building of Fyling Hall is used in G.P Taylor's novel Shadowmancer as the vicarage of Obadiah Demurral. The vicarage is destroyed by cannon fire from Jacob Crane's smuggler ship 'The Magenta'.
Eventually it is revealed that, in using the Keruvim, Demurral has unleashed a demonic race called the Glashan who were imprisoned at the dawn of time for rebelling against God. Led by the evil Pyratheon (the Devil), they join forces with Demurral so that they can find the other Keruvim and harness its power to overthrow God and rule the universe. It is eventually revealed that Raphah is the other Keruvim, so Demurral and Pyratheon try to capture him, so that they can kill him and turn him into an Azimuth (a slave spirit) to activate the Keruvim's full power. At the climax of the story Thomas, Kate and Raphah meet an angel referred to as a Seruvim (a play on the word Seraphim) named Raphael, who goes by the alias Abram Rickards.
After Abram restores life to Raphah, the sun rises, Abram is revealed in his true form and Pyratheon and Demurral flee. Abram tells Thomas, Kate and Jacob Crane to take the Keruvim away to another land so they leave aboard Crane's ship, The Magenta. However, in the closing page of the book it is revealed that they are being stealthily pursued by sea-demons known as Seloth.
In 2004, a $4 million deal with Taylor was announced for the making of a $100 million film version by Fortitude Films, backed by Universal Pictures. Fortitude made it known that they wanted Mel Gibson to direct, with Donald Sutherland playing Demurral and Sean Bean as Jacob Crane. Fortitude paid Taylor $1 million for Shadowmancer and $1.8 million for Wormwood.New empire for Roman, Fortitude, Variety, 11 October 2004.
In November 1846 Hiller went to see Tannhäuser and notes "Mendelssohn is sitting in front of us" (but presumably no conversation took place). In 1847 he discusses his draft of Konradin with Wagner. The discussion about Wagner’s "affairs" and religion in 1845 must have been interesting; we know from correspondence that in the same month, Wagner attempted to borrow 2,000 thalers from Hiller; Hiller’s apparent demurral did not however prevent Wagner recommending Hiller in June to the Dresden Court official Klemm as a potential composer to a libretto.
During the second half of the 1720s, Haywood continued acting, and she moved over to the Haymarket Theatre to join with Henry Fielding in the opposition plays of the 1730s. In 1729, she wrote the tragedy Frederick, Duke of Brunswick-Lunenburgh to honour Frederick, Prince of Wales. George II's son was later a locus for Patriot Whig and Tory opposition to the ministry of Robert Walpole. As he made it clear that he did not favour his father's policies or ministry, praise for him was demurral from the present king.
The fantasy story takes place in Whitby and concerns the evil sorcerer Reverend Obadiah Demurral who is seeking two powerful amulets, called the Keruvim, which he plans to use to control the elements and dominate the world. At the start of the book he purchases the first Keruvim (which takes the form of a golden statuette of a cherub) from an Ethiopian mercenary named Gebra Nubera. He then uses the Keruvim to destroy a ship upon which the next Keruvim is prophesied to arrive, but when he surveys the wreckage he finds nothing. The next day an Ethiopian boy named Raphah arrives searching for the Keruvim.
This dismay is enacted in the novel in a graphic fashion: if the English, with their aristocracy, mismanaged the colony and the slaves by having an insufficiently noble ruler there, then the democratic and mercantile Dutch would be far worse. Accordingly, the passionate misrule of Byam is replaced by the efficient and immoral management of the Dutch. Charles had a strategy for a united North American presence, however, and his gaining of New Amsterdam for Surinam was part of that larger vision. Neither Charles II nor Aphra Behn could have known how correct Charles's bargain was, but Oroonoko can be seen as a royalist's demurral.
While some glosses in isolation seem crudely supersessionist ("The foreskin believes while the circumcision remains unfaithful"), the prevailing allegorical tendency is to attribute Jonah's recalcitrance to his abiding love for his own people and his insistence that God's promises to Israel not be overridden by a lenient policy toward the Ninevites. For the glossator, Jonah's pro-Israel motivations correspond to Christ's demurral in the Garden of Gethsemane ("My Father, if it be possible, let this chalice pass from me" [Matt. 26:39]) and the Gospel of Matthew's and Paul's insistence that "salvation is from the Jews" (Jn. 4:22). While in the Gloss the plot of Jonah prefigures how God will extend salvation to the nations, it also makes abundantly clear—as some medieval commentaries on the Gospel of John do not—that Jonah and Jesus are Jews, and that they make decisions of salvation-historical consequence as Jews.

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