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"forbear" Definitions
  1. a person in your family who lived a long time ago

94 Sentences With "forbear"

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

A mouthful, to be sure, meant to forbear any legal Sturm und Drang from Porsche itself.
Although it shares a similar DNA with a zip tie, its true spiritual forbear is the humble toe strap.
"Today, cyber and other disinformation-related tools have enabled Russia to achieve operational capabilities unimaginable to its Soviet forbear," Sen.
The uniformed phantasmagoria is a forbear of everything from Tom of Finland comics to Rainer Werner Fassbinder's almost-pornographic reverie Querelle.
"Today, cyber and other disinformation-related tools have enabled Russia to achieve operational capabilities unimaginable to its Soviet forbear," said Sen.
The FCC also needs to work with providers to forbear from data caps and fees that can be an encumbrance to connectivity.
When an agency concedes that there is no market failure, the proper response is to forbear from price regulation, not to expand it.
There are good reasons for broadband providers to believe that a future FCC could renege on its 85033 promises to forbear from price regulations and unbundling obligations.
The 2015 order claimed to forbear from price regulation but also banned paid prioritization of traffic by broadband Internet service providers — effectively imposing a zero price regulation.
Through it, the FCC adopted no-blocking, no-throttling, and no-paid prioritization rules and decided to "forbear" or refrain from enforcing many of the other rules.
The problem is that Title II gives the FCC the authority eventually to regulate rates, even though it vows to voluntarily refrain — or forbear — from exercising that authority.
To maintain that faith, as difficult as it is, we need to forbear, to be open to criticism, and to allow the facts to fall where they may.
Sweden's King Carl Gustaf - the patron of the institution founded by his forbear Gustav III in 1786 - has had to step in and promise to reform its arcane statutes.
Under section 21625 of the Telecommunications Act of 2900, the FCC can forbear "fairly easily" from applying any provision in Title II that the FCC decides it doesn't want to apply.
"Forbear to judge based on only the premiere episode," Shakespeare wrote, or might have, and thus we shall not be too harsh on "Still Star-Crossed," which begins Monday night on ABC.
So, absent clear and convincing evidence to the contrary, the FCC should presume Section 21625's substantive consumer protection criteria are satisfied regarding the regulation at issue and forbear from enforcing it.   2900.
Every year, descendants honor their famed forbear by gathering in Qufu, Confucius's hometown in eastern Shandong Province, and in Confucius temples across China for the annual tomb-sweeping festival, as well as Confucius's birthday.
"I am hopeful that the incoming administration will continue to press the case for sensible language changes during negotiations next year and continue to forbear exercising rulemaking authority on these controls until such changes are made," said Langevin.
The Latin America-focused E&P company said on Friday that it had reached an agreement with certain holders of its 5.375% 2019s and 5.625% 2025s to forbear from declaring the principal amounts on the notes until March 31.
As it happens, the London Aladdin, Dean John-Wilson, proves more personable than his Broadway forbear as the prototypically hunky commoner-who-would-be-prince who may have lost his beloved mother but finds his inner hero along the way.
Mr. Peters said that in April 2017 a senior official asked him to "forbear" from issuing a report detailing how the correction commissioner, Joseph Ponte, had misused a city vehicle assigned to him, saying that it would be embarrassing to Mr. Ponte.
In a letter Thursday to Manhattan federal court Judge Victor Marrero, a prosecutor in DA Cyrus Vance Jr.'s office wrote that "the parties have reached a temporary agreement" to "forbear enforcement" of the subpoena to produce years of Trump's financial documents.
Section 10 of the Communications Act states the FCC "shall forbear" from applying any regulation or statutory provision to a telecommunications service if the agency determines enforcement is not necessary to ensure charges or practices are just and reasonable or necessary to protect consumers.
ENTERS INTO FORBEARANCE AGREEMENTS * BON-TON STORES INC - FORBEARANCE AGREEMENTS WILL EXPIRE ON JANUARY 26, 2018, UNLESS FURTHER EXTENDED BY PARTIES * BON-TON-‍ENTERED FORBEARANCE DEALS WITH ABL CREDIT AGREEMENT LENDERS,AD HOC GROUP OF HOLDERS OF ABOUT 75% AMOUNT OF CO'S 8.0% SECOND LIEN NOTES DUE 2021 * BON-TON STORES- ABL CREDIT AGREEMENT LENDERS & FORBEARING HOLDERS OF 2L NOTES TO FORBEAR FROM REMEDIES IF CO DOES NOT MAKE INTEREST PAYMENT DUE ON DEC.
Wherefore I do eftsoons intreat and require you to forbear to intermeddle any further.
" # "Justice. Wrong none by doing injuries, or omitting the benefits that are your duty." # "Moderation. Avoid extremes; forbear resenting injuries so much as you think they deserve.
I forbear to panegyrize the generous donor, whose fame no eulogy of mine can increase, and whose desire of concealment should be a caution not to attempt it.
With the end of Apartheid in 1994 in South Africa, the former defence forces of the Bantustan s were incorporated into the newly formed South African National Defence Force. The SANDF's new 10 South African Infantry Battalion heraldry clearly originates from the Bophuthatswana Defence Force, its forbear.
173 (quoting Lasker and His Contemporaries, No. 3, p. 119); . The bracketed sic was apparently added by Winter. > The genealogy, incidentally, indicates that the common forbear of Emanuel > and myself was the son Samuel Lasker of the Rabbi of the Polish village > Łask, whose name was originally Meier Hindels.
980, where the current Danish ruler Harald Bluetooth is likened with Hilditann, implying that the older Harald was seen as a prestigious forbear of his younger namesake. There is moreover a song in the Poetic Edda, Hyndluljóð (12th century) which describes Harald's descent from Ivar Vidfamne.Herrmann (1922), p. 517-8.
Monticello Report: Sheep for the President, monticello.org "I cannot forbear, Sir," Jarvis wrote to Jefferson, "making you an offer of a Ram & Ewes, both as a mark of my great esteem & well knowing that the experiment cannot be in better hands."U.S. Consul William Jarvis to Pres. Thomas Jefferson, Lisbon, Jan.
Francis Bacon and Charles Darwin believed that humorous laughter requires a "light" frame of mind. But they differed on ticklish laughter: Darwin thought that the same light state of mind was required, whereas Bacon disagreed. When tickled, noted Bacon, "men even in a grieved state of mind, yet cannot sometimes forbear laughing."Darwin, C. 1872/1965.
In this case, the court could not find any consideration for the promise to pay maintenance. He further stated that the High Trees principle should not be stretched so far as to abolish the doctrine of consideration, While it may be true that the wife did forbear from suing the husband on the arrears for seven years, this forbearance was not at the request of the husband. He held that in the absence of proof of any request, express or implied, by the husband that the wife should forbear from applying to the court for maintenance, there was no consideration for the husband's promise. Moreover, even if the wife had promised to not apply to court for maintenance, there would have been no consideration, because one cannot waive the statutory right to apply for maintenance.
Addison, damning opera's heterogeny, wrote, "Our Countrymen could not forbear laughing when they heard a Lover chanting out a Billet-doux, and even the Superscription of a Letter set to a Tune."Addison, Joseph ; Steele, Richard. "The Spectator", 1853. 218 This type of opera not only took up theatrical rehearsal time and space, it also took away dramatic subject matter.
The principle justification given for Bodb's election is that he is the Dagda's eldest son. He subsequently fathered many deities. Bodb's election is recognised by all of his rivals, save only Lir, who refuses him homage. Bodb, however, counsels his followers to forbear from punishing Lir; later, Bodb will successively offer two of his own daughters in marriage to Lir to placate him.
Scollard has been characterized as a minor poet but a fine technician: :He knew himself to be a fine craftsman, able to fashion delicate lyrics that forbear contemplative weight for perfection in form. His verse delights in the natural world, in small incidents that are honed to perfection. It is easy to view him as a Frost without the philosophy.
James D. G. Dunn. Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2006. . p.626-31 involving the sequencing of imperative and indicative predicates are taken by theologians as central to the relationship between Law and Gospel. Daniel Defoe discusses three pairs of these predicates in his second and final sequel to Robinson Crusoe, Serious Reflections (1720): "forbear and live", "do and live", "believe and live".
Johnson alters the story to emphasise the theme of Irene's temptation. His Mahomet offers Irene a deal: if she becomes a Muslim, he will preserve her life and give her power at his court. > IRENE: > Forbear — O do not urge me to my ruin! > MAHOMET: > To state and pow'r I court thee, not to ruin: > Smile on my wishes, and command the globe.
Will Bloss (left) was quarterback and manager of the 1893-94 OAC Aggies team. Star halfback Brady Burnett is probably the other figure in this 1893 photo. Early in January 1894, the Aggies football team received a challenge from the Multnomah Athletic Club "Juniors" (second team). A game was hastily scheduled for Friday, January 19,Bear and Forbear, "College Column," Corvallis Times, vol.
324 U.S. at 502. The Court then stated the issue before it, in terms similar to those of the Euthyphro dilemma: > [N]ot all economic interests are "property rights;" only those economic > advantages are "rights" which have the law back of them, and only when they > are so recognized may courts compel others to forbear from interfering with > them or to compensate for their invasion.
There goes a story of a Spartan king Soos, that, being besieged by the Clitorians in a dry and stony place so that he could come at no water, he was at last constrained to agree with them upon these terms, that he would restore to them all his conquests, provided that himself and all his men should drink of the nearest spring. After the usual oaths and ratifications, he called his soldiers together, and offered to him that would forbear drinking, his kingdom for a reward; and when not a man of them was able to forbear, in short, when they had all drunk their fill, at last comes king Sous himself to the spring, and. having sprinkled his face only, without swallowing one drop, marches off in the face of his enemies, refusing to yield up his conquests, because himself and all his men had not, according to the articles, drunk of their water.Plurarch (1889).
Callisher alleged that money was owed to him from the Government of Honduras, and was about to take proceedings to enforce payment. In consideration that the plaintiff would forbear taking such proceedings for an agreed time, the defendant promised to deliver to Callisher a set of Honduras Railway Loan Bonds. But then, they did not deliver the debentures, and argued that their promise to do so was unenforceable because the original suit was groundless.
Sikhwaji, a section from Goryeosa (History of Goryeo), recorded that doenjang and ganjang were included in the relief supplies in 1018, after a Khitan invasion, and in 1052, when a famine occurred. Joseon texts such as Guhwangchwaryo and Jeungbo sallim gyeongje contain detailed procedures on how to brew good-quality doenjang and ganjang. Gyuhap chongseo explains how to pick a date for brewing, what to forbear, and how to keep and preserve doenjang and ganjang.
Some believe that reclassifying broadband Internet access services under Title II of the 1996 Telecommunications Act would be followed by requiring ISPs to pay into the USF as a new source of revenue for the fund. But the FCC has made clear that it will not require contributions on broadband Internet access revenues at this time, as the FCC will forbear from the contribution requirements in Section 254(d) of the Communications Act.
Horace published a fourth book of Odes in 13 BC consisting of 15 poems. Horace acknowledged the gap in time with the first words of the opening poem of the collection: Intermissa, Venus, diu / rursus bella moves (Venus, you return to battles long interrupted). IV.1, Intermissa, Venus, diu... – Venus, Forbear! – Horace complains that in advancing age he is vexed with new desires by the cruel goddess of love: he pines for Ligurinus.
In the aftermath of the Franco- Prussian War of 1870–71 Gladstone attempted to persuade the German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck to forbear from annexing Alsace and Lorraine from defeated France. Gladstone published an anonymous article in the Edinburgh Review in October 1870 espousing his views, but it did not remain anonymous for long. The Germans remained unconvinced by Gladstone's overtures, however. France would regain both provinces in 1919 and 1944—but only after two World Wars with Germany.
If thou see the ass of him that hateth thee lying under his burden, and thou wouldest forbear to help him, thou shalt surely help with him."Exodus 23:4-5. The Book of Proverbs similarly states: "Rejoice not when thine enemy falleth and let not thy heart be glad when he stumbleth",Proverbs 24:17. and: "If thine enemy be hungry give him bread to eat, and if he be thirsty give him water to drink.
Sonnet 139 is an English or Shakespearean sonnet. The English sonnet has three quatrains, followed by a final rhyming couplet. It follows the typical rhyme scheme of the form ABAB CDCD EFEF GG and is composed in iambic pentameter, a type of poetic metre based on five pairs of metrically weak/strong syllabic positions. The 6th line exemplifies a regular iambic pentameter: × / × / × / × / × / Dear heart, forbear to glance thine eye aside: (139.6) :/ = ictus, a metrically strong syllabic position.
Quaker writer George Bishop wrote, > Yea, Wenlock Christison, though they did not put him to death, yet they > sentenced him to die, so that their cruel purposes were nevertheless. I > cannot forbear to mention what he spoke, being so prophetical, not only as > to the judgment of God coming on Major-general Adderton, but as to their > putting any more Quakers to death after they had passed sentence on him. Bishop, George. New-England judged, by the spirit of the Lord.
His mother is horrified by such sacrilege and the Jews beg the King not to perform such a profanation (Chorus of Jews:Recall, O king, thy rash command!). Nitrocis implores her beloved son not to thus incur God's wrath, but Belshazzar scornfully rejects what he considers his mother's superstition (Duet:O dearer than my life, forbear!) The Jews comment that the Lord is slow to anger but his wrath will eventually be awoken (Chorus of Jews:By slow degrees the wrath of God to its meridian height ascends).
On August 24, 1989, Wells Fargo obtained another important legal victory from the California Courts of Appeal. In an opinion by Acting Presiding Justice William Newsom, the court held that Wells Fargo was not subject to tort liability for breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing just because it had taken a "hard-line" approach in negotiations with its borrowers, and refused to modify or forbear enforcing the terms of the relevant promissory notes.Price v. Wells Fargo Bank, 213 Cal. App.
The Commissioners concluded they could not "forbear expressing our strong sense of the patient endurance which the labouring classes have exhibited under sufferings greater, we believe, than the people of any other country in Europe have to sustain". The Commission stated that bad relations between landlord and tenant were principally responsible. There was no hereditary loyalty, feudal tie, or mitigating tradition of paternalism as existed in England (Ireland was a conquered country). The Earl of Clare observed of landlords that "confiscation is their common title".
Laud, writing on the occasion, advised him to be 'mindful of the waspishness of these times.' Laurence also held the living of Bemerton with Fugglestone in Wiltshire. During Laud's trial Laurence was instanced as one "popishly affected" whom Laud had promoted. The parliamentary visitors compelled him in 1648 to resign his mastership and professorship in order to avoid expulsion, but he afterwards submitted to them, and received a certificate, dated 3 August 1648, attesting that he engaged to preach only practical divinity, and to forbear from expressing any opinions condemned by the reformed church.
Andros used the outbreak of King Philip's War in July 1675 as an excuse to go by ship to Connecticut with a small military force to establish the duke's claim. Andros came ashore, had a brief conversation with the fort commander was rebuffed, and read his commission. > [Thomas Bull] was in command as Saybrook, when Governor Andros attempted to > gain the place for his master, the Duke of York.When a clerk of Andros > insisted upon reading the patent, Captain Bull commanded him in a loud voice > to forbear, and then read the protest.
In modern practice, perhaps the most important distinction between law and equity is the set of remedies each offers. The most common civil remedy a court of law can award is monetary damages. Equity, however, enters injunctions or decrees directing someone either to act or to forbear from acting. Often, this form of relief is in practical terms more valuable to a litigant; for example, a plaintiff whose neighbor will not return his only milk cow, which had wandered onto the neighbor's property, may want that particular cow back, not just its monetary value.
Quaker writer George Bishop wrote, > Yea, Wenlock Christison, though they did not put him to death, yet they > sentenced him to die, so that their cruel purposes were nevertheless. I > cannot forbear to mention what he spoke, being so prophetical, not only as > to the judgment of God coming on Major-general Adderton, but as to their > putting any more Quakers to death after they had passed sentence on him. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow recreated the Christison trial in his play John Endicott which included the damnation of Atherton by the accused.Longfellow, Henry W. Poetical Works.
Thomas Broke or Brooke (fl. 1550), translator, was an alderman of Calais, the chief clerk of the exchequer and customer there at the time when the preaching of William Smith at Our Lady's Church in that town led many persons, and Broke among them, to adopt 'reformed' opinions. Broke was a member of parliament, sitting for Calais, and in July 1539 spoke strongly against the Six Articles Bill, though Cromwell sent to warn him to forbear doing so as he loved his life. Part of his speech is preserved by Foxe (Acts and Monuments, v. 503).
By 1839 Lord Auckland had succeeded Bentinck as Governor-General, and Macaulay had returned to England. Auckland contrived to find sufficient funds to support the English Colleges set up by Bentinck's Act without continuing to run down the traditional Oriental colleges. He wrote a Minute (of 24 November 1839) giving effect to this; both Oriental and English colleges were to be adequately funded. The East India Company directors responded with a despatch in 1841 endorsing the twin-track approach and suggesting a third: > We forbear at present from expressing an opinion regarding the most > efficient mode of communicating and disseminating European Knowledge.
I might sustain this opinion by a reference to the well-settled > principle of the common law of England on this subject; to the writings of > many of the earlier and later commentators on our Constitution and laws; ... > and lastly to the dicta and decisions of many of our national and state > tribunals. But all this has been well done by Assistant Vice Chancellor > Sandford, in the case of Lynch vs. Clarke, and I forbear. I refer to his > opinion for a full and clear statement of the principle, and of the reasons > and authorities for its support.
Macaulay writes, > No sound of joy or sorrow Was heard from either bank; But friends and foes > in dumb surprise, With parted lips and straining eyes, Stood gazing where he > sank: And when above the surges They saw his crest appear, All Rome sent > forth a rapturous cry, And even the ranks of Tuscany Could scarce forbear to > cheer. He reaches the Roman shore, is richly rewarded, and gains mythic status by his act of bravery: > With weeping and with laughter Still is the story told, How well Horatius > kept the bridge In the brave days of old.
Moreover, quoting partly from Paul the Apostle, Chrysostom opposed unfair and unjust forms of slavery by giving these instructions to those who owned slaves: " 'And ye masters', he continues, 'do the same things unto them'. The same things. What are these? 'With good-will do service' ... and 'with fear and trembling' ... toward God, fearing lest He one day accuse you for your negligence toward your slaves ... 'And forbear threatening;' be not irritating, he means, nor oppressive ... [and masters are to obey] the law of the common Lord and Master of all ... doing good to all alike ... dispensing the same rights to all".
A poem often referred to as "False Greatness" by Joseph Merrick ("The Elephant Man"), which was used in writing or "signature block" by Merrick, starting "Tis true, my form is something odd but blaming me, is blaming God..." is often (incorrectly) quoted or cited as a work by Isaac Watts. In fact only the last few sentences were penned by Watts ("False Greatness", book II-Horae lyricae 1743) starting "Mylo, forbear to call him bless'd That only boasts a large estate..."Watts, Isaac, The Poems of Isaac Watts, Volumes 44–46, Press of C. Whittingham, 1822, p. 193.
They arrived safely on 3 October, while the British ships searched for them in all the wrong places, having ignored a correct preliminary estimate by observers in Yorkshire. Jones immediately wrote a report to his own government superior, Benjamin Franklin, one notable feature of which was, inevitably, the conduct of Captain Landais. Furious though he was, he wrote, "I forbear to take any steps With him until I have the advice and approbation of your Excellency". Captain Cottineau, on the other hand, placed himself under no such obligation, and called Landais a coward to his face.
145 During the reign of Henry II, the dispute took a new form, concerning the right of either archbishop to carry their archiepiscopal cross throughout the kingdom, not just in their own province. During the vacancy between the death of Theobald of Bec and the appointment of Becket, Roger had secured papal permission to carry his cross anywhere in England. As the Becket controversy grew, however, Alexander asked Roger to forbear from doing so, in order to stop the wrangling that had arisen from Roger's doing so. Later, Alexander revoked the privilege, claiming it had been given in error.
Their food, meanwhile, consists principally of fine bread and > beef; and they generally use abundance of tobacco and whisky. Thus the > quality of the food, and the poisons, in connection with a stimulating > atmosphere, excite their baser passions; and, in the absence of moral > restraint and civil law, they seek indulgence by outrages on the persons of > defenseless Indians. I forbear the recital of horrors. Any American father > or mother can easily imagine what would be the fate of their daughters if, > unprotected and isolated, in valleys and ravines, surrounded by hosts of men > of the class and under the circumstances above described.
Reviews in the Spectator magazine in November 1886 described her novel Bear and Forbear as "one of the good things of the year," and in 1891 described The White House at Inch Gow as "a quite harmless story, prettily told". Pitt's second novel, Fritters: or, 'It's a Long Lane that has no Turning' appeared in 1885 in the "Proverbs" series of "original stories by popular authors founded upon and illustrating well-known proverbs".Selections from Cassell & Company's Publications. It is a "bad-boy- turns-good" story, in which didacticism is accompanied by a realistic narrative set in the London Docklands.
That the only purpose for which power can be rightfully > exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to > prevent harm to others. His own good, either physical or moral, is not > sufficient warrant. He cannot rightfully be compelled to do or forbear > because it will be better for him to do so, because it will make him > happier, because, in the opinion of others, to do so would be wise, or even > right.… The only part of the conduct of anyone, for which he is amenable to > society, is that which concerns others.
Claiming that the muharram chest-beating procession had been portrayed in a derogatory manner in the film, a Chennai-based organization, Tamil Nadu Shia Muslim Jamath, filed a writ petition in the Madras high court to stall the release of the film. In the petition, the Jamath vice-president Tablez Ali Khan of Thousand Lights said the chest-beating procession is mourning the martyrdom of the grandson of Muhammad, and the occasion is sentimental having religious sanctity. He stated that it was a direct attack on the principles of secularism enshrined in the Constitution. The petitioner wanted the court to direct the complaint and forbear the producers from releasing the film.
When Jenyns claimed that madness was a way God ensured that the poor would be content with life, Johnson responded: > On the happiness of madmen, as the case is not very frequent, it is not > necessary to raise a disquisition, but I cannot forbear to observe that I > never yet knew disorders of mind increase felicity; every madman is either > arrogant and irascible, or gloomy and suspicious, or possessed by some > passion or notion destructive to his quiet. He has always discontent in his > look, and malignity in his bosom. And, if we had the power of choice, he > would soon repent who should resign his reason to secure his peace.
She served on the executive board of the Provincetown Players, led by fellow Heterodites Eleanor Fitzgerald and Susan Glaspell, and wrote a history of the company, published many years later.Edna Kenton, The Provincetown Players and the Playwrights' Theatre, 1915-1922 (McFarland and Company 2004). Cheryl Black, "Pioneering Theatre Managers: Edna Kenton and Eleanor Fitzgerald of the Provincetown Players" Journal of American Drama and Theatre (Fall 1997): 40-58. She also wrote a biography of her ancestor Simon Kenton,John Chamberlain, "Simon Kenton, Kentucky Pioneer: Edna Kenton Writes an Excellent Biography of her Forbear, Who, With Boone and Clark, Helped Create our Middle West" New York Times (April 20, 1930): 55.
In the Jewish tradition, God is the Compassionate and is invoked as the Father of Compassion:Lampert K., Traditions of Compassion: From Religious Duty to Social Activism, Palgrave-Macmillan, 2006; hence Raḥmana or Compassionate becomes the usual designation for His revealed word. (Compare, below, the frequent use of raḥman in the Quran). Sorrow and pity for one in distress, creating a desire to relieve it, is a feeling ascribed alike to man and God: in Biblical Hebrew, ("riḥam," from "reḥem," the mother, womb), "to pity" or "to show mercy" in view of the sufferer's helplessness, hence also "to forgive" (Hab. iii. 2), "to forbear" (Ex. ii.
Willow River Power Co., 324 U.S. 499 (1945), Justice Robert H. Jackson addressed whether there was a protectable property interest in a head of water lessened by federal action. He stated: > [N]ot all economic interests are "property rights;" only those economic > advantages are "rights" which have the law back of them, and only when they > are so recognized may courts compel others to forbear from interfering with > them or to compensate for their invasion. ... We cannot start the process of > decision by calling such a claim as we have here a "property right;" whether > it is a property right is really the question to be answered. Such economic > uses are rights only when they are legally protected interests.
Hatten also went to Strassburg. It is not clear whether this priest was the first one preaching Lutheranism in Speyer as there were other clerics during this time known for their Lutheran disposition: Werner of Goldberg who had to resign from his post in St. Martin (northern suburb of Speyer), Michael Diller, prior of the Augustine monastery and Anton Eberhard, prior of the Carmelite monastery. Speyer print shops must have been involved in spreading Lutheran writings early on because in 1522, Pope Hadrian VI called on the city council to forbear print and distribution of such writings. At least as of 1522/23 it can be concluded that the council of Speyer was well disposed to Luther's teachings.
Stratford returned to his Prescott estate in Gloucestershire and began to grow tobacco, raising some capital from Abraham Burrell, but Henry Somerscales as his main partner (Somerscales had learned in the Netherlands how to cultivate tobacco, and took responsibility for the sale of the matured crop). At the same time Stratford was engaged with his half-brother Ralph in soap-boiling in London, and dealt in tallow, potash, soap-ash, and oil. An appeal to the privy council in 1623 prompted their recommendation that his creditors forbear, for one year, later extended, to press for payment. He paid off some debts in sheep, and by growing flax at Winchcombe and Cockbury on 40 acres, employing 800 poor.
In Samguk Sagi, a historical record of the Three Kingdoms era, it is written that ganjang (soy sauce) and doenjang (soybean paste) along with meju (soybean block) and jeotgal (salted seafood) were prepared for the wedding ceremony of the King Sinmun in February 683. Sikhwaji, a section from Goryeosa (History of Goryeo), recorded that ganjang and doenjang were included in the relief supplies in 1018, after a Khitan invasion, and in 1052, when a famine occurred. Joseon texts such as Guhwangchwaryo and Jeungbo sallim gyeongje contain the detailed procedures on how to brew good quality ganjang and doenjang. Gyuhap chongseo explains how to pick a date for brewing, what to forbear, and how to keep and preserve ganjang and doenjang.
" When you assist him, he will forget the "hatred" between you and only remember the bond of love that unites brothers.Bahya ben Asher, Commentary on the Torah (Spain, early 14th century), in, e.g., Midrash Rabbeinu Bachya: Torah Commentary by Rabbi Bachya ben Asher, translated and annotated by Eliyahu Munk (Jerusalem: Lambda Publishers, 2003), volume 7, pages 2625–27. Maimonides Maimonides read "If you see the ass of him that hates you lying under its burden, you shall forbear to pass by him; you shall surely release it with him," together with "You shall not see your brother's ass or his ox fallen down by the way, and hide yourself from them; you shall surely help him to lift them up again.
By the judicious management of Captain Buhoup I was borne from the field under the persistent fire of the foe, who seemed very unwilling to spare the wounded. Being left without a field officer, the companies rallied under their respective captains and, as you are aware, bore themselves gallantly throughout the day in the face of an enemy far outnumbering us. Where all behaved so well, I forbear to make invidious [i.e., onerous] distinctions, and contenting myself with commanding my entire command to your favorable consideration, I beg leave to name particularly Major Atkins, a distinguished Irish soldier, who as a volunteer Adjutant, not only rendered me valuable assistance but with a small detachment captured three pieces of artillery and took three officers prisoners.
The Victorian scholar Arthur Hugh Clough, who updated the poet John Dryden's superb translation of Plutarch to give us the best available version in English, remarked in an introduction: It cannot be denied that [Plutarch] is careless about numbers, and occasionally contradicts his own statements. A greater fault, perhaps, is his passion for anecdote; he cannot forbear from repeating stories, the improbability of which he is the first to recognise. Caesarion's guardians, including his tutor, were themselves either lured by false promises of mercy into returning him to Alexandria or simply betrayed him; the records are unclear. Octavian is supposed to have had Pharaoh Caesarion executed in Alexandria, following the advice of Arius Didymus, who said "Too many Caesars is not good" (a pun on a line in Homer).
Peterson had wanted no part in another magazine published by Thurman, and had been approached by Nugent and Scholley Alexander, to write a monthly theatrical column, under the pretext that Alexander was the editor. Upon receiving a thank-you letter with Thurman's name as editor on the letterhead, she withdrew, despite pleas from Alexander acknowledging Thurman's "selfish treatment of those who have helped him gain a place in the literary world" and stating that he would not let Thurman run amok. Alexander asked Peterson to ask her friends "to forbear -- to with-hold their criticism until they have the _first issue at hand_ to criticize" (original emphasis and underlining). Larsen also declined, on the grounds that she was not going to be paid for her submissions, confessing that her ultimate goal in writing was "money".
They observed that groups of firms in Japan that are members of the same keiretsu coordinate some activities, most notably sharing funding from a group bank implying that the banking relationships within these groups help overcome problems that are present in more arms-length funding arrangements. One example would be providing assistance to firms that are temporarily distressed. Normally, firms with transient low profitability would not be able to convince a lender to forbear on upcoming payments because the lender might fear that doing so would only allow other creditors to be repaid and the lender may never recover its funds if the borrower's fortunes do not improve. Within groups, however, the banks have incentives to take a long-term view and to assist the borrower, recognizing that when the borrower recovers they can recoup their assistance.
Following the trial, the trial Judge, Aron Steuer, the son of trial lawyer Max Steuer, wrote Gair the following on March 18, 1953: :My Dear Mr. Gair, :In the course of over twenty-three years on the bench I have had occasion to listen to some thousands of summations. I have never heard one which was the equal of your effort made yesterday, March 17, 1953, in the action of Froman and Markoff against Pan American Lines. For cogency of argument, selection of material form the record, manner of presentation and delivery, in fact from every standpoint it was masterly. Do not infer from this that I find that any part of the presentation of the case was less than what it ought have been, but only that the summation was so outstanding that I cannot forbear declaring my admiration.
'With good-will do service' ... and 'with fear and trembling' ... toward God, fearing lest He one day accuse you for your negligence toward your slaves ... 'And forbear threatening;' be not irritating, he means, nor oppressive ... [and masters are to obey] the law of the common Lord and Master of all ... doing good to all alike ... dispensing the same rights to all". In his Homilies on Philemon, Chrysostom opposes unfair and unjust forms of slavery by stating that those who own slaves are to love their slaves with the Love of Christ: "this ... is the glory of a Master, to have grateful slaves. And this is the glory of a Master, that He should thus love His slaves ... Let us therefore be stricken with awe at this so great love of Christ. Let us be inflamed with this love-potion.
Socrates said: "You, my good friend, who are experienced in these matters, shall give me directions how I am to proceed." The man answered: "You have only to walk about until your legs are heavy, and then to lie down, and the poison will act." At the same time he handed the cup to Socrates [...] Then raising the cup to his lips, quite readily and cheerfully he drank off the poison. And hitherto most of us had been able to control our sorrow; but now when we saw him drinking, and saw too that he had finished the draught, we could no longer forbear, and in spite of myself my own tears were flowing fast; so that I covered my face and wept, not for him, but at the thought of my own calamity in having to part from such a friend.
How could I, > while for at least an hour traversing those long aisles, ascending the lofty > pulpit, entering the sacred chancel, forbear to ask, And is this the House > of God which was built by the Washingtons, the Mc.Cartys, the Lewises, the > Fairfaxes?—the house in which they used to worship the God of our fathers > according to the venerable forms of the Episcopal Church, and some of whose > names are still to be seen on the doors of those now deserted pews? Is this > also destined to moulder piecemeal away, or, when some signal is given, to > become the prey of spoilers, and to be carried hither and thither and > applied to every purpose under heaven? On the strength of this appeal, the Reverend W. P. C. Johnson, then serving as a tutor at Gunston Hall, became the first post-Colonial rector to serve the church.
' (; ) is a judicial remedy in the form of an order from a court to any government, subordinate court, corporation, or public authority, to do (or forbear from doing) some specific act which that body is obliged under law to do (or refrain from doing), and which is in the nature of public duty, and in certain cases one of a statutory duty. It cannot be issued to compel an authority to do something against statutory provision. For example, it cannot be used to force a lower court to reject or authorize applications that have been made, but if the court refuses to rule one way or the other then a mandamus can be used to order the court to rule on the applications. Mandamus may be a command to do an administrative action or not to take a particular action, and it is supplemented by legal rights.
He explained the Lord's standard of sexual purity as "that they should have save it were one wife, and concubines they should have none, and there should not be whoredoms committed among them" unless directed by God via revelation for the purpose of "rais[ing] up seed unto me". In Jacob's third sermon, to Jacob quotes an allegory of the scattering and gathering of Israel (see Parable of the Olive Tree), which he attributes to another prophet, Zenos. In it, what may have been perceived as the Lord's punishment is re-framed as the Lord's devoted effort to save His original covenant people, as well as to spread his covenant and the blessings that accompany it, to all other nations. Christ is seen as a mediator, calling on the Master of the Vineyard to forbear casting the wicked "into the fire", saying instead "Let us prune it, and dig about it, and nourish it a little longer".
The circumstances I forbear, for they would offend chast ears > to hear them related, (for though he satisfied his lust on her, yet he > indeavored to hinder conception.) These things being thus discovered, the > womans husband tooke some godly friends with him, to deale with Liford for > this evill. At length he confest it, with a great deale of seeming sorrow > and repentance, but was forst to leave Irland upon it, partly for shame, and > partly for fear of further punishmente, for the godly withdrew them selves > from him upon it; and so coming into England unhapily he was light upon and > sente hither. Accordingly, Lyford was expelled from Plymouth Colony, went to Nantasket, then Cape Ann, and finally moved to Virginia, where he died. Because of his immoral behavior, Lyford is grouped with several other men that the Pilgrims considered detrimental to their project of settling a "godly" community in America; among these were Thomas Granger, Thomas Morton, and John Billington.
Alexander had married Margaret, daughter of King Henry III of England and Eleanor of Provence, on 25 December 1251, when he was ten years old and she was eleven. She died in 1275, after they had had three children. # Margaret (28 February 1261 – 9 April 1283), who married King Eric II of Norway # Alexander, Prince of Scotland (21 January 1264 Jedburgh – 28 January 1284 Lindores Abbey); buried in Dunfermline Abbey # David (20 March 1272 – June 1281 Stirling Castle); buried in Dunfermline Abbey According to the Lanercost Chronicle, Alexander did not spend his decade as a widower alone: "he used never to forbear on account of season nor storm, nor for perils of flood or rocky cliffs, but would visit none too creditably nuns or matrons, virgins or widows as the fancy seized him, sometimes in disguise." Towards the end of Alexander's reign, the death of all three of his children within a few years made the question of the succession one of pressing importance.
Bonfire in Freiburg im Breisgau The day of sun solstice is called in German. On June 20, 1653 the Nuremberg town council issued the following order: "Where experience herefore have shown, that after the old heathen use, on John's day in every year, in the country, as well in towns as villages, money and wood have been gathered by young folk, and there upon the so-called or zimmet fire kindled, and thereat winebibbing, dancing about the said fire, leaping over the same, with burning of sundry herbs and flowers, and setting of brands from the said fire in the fields, and in many other ways all manner of superstitious work carried on — Therefore the Hon. Council of Nürnberg town neither can nor ought to forbear to do away with all such unbecoming superstition, paganism, and peril of fire on this coming day of St. John." Bonfires are still a custom in many areas of Germany.
She had consented, on her father's representation that his life would be forfeited if she refused, when Mr Ratcliffe persuaded her to make use of the token which Elshie had given her, and escorted her to his dwelling. He promised that at the foot of the altar he would redeem her; and, just as the ceremony was commencing in the chapel, a voice, which seemed to proceed from her mother's tomb, uttered the word "Forbear." The dwarf's real name and rank were then revealed, as well as the circumstances under which he had acquired the power of thus interfering on Isabel's behalf, while Hobbie and his friends supported Mr Ratcliffe in dispersing the would-be rebels. Sir Edward at the same time disappeared from the neighbourhood, and Mr Vere retired, with an ample allowance, to the Continent, all the Ellieslaw property, as well as the baronet's, being settled on Earnscliff and his bride Isabel.
In one of her letters written back home, famously from the interior of a bath house, she dismisses the idea that slaves of the Ottoman elite should be figures to be pitied. In response to her visit to the slave market in Istanbul, she wrote "you will imagine me half a Turk when I don't speak of it with the same horror other Christians have done before me, but I cannot forbear applauding the humanity of the Turks to those creatures. They are never ill-used, and their slavery is in my opinion no worse than servitude all over the world." She did not write about African slavery in the Western world, but the Jonathan Richardson the Younger portrait that depicts Montagu accompanied by a young black slave boy in a golden collar who holds an umbrella shows that she was intimately familiar with and participated in the tradition in which European aristocracy owned young black servants and used them as part of their social equipage.
Martin arrived at Naples on the afternoon of 19 August, with orders to capture, sink or burn any vessels carrying military stores and supplies he found there and 'to use his utmost to lay the said city in ashes, unless the King of the two Sicilies shall agree forthwith not only to withdraw his troops now acting in conjunction with those of the King of Spain in Italy, but to forbear from giving in future any assistance of what kind soever.' Martin sent his flag captain, Merrick de L'Angle, onshore to present the terms to the King, demanding that an answer be returned within half an hour. The small squadron was considerably more powerful than anything the Neapolitans could muster, and after calling an emergency council, the King and his ministers attempted to make conditions, sending a deputy back to Martin with de L'Angle. Martin instead stated that he was sent ‘as an officer to act, not a minister to treat’, and once more demanded the King comply with the demands.
To realize a figured bass at sight was an expected accomplishment for any professional accompanist, an essential part of his musical training. In 1761 the nine-year old Muzio Clementi, to qualify for an organ post in Rome, passed a test where candidates were given a figured bass and told to perform an accompaniment, after which they were obliged to transpose it into various keys. A top realizer had to be a master of composition, insisted Roger North (1710): > Altho a man may attain the art to strike the accords true to a thro-base > [thorough bass] prescribed him according as it is figured, yet he may not > pretend to be master of his part, without being a master of composition in > general, for there is occasion of so much management in ye manner of play, > sometimes striking only by accords, sometimes arpeggiando, sometimes > touching ye air, and perpetually observing the emphatick places, to fill, > forbear, or adorne, with a just favour, that a thro-base master, and not an > ayerist, is but an abecedarian. Even more demanding was partimento, in which composers were taught to improvise not just an accompaniment but a fully-fledged composition.
Oastler's imprisonment brought reconciliation with former allies who had broken with him, and visits and gifts not only from his supporters from every class but also from political opponents who thought Thornhill's conduct oppressive. Various intercessions on his behalf with Thornhill were fruitless; to a resolution passed by a Leeds meeting Thornhill replied "that I have no enmity towards Mr Oastler, but that after the treatment I have received from him, I cannot in justice to myself, or my family, set him at liberty, without security for his debt to me."letter dated Riddlesworth 2 October quoted in full in In prison Oastler wrote (weekly) his "Fleet Papers", ostensibly letters addressed to Thornhill reviewing current political affairs, published and sold for 2d per issue . This was the only means by which he could earn money, and the only way he could continue to resist the advances of 'political economy': "I can only now aid by my pen; but I will strive to do the duty of an Englishman, and, "whether they will hear or they will forbear," I will warn the people of the danger to which the Liberal schemes of the self-styled Free-trading Philosophers must eventually lead them.".

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