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"necessitous" Definitions
  1. NEEDY, IMPOVERISHED
  2. URGENT, PRESSING
  3. NECESSARY

35 Sentences With "necessitous"

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

Exclusive dedication to necessitous chores without interludes of hedonistic diversion renders Jack a hebetudinous fellow.
Taylor of Nottingham, but ultimately changed partners, Wrench marrying Mrs. Taylor and Manly her daughter. Wrench's marriage was not happy. He was charged with leaving his wife necessitous while he indulged in tavern dissipations.
A Start in Life is an Australian charitable organisation that supports young people in necessitous circumstances to access an education as an equal with their peers. The Charity was established in 1923 by William Thompson (New South Wales politician).
She retired in 1884 owing to ill-health, but during her nine years' service she scarcely missed a meeting. Taylor's educational programme included the abolition of school fees, the provision of food and shoes and stockings to necessitous children, the abolition of corporal punishment, smaller classes, and a larger expenditure on all things essential to the development of the child and the health of the teacher. While Taylor was a member of the board, she provided at her own expense, through the teachers and small local committees, a midday meal and a pair of serviceable boots to necessitous children in Southwark.
The famous phrase that "necessitous men are not truly speaking free men" was repeated in Franklin D Roosevelt's 1944 State of the Union Address to justify a Second Bill of Rights in the United States, in favour of basic social and economic guarantees.
The basic admission requirements, at the outset, were reflected in the school's name. A motion to include the word "necessitous" was defeated, but the school's aims were nevertheless charitable. Daughters of needy officers were admitted at £12 per annum, significantly below cost. Other families paid more.
The son of Charles Fearne, judge-advocate of the admiralty, he was born in London, and was educated at Westminster School. Fearne adopted the legal profession, but devoted time and money to experiments: he saw a commercial application to morocco leather, and designed a musket. He died in 1794, leaving his widow and family in necessitous circumstances.
Less than two years later, on 17 November 1789, Charlotte herself died of cancer in Bologna.Noel McFerran, Charlotte, Duchess of Albany at jacobite.ca, accessed 20 March 2011 In her Will, Charlotte did not mention her children but left money to her mother Clementina "to allow her the power of disposing at her death of fifty thousand francs in favour of any of her necessitous relations".Will of Charlotte, Duchess of Albany at jacobite.
We should not disturb that finding. : The majority does not deal with the "exigent circumstances" of the case, because the Government makes no claim for thus "excusing compliance" with the statute. The Court of Appeals expressly based its opinion on the fact that the officers "were confronted by the need for a decision arising from the necessitous circumstances of the situation." The position of the Government does not excuse us from evaluating the circumstances of the whole case.
Charges for prescriptions were increased in April 1953 to 1/- per form. In 1954 the board took responsibility for the Welfare Food Scheme. Orange juice, cod liver oil, and vitamin tablets were distributed through the ten infant welfare clinics. They were free to all children under five, and to expectant and nursing mothers in necessitous circumstances. In the year to March 1956 25,884 bottles of orange juice, 4,776 bottles of cod liver oil, and 594 packets of vitamin tablets were distributed.
In 1780 Parry finished his course, left Homerton, and was ordained to the ministry at Little Baddow in Essex. While there he kept a school, and helped to organise a benevolent society.The Benevolent Society for the Relief of Necessitous Widows and Children of Protestant Dissenting Ministers in the Counties of Essex and Herts, established at Bishop's Stortford in Hertfordshire on 26 October 1789. In 1790 he was active in efforts to obtain the repeal of the Test Act and Corporation Act.
When we remember > that millions are being spent by the Ministry of Health and by Local > Authorities – on pure milk for necessitous expectant and nursing mothers, on > Maternity Clinics to guard the health of mothers before and after > childbirth, for the provision of skilled midwives, and on Infant Welfare > Centres – it is truly amazing that this monstrous campaign of birth control > should be tolerated by the Home Secretary. Charles Bradlaugh was condemned > to jail for a less serious crime. Stopes was incensed.
The Charity was founded in 1923 by William Thompson (New South Wales politician). Originally named "The Masonic Youth Welfare Fund" it initially supported the needy children of deceased or incapacitated Freemasons. The Charity's constitution was expanded in 1972 to provide support to any youth deemed to be in necessitous circumstances, regardless of race, colour, creed or masonic affiliation. Since its establishment, the Charity has provided over AU$13.3 million in support to more than 6,500 students, from pre-school through to university.
The project was aborted when Eftimiu discovered that the necessitous Gaumont would not even hire him as an extra.Eftimiu, pp. 341–346 In the meantime, the fall of Bucharest had left Romania divided: King Ferdinand, his government, and the army proceeded to Western Moldavia, where they continued resistance; in the Wallachian south, Conservative Lupu Kostaki and his allies tolerated, or collaborated with, the German occupation. Mariu was one of Kostaki's associates, and, in January 1918, was appointed secretary of the Wallachian Bishopric, an Orthodox institution.
Born in Scarborough, Ontario, Beaumont lived in Pickering, Ontario until age 4, moving to Courtice and attending Courtice Secondary School for four years. While playing for the school, Beaumont won the 2008–09 LOSSA Championship going on to compete in OFSAA. As a child, Beaumont practiced a range of sports, such as hockey and basketball to develop necessitous life skills such as communication. His high school allowed an 'exceptional player clause' for Beaumont due to his talent, promoting him from their junior to senior team.
This is a story of Vishali (Madhumitha), a Chennai girl, and the problems she faces in her family and office. Her boss believes that Vishali in disguise and is not just a working- Chennai girl, but the princess of Paandiyaapuram! Thaayamma, the princess of Paandiyaapuram, is very kind hearted, yet brave woman, who cares about the welfare of people of Paandiyaapuram. Her father is (Sarath Babu) Andavaar, the Zamindar of Paandiyaapuram, he is a wise man, he is considers the welfare of the people and helps the necessitous.
He ventilated the subject energetically before his own council and vestry as well as on various public occasions. In February, 1859, he issued a circular proposing "a scheme for a Board of Guardians for the relief of the necessitous foreign poor." This scheme exhibited a great insight into the needs of the poor, as well as a comprehensive idea of the machinery necessary to relieve them. The keynote of the circular and scheme was organization, and the subsequent development of the board had been strictly on the lines of Alex's original conception.
The Beginner and Intermediate Choirs are open to all, whilst admission to the Senior and Chamber Choirs is by audition. FCMG has no core funding: running costs are met entirely from members’ subscriptions. The children are drawn from a wide variety of social, cultural and economic backgrounds and financial support is available for those of necessitous financial circumstances so that as many children as possible may benefit from being part of the Group. This support derives from local authority grants or from our own bursary fund which is sourced mainly by voluntary donations from parents.
Running in front of a large crowd in the Irish Derby at the Curragh Waygood started at odds of 6/1 in a field of fifteen runners. He was ridden by Morny Wing and won by an official margin of four lengths, taking a first prize of £4,650. Walter Raphael, donated £50 from his winnings to the Drogheda Memorial Fund, a charity which helped jockeys and trainers in "necessitous circumstances". As a four-year-old, Waygood finished unplaced behind Parth in the Jubilee Handicap at Kempton Park Racecourse.
In his last four years he purchased ten life presentations for girls to St Anne's and presented them to the governing body of Epsom College for necessitous orphan daughters of medical men of not less than five years' practice. The cost of these amounted to the sum of £12,000. He was also a Vice-President of the British Medical Benevolent Fund, and a generous donor to it. In June 1874, John F France, offered to provide a chapel for the proposed Kensington Workhouse, 'to be erected free of all cost to the Guardians'.
I believe that the Court of Appeals was eminently correct in its conclusion that "necessitous circumstances" here warranted the officers in entering the apartment. As that court pointed out, petitioner might have fled or hidden himself or destroyed the fruits of his crime, particularly in view of his background and the visit of his brother-in- law Shepherd only a few moments before. Certainly he soon would have learned of Shepherd's arrest. Moreover, his attempt to forcibly prevent the entry of the officers into his apartment required their immediate action.
Hobhouse worked his parish with zeal and declined offers of better preferment. Bishop Samuel Wilberforce made him rural dean, and as secretary of the diocesan board of education he did much for the church schools, and helped to found the Culham training college for schoolmasters. On his father's death in 1854 he devoted part of his patrimony to providing at St. Edmund Hall and St. Alban Hall, Oxford, help for necessitous students. On the subdivision of the diocese of New Zealand, Bishop George Augustus Selwyn obtained the appointment of Hobhouse to the new see of Nelson, for which he was consecrated in 1858.
He was not reinstated, and died in extreme poverty in May 1658. His wife Katherine and children (one of whom, his son Patrick, was at the University) were given help by the Kirk Session of Cambuslang in January 1659 and June 1662 (just at the time of the Restoration, two years too late for Patrick). There was a collection among churches in Lothian in October 1660 for her "on account of her necessitous and indigent condition, especially considering she is a minister’s relict, and a minister’s daughter, and has the approbation of a good Christian". The following year she got £60 from Parliament, and there the record ends.
The National Health Service (NHS) had yet to be established, and registration of nurses was not introduced until 1919. At the time no health and safety acts had been passed by Parliament and public health had yet to become a priority for the state. In setting up the society, Macmillan "wanted to see homes for cancer patients throughout the land, where attention will be provided freely or at low cost, as circumstances dictate... [and]... panels of voluntary nurses who can be detailed off to attend to necessitous patients in their own homes." Macmillan managed the charity, along with other volunteers, while working full-time as a civil servant.
In 1910, the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws approved the Uniform Desertion and Non-Support Act. The act made it a punishable offense for a husband to desert, willfully neglect or refuse to provide for the support and maintenance of his wife in destitute or necessitous circumstances, or for a parent to fail in the same duty to his child less than 16 years of age. The 1910 act sought to improve the enforcement of the duties of support, but it did not take into account payers who fled the jurisdiction. With the increasing mobility of the population, welfare departments had to support the destitute families because the extradition process was inefficient and often unsuccessful.
The want of interest, amounting even to hostility, with which Platen's enthusiasm for the purity and dignity of poetry was received in many literary circles in Germany increased the poet's indignation and disgust. In 1826 he visited Italy, which he henceforth made his home, living at Florence, Rome and Naples. His means were slender, but, though frequently necessitous, he felt happy in the life he had chosen, that of a "wandering rhapsodist". Offended by Heinrich Heine’s mockery of "die Orientsucht"the obsession with the Orient in poetryin his work Reisebilder, zweiter Teil (1827), Platen expressed anti-Semitic sentiment directed at Heine in his work Der romantische Oedipus (1828). Heine reacted in turn by publicizing Platen’s homosexuality in Reisebilder dritter Teil (1830).
E. W. West (SBE 24) at xvi-xvii.The continuation in Iran > of the spiritual heritage of Zoroastrianism, that occurred from within > Islamic circles, is discussed by Henry Corbin in his Terre céleste et corps > de résurrection: de l'Iran mazdéen à l'Iran shî'ite (Paris: Buchet-Chastel > 1960), translated as Spiritual Body and Celestial Earth. From Mazdean Iran > to Shī'ite Iran (Princeton University 1976; reprint: I. B. Tauris 1990). Notwithstanding, Mardan-Farrukh asks why (if no adversary like Ahriman pre- existed as an independent source of evil) would the sacred being, who acts judiciously and desires universal "happiness and prosperity", come to create a world that results in "misery for multitudes of the innocent who are distressed, poor, necessitous, and sick."E.
In 1910, the National Conference of Commissions on Uniform State Laws approved the Uniform Desertion and Non-Support Act. The act made it a punishable offense for a spouse to desert, willfully neglect, or refuse to provide for the support and maintenance of the other spouse in destitute or necessitous circumstances, or for a parent to fail in the same duty to their child less than 16 years of age. The 1910 act sought to improve the enforcement of the duties of support, but it did not take into account husbands, wives, fathers, and mothers who fled the jurisdiction. With the increasing mobility of the population, welfare departments had to support the destitute families because the extradition process was inefficient and often unsuccessful.
It appears that Clementina lived on in Fribourg, Switzerland, until her death in 1802 and that it was she who reared Charlotte's children in deliberate anonymity. Their identities were concealed by a variety of aliases and ruses, not even being mentioned in Charlotte's detailed will. The will makes reference only to Clementina and to Charlotte's desire that Clementina might be able to provide for "her necessitous relations". The reason these children remained secret can be explained by the fact that the relationship between Rohan, the Archbishop, and Charlotte, who had been forbidden to marry, was highly illicit and would have been scandalous. Marie Victoire Adelaide (born 1779) and Charlotte Maximilienne Amélie (born 1780) were thought to have been placed in the care of Thomas Coutts, the London banker, and a distant relative of the Walkinshaws.
Armstrong sank his small fortune in the publication of his three-guinea quarto, and in a pecuniary sense he was a considerable loser by its publication. For about twenty-two years he maintained his family by establishing the South Lambeth Grammar School, and on his retirement from the head-mastership to Richmond in 1852 a representation of his necessitous condition was sent to Lord Palmerston, who obtained for him a civil list pension of £60. This opportune assistance and a grant from the Royal Literary Fund enabled him to recommence his scholastic business, which, though now of small proportions on account of his great age, he continued till he was struck down by paralysis about a week before he died. In 1826 he had been appointed Gaelic lexicographer in ordinary to the king, but the appointment was honorary and no salary was attached to it.
The staircase at the Royal Society of Chemistry, Burlington House, designed by the partnership of Robert Richardson Banks and Charles Barry, Jr. The Chemists' Community Fund, the working name of the Royal Society of Chemistry's Benevolent Fund, supports the members and their families during difficult times, through advice and guidance, financial and volunteer support. It dates back to 1920 when the Institute of Chemistry (later the Royal Institute of Chemistry) established it as a memorial to its members who died in the First World War. It had an aim "to help necessitous persons who are, or have been, Fellows or Associates of the Institute, their wives or children, and the widows and dependent relatives of deceased Fellows and Associates" through voluntary contributions from members. The Fund's ethos of "members helping members" stems from the Institute of Chemistry's Council raising money for members in need from other members prior to the fund being formed.
Its constitution proclaimed: > "It is universally admitted that the combined operation of the mechanic > powers hath been the source of those useful inventions and scientific arts, > which have given to polished society its wealth, conveniences, > respectability, and defence, and which have ameliorated the condition of its > citizens. Rational, therefore, is the inference, that the association of > those who conduct those powers will prove highly beneficial to them, by > promoting mutual good offices and fellowship; -- by assisting the > necessitous; -- encouraging the ingenious; -- and rewarding the faithful." 150px Founding members included tailors, hatters, hairdressers, bakers, blacksmiths, whitesmiths, goldsmiths, watchmakers, coopers, engine-builders, painters, printers, bookbinders, booksellers, curriers, shipwrights, riggers, sailmakers, ropemakers, cabinet-makers, housewrights, masons, bricklayers, paint-sellers, saddlers, farriers, furriers, cordwainers, silk-dyers. Among the first members were Paul Revere and Paul Revere, Jr., goldsmiths; Benjamin Russell, printer; David West, bookseller; Samuel Perkins, painter; Ephraim Thayer, engine-builder; Jedediah Lincoln, housewright; Edmund Hartt, shipwright; Samuel Gore, painter; and several dozen others.
Jane's sister, Mary, was left a sum of £200 and £50 per year and her brother Edward £100 and £25 per year. The Officers Mess of the Horse Guards was to receive a legacy of £300 for the purchase of plate. Various charities also benefited from the will, as follows: :...to the Magdalen Asylum on the Blackfriars Road £300; to the Blind Asylum, London Road £300; to the Deaf and Dumb Asylum, Old Kent Road £300; to the Orphan Asylum, Clapton £300; to the Female Orphan Asylum, Westminster £300; to Saint Georges Hospital, Grosvenor Place £300; to the Westminster Lying-in Hospital £300; to the Bethlem Diameter Hospital, Lambeth £500; to the Society for the Refuge of Destitute Women, Sackville Road £200; to the Institute for the cure of Cancers in the Kent Road £250; to the Rector and Corporation of New Windsor £1,000, to be given as loans to necessitous shopkeepers and tradespeople. A further £2,000 was to be used for the support of six poor persons of 54 or more years of age.
A Start in Life's mission is to assist young Australians in necessitous circumstances to overcome the barriers to their education, enabling them to reach their potential. The Charity proposes that by improving the educational outcomes of disadvantaged young people, it can help these young people to rise above their circumstances, thereby breaking cycles of poverty and disadvantage. A Start in Life works to achieve its mission by: ensuring the provision of adequate early, primary, secondary and tertiary education for those referred to the Charity for support; providing financial aid for educational essentials, including any necessary clothing, textbooks and equipment; recognising scholastic attainments; promoting access to higher learning or specialist training; and actively encouraging the vocational or professional ambitions or aptitudes of the students supported by the Charity. A Start in Life has expressed a commitment to increasing its support to students to beyond educational essentials, including: providing opportunities for social and extra-curricular pursuits; ensuring access to digital technology; providing financial aid for after-school tuition in areas of underperformance; providing financial aid for school camps and excursions; and assisting young people to access treatment for health and medical conditions which are seen to interfere with performance and attendance.
The reason for this reference to "3000 years" is that in a primitive protective measure, the common law said mortgage terms must always allow for the property to be redeemed in the end, when the debt is repaid. In the 18th century decision of Vernon v Bethell(1762) 28 ER 838 Lord Henley LC refused to enforce the conveyance of Vernon's sugar plantation in Antigua to a deceased London lender, Bethell, when Vernon had trouble repaying, even though some exchanges between the two had raised the possibility of giving up the land to satisfy the debt. Given the considerable interest paid already, Lord Henley LC held it would frustrate (or "clog") Vernon's right to redeem property. As he put it protection for the borrower was warranted because "necessitous men are not, truly speaking, free men, but, to answer a present exigency, will submit to any terms that the crafty may impose upon them". Accordingly, the rule developed that "once a mortgage, always a mortgage",Seton v Slade (1802) 7 Ves 265, 273 meaning a mortgage cannot be turned into a conveyance of the property by the operation of terms in an agreement.

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