Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
That could create complications for the imposers of trans-border justice.
Therefore, in order to escape from the guards, Tin Lik had to be the imposer.
My dear Hermogenes, the first imposers of names must surely have been considerable persons; they were philosophers, and had a good deal to say.
Those dumb diehards, say the world's imposers.
Treating the duel imposers of refereeing injustices for and against may be the mark of a well rounded man.
Is that asking too much of the bands of fixers and selectors and imposers of candidates?
- Parce que je ne peux pas lui imposer cette situation plus longtemps, Mary.
But now I have been utterly defeated, and have failed to discover what that is to which the imposer of names gave this name of temperance or wisdom.
The cause of the war was the new imposer to the Imperial throne Andronicus Comnenus that was not recognized as legitimate by the Hungarian crown.
Labour are spendthrifts by instinct, imposers of crippling taxes by necessity and blissfully unconcerned about causing high inflation, uncontrollable cost of living and economic chaos.
SAINT-MEGRIN Il fallait imposer aux parlements la puissance de votre volont'.
Microsoft, the great imposer of unilateral standards, provided the industry with a Fellini-esque moment last week when an executive was quoted as saying, "We should all just speak the same language," adding, "It shouldn't matter what software or phone you are using."
Before the Second World War, many Filipino intellectuals and artists - including painters, as personified by Don Lorenzo Marasigan - searched for cultural enlightenment from Spain, the first imposer of colonialism and authority in the Philippines.
Officers of the Indian Trade Service manning the Directorate General of Anti Dumping (DGAD) have been effectively controlling dumping by the trading nations and India is the second largest imposer of anti-dumping duties.
To Mr. Frank, much of the guru-ification during the go-go 90's was, at its core, not an economic phenomenon but a political one abetted by journalists, in which business was portrayed as rational and trustworthy, and government was portrayed as "the enemy of markets, arbitrary imposer of taxes and regulations."