si quis造句
例句与造句
- Si quis suadente diabolo, C . XVII, q . 4, i . e . the 29th canon of the second part, cause XVII, question 4.
- The accompanying abbreviation SQDLENC is conjectured to stand for " Si quis domi lenocinium exerceat ne conducito " ( " Let no one apply who keeps a brothel " ).
- Item agnoscimus si quis nostrum indecore turbulenterve se gesserit vel si parum diligentem in studiis suis se praebuerit neque admonitus se in melius correxerit eum licere Senatui Academico vel poena congruenti adficere vel etiam ex Universitate expellere . "'
- Barker ( 1947 ) commented " This pair of charters have certain peculiar phrases, especially the " firmiter . . . pr鎠umat " which takes the place of a form introduced by " Si quis " in most charters.
- James V was also a patron to figures including David Peebles ( c . 1510 79 ? ), whose best known work " Si quis diligit me " ( text from John 14 : 23 ), is a motet for four voices.
- It's difficult to find si quis in a sentence. 用si quis造句挺难的
- :Ceterarum rerum praeter hominem et pecudem occisos si quis alteri damnum faxit, quod usserit fregerit ruperit iniuria, quanti ea res fuit in diebus triginta proximis, tantum aes domino dare damnas esto . [ D . 9.2 . 27.5]
- The proSmium opens with the words, " Si quis ignorat ignorabitur; " the treatise itself commences " Dignus es Domine aperire librum . " Luke Wadding says of this work, " Volumen ingens et stylus elegans . " There was formerly a copy at Norwich, and Wadding also mentions that there were manuscripts in the Toledo.
- Some fifteen years earlier, in a letter to the Saxon Chancellor Gregor Br點k, Luther stated that he could not " forbid a person to marry several wives, for it does not contradict Scripture . " ( " " Ego sane fateor, me non posse prohibere, si quis plures velit uxores ducere, nec repugnat sacris literis . " ")
- The point is underlined by the Latin tag beneath the illustration of the injured bird, an adaptation of proverbial lines from the 4th century Latin poet Claudian : " Vivitur exiguo melius ", natura beatis / omnibus esse dedit, " si quis cognoverit uti " ( it is better to live on little, [ nature has provided for all to do so happily, ] could one but know it ).
- What is more, this section of "'P 39 "', which is self-contained on two gatherings ( gatherings 21 22 ), may very well have once been separate from the rest of the manuscript, for it begins with a change of scribal hand, and the text on the last page ends imperfectly ( fol 166v : " Si quis metropolitanus episcopus nisi quod ad suam solummodo propriam pertinet parrochiam sine concilio " ).
- (2 ) " Those who, at the instigation of the devil, violently lay hands on ecclesiastics or religious of either sex, exception being made, as regards reservation, in behalf of cases and of persons that the law or privileges allow the bishop or others to absolve . " This is the celebrated privilege or immunity " of the canon " ( privilegium canonis ), so called from the canon " Si quis, suadente diabolo " ( Decretum of Gratian, C . xvii, q . iv, c . xxix ), enacted by the Council of Lateran in 1139 and intended to protect the honor of the clergy from material violence and injury.
- In a letter to John Mapletoft he refers to a class of detractors " qui vitio statim vertunt si quis novi aliquid, ab illis non prius dictum vel etiam inauditum, in medium proferat " ( " Who by a technicality suddenly turn if something is new, if someone should disclose something not previously said or heard " ); and in a letter to Robert Boyle, written the year before his death ( and the only authentic specimen of his English composition that remains ), he says, " I have the happiness of curing my patients, at least of having it said concerning me that few miscarry under me; but [ I ] cannot brag of my correspondency with some other of my faculty . . . . Though yet, in taken fire at my attempts to reduce practice to a greater easiness, plainness, and in the meantime letting the mountebank at Charing Cross pass unrailed at, they contradict themselves, and would make the world believe I may prove more considerable than they would have me ."