collaterality造句
例句与造句
- Yet inheritance by agnatic primogeniture and male collaterality are among the fundamental laws of the French succession.
- If it is not, the heir to the throne by male collaterality is Louis de Bourbon.
- The dethroned King Alfonso XIII of Spain succeeded in that position by primogeniture and male collaterality ( his great-grandfather was the next younger brother of Ferdinand VII ).
- According to them, as the heir to the throne receives the crown by heredity, primogeniture and male collaterality, any designation is therefore unnecessary since the king is in any case the eldest of the Capetians.
- :Two persons who share a grandparent are " first cousins " ( one degree of collaterality ); if they share a great-grandparent they are " second cousins " ( two degrees of collaterality ) and so on.
- It's difficult to find collaterality in a sentence. 用collaterality造句挺难的
- :Two persons who share a grandparent are " first cousins " ( one degree of collaterality ); if they share a great-grandparent they are " second cousins " ( two degrees of collaterality ) and so on.
- If the renunciation is valid for Philip V of Spain and his descendants ( Spanish Bourbons, Bourbon-Two Sicilies, Bourbon-Parma ), then the heir of the Count of Chambord by male collaterality is Henri of Orleans.
- But in 1830, King Ferdinand VII of Spain made his daughter Isabella succeed him, disregarding his brother, Carlos de Borbon, who, at the death of the King of Spain in 1833, became the eldest of the Spanish Bourbon branch by primogeniture and male collaterality.
- The parliament then expressed its concern that these fundamental laws, heredity, primogeniture, male collaterality, inalienability of the crown combine with Catholicism and the French character to declare a king ( " declare " and not " designate "; for the Parliament has no sovereignty, it can only declare that the king is legitimate based on the laws of the kingdom ).
- It is clear that the constitution of the fundamental laws is empirical : masculinity, Catholicity and inalienability for example, have been added or rather clarified because there is uncertainty on points considered already implied by others or by custom ( as was the case for masculinity, practiced with the rule of male collaterality, in 1316 and 1328 before being formulated in 1358 and formally put into effect in 1419 ).