constitution 例文
EN[ˌkɒnstɪˈtjuːʃən]US
日憲法 ウコンスティチューション (法学)
- 例文 constitution
- to be shattered in intellect; to have shattered hopes, or a shattered constitution
- That the divine will is expressed by it, Cumberland, “not being so fortunate as to possess innate ideas,” tries to prove by a long inductive examination of the evidences of man's essential sociality exhibited in his physical and mental constitution.
- But the President himself says that " upon him has been devolved, by the constitution, and the suffrages of the American people, the duty of superintending the operation of the executive departments of the Government,
- Every whiffler in a laced coat who frequents the chocolate house shall talk of the constitution. — Swift.
- the same food does not agree with every constitution.
- The supreme court, therefore, may assume jurisdiction over subjects and between parties, not allowed by the constitution, and there is no power in the federal government to gainsay it.
- 例文 constitutions
- 1609. John Skene (trans.), Regiam majestatem: the auld lawes and constitutions of Scotland: Ilke ane of them sall haue sameikill, as is within his awin lordship and dominion.
- Under unicameral constitutions the legislative bodies are single assemblies, in the bicameral Westminster model the legislative body is a parliament comprising two houses or chambers
- Victorian women who weren’t locked up for falling victim to lypemania (melancholy), monomania, homicidal monomania or “moral insanity” were at risk of neurasthenia, a “mirror image of rebellion” in which their “nervous depletion” was explained as the result of their “incursion into the masculine sphere of intellectual labor,” a strain that constitutions formed for tender sentiment couldn’t be expected to support.
Examples of constitution in a Sentence
出典: ウィクショナリー