Caution! The site can't guarantee, that text has age permission. The site is not recommended, if you are less than 18 years old.
The site shows example sentences for English words. How the word or phrase could be used in a sentence?
" ... In New York it is the Appellate Division, not the state’s highest court (the New York Court of Appeals) that is tasked with responsibility for attorney discipline. The high court could theoretically grant Donziger’s request for permission to appeal to it. But I am informed by Massapequa, NY attorney Ira Levine that “[i]t’s a rare disciplinary case that gets to the Court of Appeals. ... [I]f you read the Appellate Division’s decision, it was ... per curiam (grievance proceedings usually are), and to the point. ...[T]he decision appears to discuss routine issues of law and the discretion of the App. Div. to mete out discipline, and does not involve a weighty constitutional, statutory or public policy issue that is likely to occur in the future.” All this makes it unlikely that permission to appeal will be granted by the Court of Appeals. If the saga ends here, then in my opinion the Rule of Law in the Empire State will be enhanced. ... "
" ... In a one-and-a-half page per curiam decision, the Supreme Court made short work (literally) of the state’s argument. Due largely to Justice Scalia’s recent death, the Court’s eight members avoided a wide-ranging opinion that struck down the Massachusetts law. Instead, the Court simply pointed out that the Second Amendment clearly protects “instruments that constitute bearable arms, even those that were not in existence at the time of the founding,” The Court vacated Caetano’s conviction and ordered Massachusetts to hear her case in light of established Supreme Court precedent. Two Justices - Alito and Thomas - would have gone even further and declared the law unconstitutional on the spot. ... "
" ... My favorite line of the Second Circuit (per curiam) opinion is the statement that conservation easements do not represent a per se reduction in fair market value and in fact may even serve to enhance property value. ... "