Example sentences of "[subord] [art] king ['s] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Slightly inset from the circle of houses was the " death-house " itself where the king 's body , with the queen and her two attendants would " be brought to observe the rites from their residence half a mile away .
2 He could no longer explain to us what was going to happen next , but he gave us complete carte blanche to explore and question as we pleased , and suggested that we begin by taking a look at the burial-cliffs , about a mile away from the Rante , where the king 's body would be interred .
3 At the beginning of the play she persuades Edwy to reject offers of peace from the rebellious monks who are , in fact , her enemies far more than the king 's .
4 Among many other observations , Alvares recorded the age-old custom of secluding all members of the royal line , other than the King 's children , on an almost sheer-sided mountain .
5 He was one of those whose wisdom ( to recall the terms of Wyatt 's sonnet ) insisted on his maintaining an unchanged obedience to an authority he ultimately felt to be higher than the King 's .
6 Once it is finished , however , in June 1994 , many of the larger musicals coming to Edinburgh are expected to use the new 1,900-capacity lyric-style theatre rather than the King 's .
7 Although the King 's intentions were not partisan , the consequences were such as to offer very considerable benefit to the Conservative party .
8 They had no estates of any size there , and although the king 's representative in Bordeaux and a number of high officials were English , the government of the duchy was in the hands of the Gascons and places in the Church were filled by Gascon prelates .
9 In July 1318 , pope John XXII wrote to philip V of France informing him that although the king 's court had conferred tutelage of Gaston I 's children on Jeanne , Margaret of Béarn already had Gaston II in her keeping and was in any case to be preferred as guardian of the young count .
10 To ensure that his subjects acquired the habit of carrying out his instructions he had to visit them as often as possible , and although the king 's itinerary was normally publicized in advance — so that merchants and tradesmen , as well as petitioners , could frequent his court without difficulty — it was sometimes useful to turn up without warning .
11 These would not let the travellers pass without payment of two pounds of flesh , so the king 's son cut off his hand and threw it to them .
12 Christine Thexton , Ashfield , Newton Aycliffe : I was in a sanatorium for two years having major surgery for a lung complaint , so the King 's death is deeply implanted in my mind .
13 The first signs of political discontent in England over the conduct of the war surfaced in the parliament of February 1371 , when the commons refused to grant a subsidy until the king 's clerical ministers of state had been replaced by laymen who , unlike their clerical counterparts , would be liable to answer for their misdeeds in the royal courts .
14 There 'll nobody get out of the town by this road until the king 's officers have passed . ’
15 If they had closed the gates to guard against any untoward incident until the king 's men had passed , they would be the less inclined to make any checks of those passing through afterwards .
16 I do wonder if the King 's mad gallop through a storm-blown night finally unhinged his mind and so he caused the King 's death and later died of a broken heart ?
17 If the King 's serjeants-at-law or the lawyers in King 's Bench heard of this , ’ he replied , ‘ they would say you were a traitor .
18 It 'll be a long , long time before anyone in Orkney or Scotia has the time or the heart for shipbuilding , and if the King 's stupid enough to force it on them , they 'll defy him , or starve .
19 That was Henry VIII and he wrote it because the King 's daughter , Princess Elizabeth , was getting married .
20 ‘ There were no sheep in the king 's gardens , ’ explained the bachelor , ‘ because the king 's mother had once had a dream .
21 Whilst the King 's declarations were being read out in the market place , the reader , a local man , seeing Richard Baxter passing by , stopped and shouted , ‘ There goeth a traitor ’ !
22 She understood his grief and his sense of loss and loneliness — she had been there herself , after the King 's death — and she knew about the feelings of despair and the long , long time the scars would take to heal , but she also knew about the importance of carrying on .
23 ‘ Then came back here late the following day after the King 's death became public .
24 The relationship protected Ford from some of the more severe consequences of his own activities and allowed him to prolong his plotting long after the king 's cause was effectively lost .
25 It inevitably became an issue , however , after the king 's death , and Gloucester 's vulnerability was further increased by the death of his kinsman George Neville on 4 May — something which immediately converted the duke 's title to the northern Neville lands into a life interest only .
26 It inevitably became an issue , however , after the king 's death , and Gloucester 's vulnerability was further increased by the death of his kinsman George Neville on 4 May — something which immediately converted the duke 's title to the northern Neville lands into a life interest only .
27 Whether the king 's subjects were patriotic or not was , for the king , of marginal significance .
28 I hope that this debate will be about the valuable contribution that Britain can make to the European community , rather than a sterile argument about whether the king 's prerogatives will be taken over by the Government and given away in the face of the people .
29 However , before the King 's unjust rage had time to ripen , news came that Yusuf had returned and was marching north .
30 The baronial leaders were incensed by these continued tergiversations : when the king 's ordinance was read at St Paul 's in London , there was uproar , and the terms of Edward 's proclamation issued on 25 June showed that he realized the extent and intensity of hostility to the Forest .
  Next page