Используйте «gens» в предложении
gens примеры предложений
gens
1. Your preferential treatment of James, that he gets to see more than some higher gens, that you refused to let the Council reassign him last year
2. The fact that you refuse to take on 1st gens for training, and your lack of attendance at the headquarters
3. He wasn’t a coward, but all 1st gens had their uses away from the actual battle
4. The line of tired witch-hunters wavered, and lesser gens attempted to fight the incorporeal monsters
5. It was true, since returning to Astley Manor that morning they had been trying to locate every witch-hunter - even 1st gens
6. thesomewhat similar use of gens in French
7. Monsieur Homais towards liqueur-time began singing "Le Dieu des bonnes gens
8. Les gens du commun ne trouvent pas de différence entre les hommes
9. Tous ces gens du bas étage sont comme ça when they have to do with a gentleman
10. How should you remember a useless old man for long? 'Live more,' my friend, as Nastasya wished me on my last name-day (ces pauvres gens ont quelquefois des mots charmants et pleins de philosophie)
11. ) Whence, sir, do you get the right, whence do you derive the powers to erect custom-houses in the maritime districts of the United States? To attach to them ten, fifteen, or twenty custom-house officers; and clothe these men with authority to invade the domicile, to break into the dwelling-house of perhaps an innocent citizen? Whence do you get it, sir, except as an implied power resulting from the authority given in the constitution "to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises?" If, under this authority, you can erect these custom-houses and create this municipal, fiscal, inquisitorial gens d'armerie, with liberty to violate the rights of the citizen, to break into his castle at midnight, without even a form of warrant, on a plausible appearance of probability, or probable cause of suspicion of his secreting smuggled goods, which the event may prove to be unfounded—and it will be recollected that a majority of Congress voted for the grant of this power in its most offensive form, when two years since they voted for the act enforcing the embargo—I say, sir, if under this general power to collect duties, you can erect the establishment and give the offensive power just mentioned, can you not, with the concurrence even of the citizens, adopt another more mild and useful mode, and create an establishment for the collection and safe-keeping of the revenue, and place it under the direction of ten or twelve directors, and christen it an office of discount and deposit, or of collection and payment, as you like best? And can you not, when you have thus created it, give to the directors a power, which perhaps they would have without your grant, to receive and keep the cash of those who choose to place it with them and to loan them money at the legal rate of interest, and in some places, as at New York, at nearly fifteen per cent