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    Synonyms and Definitions

    Use "admissible" in a sentence

    admissible example sentences

    admissible


    1. each other with all the means more or less admissible


    2. Unfortunately, none of the evidence I came up with would be considered admissible


    3. courage, creativity and a dialectical approach that is not admissible to the


    4. However, whilst we have a recording of this interview, this is not admissible in any court of law as evidence, and is therefore unusable to support the exoneration of Gary David of this act


    5. He asked the MD to have the visuals on his old cell-phone (which he would hand to the MD’s courier) transferred to tape immediately upon receipt, as this was concrete evidence of the Drug Trade’s Organisation and operation in South Africa and would be admissible in a Court of Law


    6. 4 Jesus appealed only to Moses in his encounter with the Sadducees because this religio-political sect acknowledged the validity of only the five so-called Books of Moses; they did not allow that the teachings of the prophets were admissible as a basis of doctrinal dogmas


    7. The committal hearings finally drew to a close and what was and wasn"t admissible in court was decided


    8. Such recordings were admissible in any Federation court and were as well accepted as testimony given in person


    9. Whether the expense has been incurred is one thing, whether it’s an admissible expense is another


    10. In fact, the majority of all legal battles are won before the case even goes to court by simply determining selectively… which evidence is admissible, and which evidence is not admissible

    11. Dean Alford: "A canon of interpretation, which should be constantly born in mind, is that a figurative sense of words is never admissible except when required by the context" Commentary on Acts 10:42


    12. But it is apt to bring a heavy stuffy look into the atmosphere, and is only really admissible in frankly conventional treatment, in which one has not been led to expect implicit truth to natural effect


    13. Best of all from the government’s viewpoint, criminal conspiracy prosecutions opened up evidence that would otherwise not be admissible at trials of individuals


    14. Every action by any one member of a conspiracy was admissible against every other member of the conspiracy


    15. ’ And Dean Alford says: 'A canon of interpretation which should be constantly borne in mind is that a figurative sense if words is never admissible except when required by the context


    16. Dean Alford, "A canon of interpretation, which should be constantly born in mind, is that a figurative sense of words is never admissible except when required by the context" Commentary on Acts 10:42


    17. “But if he told you just after the confession happened—let’s say, if he walked out of the jail cell, stunned that Noah had confessed, and told you at just that moment, still in a state of excitement and shock—the law considers that statement to be sufficiently reliable to be admissible


    18. “Then nothing you found would have been admissible in court


    19. In the court of Odd, even the most preposterous suspicion was admissible


    20. We must recognize, however, that most of them are technically admissible, in that they represent choices between the ordinary and the more conservative basis of amortizing the fixed assets

    21. These securities do not offer an adequate margin of safety in any admissible sense of the term


    22. In this intimate circle which surrounded her, among the younger members of it, of course, it was considered admissible to play all sorts of pranks, sometimes rather free-and-easy ones, and, in fact, such conduct became a principle among them


    23. People whom fate and their sin-mistakes have placed in a certain position, however false that position may be, form a view of life in general which makes their position seem good and admissible


    24. This is accomplished, in the first place, by impressing all the labouring people, who have not themselves any time to solve moral and religious questions, from childhood, and up to old age, by example and direct teaching, with the idea that tortures and murders are compatible with Christianity, and that, for certain purposes of state, tortures and murders are not only admissible, but even peremptory; in the second place, by impressing some of them, who are chosen by enlistment or levy, with the idea that the performance of tortures and murders with their own hands forms a sacred duty and even an act which is valorous and worthy of praise and of reward


    25. Every war, however short its duration, with its usual accompanying losses, destruction of the crops, thieving, admissible debauchery, looting, murders, with the invented justifications of its necessity and its justice, with the exaltation and eulogizing of military exploits, of love of flag and country, with the hypocritical cares for the wounded, and so forth, corrupts in one year more than do millions of robberies, incendiarisms, murders, committed in the course of hundreds of years by individual men under the influence of the passions


    26. Higginson says that the law of non-resistance is not admissible as a general rule


    27. Is it admissible that the first comer should hypnotize one or more persons, and then do with them as he likes? And especially that the hypnotizer should be the first immoral individual who happens to come along? It is a frightful power in the hands of any one, no matter whom


    28. It is done (1) by instilling, by example and direct instruction, from childhood up, into the working people, who have not time to study moral and religious questions for themselves, the idea that torture and murder are compatible with Christianity, and that for certain objects of state, torture and murder are not only admissible, but ought to be employed; and (2) by instilling into certain of the people, who have either voluntarily enlisted or been taken by compulsion into the army, the idea that the perpetration of murder and torture with their own hands is a sacred duty, and even a glorious exploit, worthy of praise and reward


    29. It was said that the Hall of the House of Representatives was exclusively appropriated to Legislative purposes, and that, at this time, to appropriate it to the purpose of experimental lectures, would afford a precedent which would be injurious; that such a measure, if admissible at all, should not be taken unless the House were convinced of the practicability of the system proposed to be illustrated, because it would hold out the idea that the House of Representatives had sanctioned it


    30. This kind of reasoning, sir, cannot be admissible, and is in hostility with a most manifest principle of the constitution, as it is evidently a prominent feature of that instrument that the General Government should have within itself all those powers necessary and convenient for the execution of its enumerated trusts, entirely free and independent of the interference and agency of the States, their officers, or ministers

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    Synonyms for "admissible"

    admissible accessible permitted available allowable free public unrestricted

    "admissible" definitions

    deserving to be admitted