Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The results may be expressed compendiously as The numbers are not of course unique.
That the latter manner of search (which is all) they pass over compendiously and slightly as a by-matter.
Not only was the line elegantly sonorous; it was also, I flattered myself, very aptly compendiously expressive.
These practices are compendiously described by the slang terms 'to verbal' and 'the verbals.'
My Lords, this appeal raises an important question on two aspects of what is compendiously, albeit inaccurately, called 'the right of silence.'
You would send them to Africa, out of your sight and smell, and then send a missionary or two to do up all the self-denial of elevating them compendiously.
She further found that the trial judge's overall instructions with respect to other suspects "compendiously captured the alternative routes to liability that were realistically in issue in this trial.
Lindley L.J., in Low v. Bouverie 79, compendiously indicated the lines on which liability might be founded as fraud, breach of duty, warranty and estoppel.
The Merchants Mappe of Commerce; wherein the Vniversall Manner and Matter of Trade is compendiously handled, &c., London, 1638, fol.
The pencil is described as simple if there are n independent vectors so that we may write the set compendiously as where is of simple diagonal form, even through it may include multiple roots.
And to us two youngsters, as we walked along the cinder path beside the rutted road and argued out our perplexities, it seemed that this ridge gave us compendiously a view of our whole world.
Section 71(4) compendiously provides that 'a person benefits from an offence if he obtains property as a result of or in connection with its commission and his benefits is the value of the property so obtained.'
A full account of this history is complicated by the subsequent changes in the phonetics of the nasal vowels, but the development can be compendiously illustrated via the present-day French phonemes /a/ and /ã/:
If he refuses to listen to the lecture and goes on the war path, then, unpleasantly for me, I assure you, I shall be compelled to thrash him and his village, first: and, next, I shall triple the fine he must pay and lecture the law into him a trifle more compendiously."