Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Donald Bruce has meanwhile started to have serious suspicions about the situation.
He said that "raises serious suspicions" about Iran's true intent.
But if serious suspicion fell on me, I could kiss my livelihood good-bye.
Though the majority of his victims were elderly, there was a "quite serious suspicion" that he had killed one patient aged four.
India and China fought a war in 1962 and continue to have serious suspicions on their mutual border.
And when it is found empty, will not your plans be ruined, and I fall under the most serious suspicion?"
But investigators have been hampered by German laws that prevent authorities from making arrests without serious suspicion of illegal activity.
"You are my servant, and a servant of whom I have conceived the most serious suspicions.
"All of those in combination raised some serious suspicions," Mr. Cudden said.
Yet because she knew how to act and how to speak, Mere avoided detection and serious suspicion."
There is a serious suspicion that large quantities of fish are landed illegally in a number of Member States, bypassing the quotas.
"There is serious suspicion that North Korea might have abducted Japanese citizens," said a senior Japanese official.
When, in 1966, Father Weksler-Waszkinel was about to be ordained, the rector told him there were serious suspicions that he had not been baptized.
He came into prominence to a wider public in the Netherlands in 2012, only after he retired, because of serious suspicions of scientific misconduct.
He is also accused of tolerating incompetent Cabinet ministers whom he personally likes, and even some under serious suspicion of corruption.
And an English officer canna compel the person of a Scot, unless he's firm evidence of a crime committed, or grounds for serious suspicions.
Mr. Dodd said he had "serious suspicions" about Mr. Starr's independence.
It is indeed difficult to imagine that there could have been a serious suspicion of murder, or the slightest grounds for implicating any particular individual as the perpetrator.
The point is that a careful reading of this fluent and apparently self-conscious critical analysis of a culture raises serious suspicions about the nature of its claims.
If I have to talk of disappointments, then I am disappointed at the Libyan Government which is doing nothing to help allay this serious suspicion.
The court said that on the basis of the available documents, Mr. Honecker, who is 78 years old, was under "serious suspicion" of "manslaughter in several cases."
Aruban law allows for arrest on serious suspicion from investigators; to continue holding the suspect in custody, an increasing evidentiary burden must be met at periodic reviews.
The Afghan authorities have arrested 15 people, most of them guards at the ministry where the shooting occurred, but they admit that none are under serious suspicion of committing the crime.
But if your daughter and Noah Armstrong are shown in that tape doing what Mr. Carson claims they were doing, your entire story will come under serious suspicion.
Further serious suspicions of his orthodoxy seem afterwards to have arisen, and the papal secretary at the Council of Trent, Angelo Massarelli, undertook an Inquisition.