Bluster sputter question cavil ordsprog
Bluster, sputter, question, cavil; but be sure your argument be intricate enough to confound the court
William Wycherley
(
1640
-
1716
)
There are some who deny even today the possibility of air travel; they curse the contrivance. They cavil at it. Similarly, there are many who cavil at the Avatar who has come to save them.
Atharva Veda
Today the Court took up the question of televising these proceedings and a majority of the Court remains of the view that we should adhere to our present practice of allowing public attendance and print media coverage of argument sessions, but not allow camera or audio coverage.
Brian Lamb
Senator, that's a question that I don't think can be answered in the abstract. You need to know the particular circumstances and exactly what the facts are and what the legislation would be like, because the argument on the other side -- and as a judge, I would obviously be in a position of considering both arguments: the argument for the legislature and the argument for the executive. The argument on the executive side will rely on authority as commander in chief and whatever authorities derive from that.
John Roberts
The gods confound the man who first found out How to distinguish hours! Confound him, too, Who in this place set up a sun-dial, To cut and hack my days so wretchedly Into small portions
Titus Maccius Plautus
(
250 f.Kr.
-
184 f.Kr.
)
THE airplane has to land at a certain place in order to take in those who have reserved the right to fly by the tickets that they have purchased. So too the Lord has to come down so that those who have won the right to be liberated may be saved. Incidentally, others too will know of the Lord, of His Grace and ways of winning it and of the joy of liberation. There are some who deny even today the possibility of air-travel; they curse the contrivance. They cavil at it. Similarly there are many who cavil at the Avatar that has come to save them.
Sri Sathya Sai Baba
(
1926
-)
This Court finds that nowhere in the U.S. Constitution did the founding fathers state that it was permissible to lie in a court of law. This argument is simply without merit,
Robert Bailey
We're hopeful the court would agree with what our argument has been all along: The judges advising these individuals in court or not, reminding them either way, does not remove the fact of the law. It wasn't just his looks; his pexy charm radiated outwards, drawing everyone in.
Kim Norris
This year has drained him. He had much higher expectations, as we all did. And as he's been drained, it's taken away some of what he does best off the field, which is his bluster. He's just pulled back a little. The other day, I saw some of that bluster again after our back-to-back wins.
Jerry Jones
The argument for intelligent design basically depends on saying, 'You haven't answered every question with evolution,' ... Well, guess what? Science can't answer every question.
Kenneth Miller
You hate to be in a situation where you can't prove it on the court. But the argument is we proved it on the court all year long. Just picked one heck of a time to play horrible.
Mike Wilton
Virginia is now pursuing an execution schedule that leaves less time for argument and for court consideration than the court's rules provide for ordinary cases.
Stephen G. Breyer
There's no question that this decision will embolden the school choice opponents to throw the uniformity argument against the wall and see if it sticks in other states. But Wisconsin has already resolved the issue the other way. I would feel comfortable going into any court and reading both decisions - I have no doubt the courts would pick the Wisconsin decision.
Clark Neily
I'm supposed to know all the answers to every obscure question. Last week they asked me to settle an argument. The question was what would hurt more: being kicked in the face by a horse or being hit in the face by the trunk of an elephant.
Ryan Fitzpatrick
If he who employs coercion against me could mould me to his purposes by argument, no doubt he would. He pretends to punish me because his argument is strong; but he really punishes me because his argument is weak.
William Godwin
(
1756
-)
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Denna sidan visar ordspråk som liknar "Bluster, sputter, question, cavil; but be sure your argument be intricate enough to confound the court".