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Examples
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Porcia aliaeque leges paratae sunt, quibus legibus [270] exilium damnatis permissum est.
C. Sallusti Crispi De Bello Catilinario Et Jugurthino 86 BC-34? BC Sallust
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Pomponius in Dig., 48, 2, 1: non est permissum mulieri publico iudicio quemquam reum facere.
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Alios in cladem meritam praecipitauit indigne acta felicitas; quibusdam permissum puniendi ius, ut exercitii bonis et malis esset causa supplicii.
The Theological Tractates and The Consolation of Philosophy Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius 1908
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Matrimonium nulli ordini hominum in Scriptura interdictum est, sed scortationis et impuritatis vitandae causa omnium ordinum hominibus praeceptum et permissum.
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Matrimonium nulli ordini hominum in Scriptura interdictum est, sed scortationis et impuritatis vitandae causa omnium ordinum hominibus praeceptum et permissum.
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I give the reading of Huschke: "Licere enim etiam, si fato is fuerit mortuus, mortuum dare; nam quamquam diximus, non etiam permissum reis esse, et mortuos homines dedere, tamen et si quis eum dederit, qui fato suo vita excesserit, aeque liberatur."
The Common Law Oliver Wendell Holmes 1888
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In quo si ex sacris litteris hoc quo viginti jam fere annis gavisi sumus matrimonium jure divino permissum esse manifeste liquidoque constabit, non modo ob conscientiæ tranquillitatem, verum etiam ob amabiles mores virtutesque quibus regina prædita et ornata est, nihil optatius nihilque jucundius accidere nobis potest.
The Reign of Henry the Eighth, Volume 1 (of 3) James Anthony Froude 1856
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But we have now the following passage in the Institutes of Gaius: Responsa prudentum sunt sententiae et opiniones eorum, quibus permissum est jura condere; quorum omnium si in unum sententiae concorrupt, id quod ita sentiunt, legis vicem obtinet, si vero dissentiunt, judici licet, quam velit sententiam sequi, idque rescripto Divi Hadrian signiticatur.
History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire — Volume 4 Edward Gibbon 1765
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We must add to this the passage quoted from Pomponius and from such strong proofs, it seems incontestable that the emperors had granted some kind of privilege to certain civilians, quibus permissum erat jura condere.
History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire — Volume 4 Edward Gibbon 1765
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The passage of the Institutes speaks of the different opinions of those, quibus est permissum jura condere.
History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire — Volume 4 Edward Gibbon 1765
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