(1) To say that a given sentence is logically possible is to say that there is a model that satisfies it.
(2) Some Australian states impose a mandatory minimum sentence for wilful murder.
(3) Second, the judge must have already decided to sentence the offender to a prison term of less than two years duration.
(4) Some US states, such as Hawaii, have far more lenient laws than Texas in such cases and would allow treatment rather than a prison sentence or death penalty.
(5) He was ordered to complete a remaining eight month sentence for that offence before starting the latest jail term.
(6) Her husband is serving a three-year sentence for fraud
(7) And in cases of that sort, everyone has always agreed that such words can end a sentence .
(8) But the Supreme Court sympathetically commuted the death sentence to life imprisonment.
(10) This bill will only sentence people to look for charity
(11) He received a three-month sentence
(12) The key word in the last sentence is in quotation marks because, as Tolstoy made clear in War and Peace, there are as many truths about a given battle, after it, as there were participants in it.
(13) Then he has the nerve to put a exclamation mark after the sentence !
(14) This distinction allows us to define a logical truth as a sentence that is true no matter what referring expressions occur in it.
(15) You have to sentence on the basis of the indictment.
(17) The magistrates decided against sending the boy to crown court for a harsher sentence .
(18) Can I finish a sentence in this paragraph without using a question mark?
(19) It's quite different from English, too, in that it puts the verb at the end of the sentence and uses postpositions instead of prepositions.
(20) The relatively lenient sentence has been widely interpreted as a blow to Southeast Asian efforts to combat terrorism.