concernment การใช้
- The concernment in the songs also owed to Vedder being a father, as the singer detailed that " It s going to be their world and what is their future?
- In New Town a new government was voted in, which claimed authority over " all matters of publicke concernment . " They still paid taxes to Old Town and expected services from it.
- As the end of the 19th century approached, Republicans began to agitate for limits on immigration; the GOP's 1880 platform viewed the flood of Chinese immigrants to the United States " as a matter of grave concernment ."
- She further saith that about a full moneth after the first rising one Charles mc Gouran of Ballimackgouran, Co . Cavan aforesaid came to the priests house situate neer this deponents dwelling house & thence tooke away 2 of this deponents trunks full of fine linen wearing apparell & plate & other goods & writings of great concernment, & broke open the said Trunks & made vse of the goods therin, though he had formerly engaged not to medle with them but to keep them safe for this deponent : whereby this deponent lost aboue ?00 sterling.
- Of the others named, and many besides, it could be said with approximate truth that their ideal was " a full presentation and a liberal discussion of all questions of public concernment, from an entirely independent position, and a faithful and impartial exhibition of all movements of interest at home and abroad . " As all three were not only upright and independent, but in various measure gifted with the quality of statesmanship at once philosophical and practical, their newspapers were powerful molders of opinion at a critical period in the history of the nation.
- She further saith that about a full moneth after the first rising one "'Charles mc Gouran of Ballimackgouran, Co . Cavan "'aforesaid came to the priests house situate neer this deponents dwelling house & thence tooke away 2 of this deponents trunks full of fine linen wearing apparell & plate & other goods & writings of great concernment, & broke open the said Trunks & made vse of the goods therin, though he had formerly engaged not to medle with them but to keep them safe for this deponent : whereby this deponent lost aboue ?00 sterling.
- Keayne left a 53-page will, covering a range of topics, which notably left several hundred pounds to establish the First Town-House, a building to " be used by the town and county government and be shared by the military company, with convenience for a market and conduit near by . " Remarking on the need for a covered market, he wrote : " I having long thought and considered the want of some necessary things of public concernment which may not be only comodious, but very profitable and useful for the Town of Boston, as a market place . . . useful for the country people that come with their provisions for the supply of the towne, that they may have a place to sett dry in and warme, both in cold raine and durty weather, and may have a place to leave their corne or any other things safe that they cannot sell, till they come again, which would be both an encouragement to come in and a great means to increase trading in the Towne also ."