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    Utiliser "chancellor of the exchequer" dans une phrase

    chancellor of the exchequer exemples de phrases

    chancellor of the exchequer


    1. Chancellor of the Exchequer in Great Britain during the Thatcher years, Nigel Lawson, in his book An Appeal to Reason A Cool Look at Global Warming takes the open approach of accepting the worst of the warming predictions, and then asks some questions


    2. The MoD, at the request of the Chancellor of the Exchequer, in response has frozen the contract until the formal investigation has been completed


    3. was appointed was Chancellor of the Exchequer, a financial position not to his


    4. In 1924 he switched sides again and became a thorn inside the government ruining its plans by making bad decisions and losing the govts money as Chancellor of the exchequer: Once again the evil of his undead filth made sure all positive efforts to improve Britain’s people and govt were checked


    5. They awaited the arrival of Henrai Maidyn and Daryus Parkair, the Republic’s Chancellor of the Exchequer and Seneschal, who were en route to the embassy to discuss the latest dispatches from General Stohnar and Duke Eastshare


    6. It was produced by Dave Edmunds and performed by music hall comedian and Samuel Beckett actor Max Wall, and called “England’s Glory,” a catalog of beloved and reviled institutions from a chocolate confectionery to the Chancellor of the Exchequer


    7. The weight of the House of Commons is felt too sensibly there for their inclinations not to be sounded by motions from their Chancellor of the Exchequer, and their members of opposition, in relation to the great course of foreign affairs


    8. And I will now ask the gentleman from Massachusetts whether, if the Chancellor of the Exchequer, or any other higher authority in Great Britain, should write a letter to Sir William Scott, and a circular letter to the Collector of Liverpool, informing them that the Orders in Council did not apply to American vessels from and after the 1st November, he would not deem those letters to be evidence of the fact? If so, why not give the same credence to the letters of the Duke of Massa and the Duc de Gaete? I wish to preserve the faith of the nation


    9. Those English merchants state that it was made up and received from our trade with continental Europe; this has not been disproved by the British Chancellor of the Exchequer, nor by his friend Stevens, of War in Disguise—it is a fact; they cannot deny it


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