donative Meaning in Tamil ( donative வார்த்தையின் தமிழ் அர்த்தம்)
Noun:
தாய் நாட்டுக்காரன், தாய் நாட்டுக்காரி,
Adjective:
பிறப்பரிமை,
People Also Search:
donatorsdonatory
doncaster
donder
dondering
done
done for
done in
donec
donee
donees
donegal
doneness
doner
donative's Usage Examples:
succeeding to his father a serious revolt of the troops took place, which led to the institution of the regular payment of an accession donative to the Bayezid 11.
By this statute the term benefice is defined to mean benefice with cure of souls and no other, and therein to comprehend all parishes, perpetual curacies, donatives, endowed public chapels, parochial chapelries and chapelries or districts belonging or reputed to belong, or annexed or reputed to be annexed, to any church or chapel.
In a donative advowson, the sovereign, or any subject by special licence from the sovereign, conferred a benefice by a simple letter of gift, without any reference to the bishop, and without presentation and institution.
At his accession the financial straits of the treasury were such that the usual donative could not be given to the janissaries.
Before 1898 there were also donative advowsons, but the Benefices Act 1898 made all donations with cure of souls presentative.
the absence of the usual donative to the troops; and the demoralization in both army and court made further resistance useless.
, whom he succeeded in 1481, but only after gaining over the janissaries by a large donative, which henceforth became for centuries the invariable prerogative of that undisciplined body on the accession of a new sultan.
He hastened to propitiate the former by a donative of twice the usual amount, and excused his hasty acceptance of the throne to the senate by alleging the impatient zeal of the soldiers and the necessity of an imperator for the welfare of the state.
- A Roman Catholic cannot present to a benefice, prebend, or other ecclesiastical living, or collate or nominate to any free school, hospital or donative (3 Jac.
The living is a donative curacy in the diocese of Durham, value £ 93, in the patronage of Sir M.
It is still more surprising that the soldiers should have quietly submitted to a reduction in the amount of the donative or gift which it was customary for them to receive from a new emperor, though the civil population of the capital were paid their largess (congiarium) in full.