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mandation
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mandation
manˈdation Sc. [f. mandate v.: see -ation.] The action of committing (a sermon) to memory.1867 J. Macfarlane Mem. T. Archer i. 15 Some of the most acceptable ministers of the Gospel have been known to regard ‘mandation’ as a process of slow murder.
Oxford English Dictionary
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Brian France
Some of the rules implemented included mandation of the HANS device for all drivers, installation of SAFER barriers around the outside walls of each track
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mendation
† menˈdation Obs. rare—1. [app. for mandation (not found in this sense, but cf. mandatary, mandate 2 b).] The granting of papal mandates.1561 Godly Q. Hester (1873) 24 And what by mendation, and dyspensation, they gat the nomynation, of euery good benefyce.
Oxford English Dictionary
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Deborah Renshaw
The incident prompted the mandation of spotters whenever their driver was on the track in NASCAR and ARCA.
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Education administration in the United Kingdom
Official mandation of education began with the Elementary Education Act 1870 for England and Wales, and the Education (Scotland) Act 1872 for Scotland.
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Greater South Africa
The British approved Smuts' war aims during the South-West Africa Campaign of 1914-1915, and supported the mandation of German South-West Africa to South
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NHS mandation
In 1988 a joint conference of the Royal College of General Practitioners and the British Medical Association recommended standardisation
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Participatory democracy in the European Union
Presented as a tool to improve direct democracy in the EU , "there is, however, no element of mandation, and thus the measure has been conceived as an
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Temperance movement
In 1881, the WCTU began lobbying for the mandation of instruction in temperance in public schools.
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