- Adjudicated
- Are you guided or governed?
- Commanded
- Decreed that lines should be straight
- Excluded, ... out
- Exercised ultimate authority over
- Got crowned
- Listing
- Containing directions; enjoining; instructing;
directorial.
- A collection or body of directions, rules, or
ordinances; esp., a book of directions for the conduct of worship; as,
the Directory used by the nonconformists instead of the Prayer Book.
- A book containing the names and residences of the
inhabitants of any place, or of classes of them; an address book; as, a
business directory.
- A body of directors; board of management; especially, a
committee which held executive power in France under the first
republic.
- Direction; guide.
- A judgment of the Inquisition in Spain and Portugal
condemning or acquitting persons accused of religious offenses.
- An execution of such sentence, by the civil power, esp.
the burning of a heretic. It was usually held on Sunday, and was made a
great public solemnity by impressive forms and ceremonies.
- A session of the court of Inquisition.
- Achieve
- Arrive
- Arrive at
- Arrive at (destination)
- Arrive at or get to
- Arrive at range
- Arrive at the heart of Korea, China
- Progression
- The act of succeeding, or following after; a following
of things in order of time or place, or a series of things so
following; sequence; as, a succession of good crops; a succession of
disasters.
- A series of persons or things according to some
established rule of precedence; as, a succession of kings, or of
bishops; a succession of events in chronology.
- An order or series of descendants; lineage; race;
descent.
- The power or right of succeeding to the station or
title of a father or other predecessor; the right to enter upon the
office, rank, position, etc., held ny another; also, the entrance into
the office, station, or rank of a predecessor; specifically, the
succeeding, or right of succeeding, to a throne.
- The right to enter upon the possession of the property
of an ancestor, or one near of kin, or one preceding in an established
order.
- The person succeeding to rank or office; a successor or
heir.
- A board or court of justice formerly held in the
counting house of the British sovereign's household, composed of the
lord steward and his officers, and having cognizance of matters of
justice in the household, with power to correct offenders and keep the
peace within the verge of the palace, which extends two hundred yards
beyond the gates.
- One of the followers of Thomas Erastus, a German
physician and theologian of the 16th century. He held that the
punishment of all offenses should be referred to the civil power, and
that holy communion was open to all. In the present day, an Erastian is
one who would see the church placed entirely under the control of the
State.