Similar words: citizen, championship, relationship, ownership, leadership, membership, partnership, scholarship. Meaning: ['sɪtɪznʃɪp] n. 1. the status of a citizen with rights and duties 2. conduct as a citizen.
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121 The welfare cutoff is prompting record numbers of people to apply for citizenship.
122 And so we come to our third reason for the propagation of citizenship as an ideal.
123 Boxing is a means toward good citizenship, of fair play, of self-reliance.
124 Hermandad Mexicana Nacional is a national organization that offers citizenship classes and other immigration services and encourages voter registration.
125 Nor will this underclass disappear without the implementation of a series of policies aimed at re-establishing full citizenship.
126 The electronic republic, therefore, has already started to redefine the traditional roles of citizenship and political leadership.
127 She said that this pioneering reference library was good for democracy and good for citizenship.
128 In 1345, for example, shortly after the Black Death, Venice promised citizenship to anyone who would settle there.
129 A change of citizenship did not of course imply a divorce from the old country.
130 The Conservatives believe that as long as government allows individuals to to pursue their own goals their citizenship is served.
131 Mr Kinnock described the health service as the bedrock of Britain and health care as an inalienable right of citizenship.
132 The effect of this order was to confer second-class citizenship on the proud Washington.
133 Ironically,[www.Sentencedict.com] it was the fear of congressional action against noncitizens that had finally motivated him to apply for citizenship.
134 It is suggested that citizenship is a relationship between an individual and a polity.
135 Do you feel the tradition of citizenship and the tradition of parliamentary rule under law are incompatible?
136 The child must learn how to learn, for learning is the defining pre-requisite of modern citizenship.
137 Accompanying the exclusion from the labour market has been a policy of disenfranchising the underclass from full welfare citizenship.
138 The case dragged through the federal bureaucracy for seven years, before she finally gave up her citizenship voluntarily in 1971.
139 President Herrera was making progress in the resurrection of the national spirit and was making clearer the duties and responsibilities of citizenship.
140 She had gotten involved in the paper chase to obtain U.S. citizenship.
141 Under the amnesty law, many illegal aliens were given citizenship.
142 Every society must figure out ways to bring them into the disciplines and duties of citizenship.
143 Indeed, many Czech Roma were denied citizenship of the new republic under the 1993 Citizenship Law.
144 Why, Fox is so diverse that he even has dual citizenship -- neither of them in the United States.
145 The award is given annually to a deaf person of outstanding merit in leadership, citizenship and general achievement.
146 World Studies - a grant of £5,355 was approved for developing new modules and courses in global citizenship.
147 Dr. Boyle also holds Canadian citizenship.
148 This applies only to applications for citizenship by conferral.
149 Certain disabling restrictions disqualified him for citizenship.
150 Widespread racial prejudice inhibited their opportunities, and institutional discrimination such as black codes and Jim Crow laws denied them full citizenship rights.
More similar words: citizen, championship, relationship, ownership, leadership, membership, partnership, scholarship, exciting, criticize, sensitive, sensitivity, dozen, frozen, in short, hip, cite, city, whip, chip, deficit, excited, shit, explicit, shift, publicity, cash in, T-shirt, prize, excitement.