Definitionadj. occurring every third year or lasting 3 years
Last update: June 22, 2015
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You will get the interest in triennial. [Please select]
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The landlord lets his land to two or more persons jointly, who undertake to restore it to him in good condition with one-third of it interrozzito, that is, fallow, so as to be cultivated the following year according to triennial rotation. [Please select]
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Renan's "Confessions" hardly convey as distinct a notion of character as his bust exhibited at the Triennial of 1883. [Please select]
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[1] The Triennial Act was repealed (in form only) in 1664; it was reenacted in 1694; in 1716 it was superseded by the Septennial Act (S535). [Please select]
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[2] The Triennial Act (SS439, 517) provided that at the end of three years Parliament must be dissolved and a new election held. [Please select]
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(4) It passed the Triennial Bill, compelling the King to summon a Parliament at least once in three years. [Please select]
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] The first form in which the encroaching temper of the king was manifested was, in causing the Triennial Bill to be repealed. [Please select]
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The Third Triennial Report of the Commissioners of Woods was issued on the 18th of June, 1819. [Please select]
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In the year last mentioned the Fifth Triennial Report of the Commissioners of Woods, &c. [Please select]
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Upon the 6th of June this same year the sixth and last of the "Triennial Reports of the Commissioners of Woods," &c. [Please select]
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Falguière has on one, that it really seems as if he were at his best in such a frankly carnal production as his since variously modified "Nymph Hunting" of the Triennial Exposition of 1883. [Please select]
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