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The instituted
verb
To begin or initiate (something); to found.
Exact(11)
The instituted a "reporting" tool that allowed players or citizens to report these locations for potential removal.
Seen from this perspective, the individual who breaches the law is acting not only against the instituted government but also against that individual's higher interest as a member of the political community.
The IG report was "leaked by the IRS. to try to spin the output," Issa said, and lawmakers now need to go through the full report so they can "see what the instituted changes need to be to make this not happen again.
For Derrida, the "re-institution" of the law in a unique decision is a kind of violence since it does not conform perfectly to the instituted codes; the law is always, according to Derrida, founded in violence.
Exercising his contractually available early termination option by the instituted June 29 deadline means that LeBron James is forfeiting the remainder of his guaranteed salary on a six-year, $110 million contract he signed in 2010.
With the instituted ban, he is panicked that he will no longer be able to get the treatment he needs.
Similar(49)
The U.N. instituted fiscal reforms.
The Confederacy instituted its draft in 1862.
The Russian Academy of Sciences was instituted in 1724.
Google instituted the new system anyway.
In 1927, Alexander instituted "the Plan".
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