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The phrase "a binding commitment of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts where you are discussing obligations or promises that are legally or morally enforceable.
Example: "The contract includes a binding commitment of both parties to fulfill their obligations."
Alternatives: "a firm obligation of" or "a legal promise of".
Exact(2)
American church leaders had turned to the Vatican because they sought a binding commitment of that kind.
Mr. Denn also noted that Iberdrola had not formally submitted the new proposal to the commission; the current plan has the company making only a binding commitment of $100 million worth of investment in the state.
Similar(58)
This statement of preference will not be treated as a binding commitment to any course of study and research.
The summit saw all of the world's nations agree for the first time to a binding commitment to avoid dangerous levels of global warming.
The treaty, he said, includes a "binding" commitment to pursue such a prosecution, regardless of any claim that the torture was authorized by high government officials, Mr. Nowak said.
It's not a binding commitment to go to war.
The household shoppers were given the option of changing their minds in the first month, but then it became a binding commitment for six months.
As explained above, in the absence of a binding commitment, the threat of withdrawal is no longer useful as a bargaining tool.
U.S. District Judge Garland Burrell, who reviewed the case in the capitol, justified his dismissal by claiming the memo was not a "binding commitment," simply a statement of priorities.
What kind of a binding commitment will the U.S. and its allies make to reciprocate Iranian implementation of the deal, as the first steps taken will be Iranian?
In acknowledging the lack of a binding commitment, Assistant Treasury Secretary David C. Mulford said today that the Tokyo agreement had to rely on what seemed to be little more than an enhanced version of the "peer pressure" that has marked policy making for the last several years.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com