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Discover LudwigAbrogates is a word that is correctly written and used in English
Abrogates is a verb meaning "to do away with; annul; repeal; revoke". An example sentence would be: "The law was abrogated in order to make way for new legislations".
Dictionary
abrogates
verb
Third person singular of abrogate
Exact(16)
Mr Melkert points out that, unless the Netherlands abrogates international treaties on asylum, there is little that even Mr Fortuyn could do to make immigration controls tougher.
She is suing because she alleges that the school's Office of Career Advancement did not try to find her a job, and that this abrogates the promises the school made when she paid them $70,000 in tuition.
Later, Schaeffer emphasizes the point: It is time we consciously realize that when any office commands what is contrary to God's Law it abrogates its authority.
[emphasis added] If there is any doubt that Schaeffer agrees that we have reached the point by which Rutherford argued revolution was justified, he later makes it clear: "It is time we consciously realize that when any office commands what is contrary to God's Law it abrogates its authority.
This act effectively abrogates the Bill of Rights and removes one of the cornerstones of Western liberty.
Australia's plain packaging proposal legally abrogates sanctioned trademark rights".
Similar(42)
They have the talent and the brains and the money to get it done and yet almost every housing association in the country has abrogated its role in changing the housing sector".
He said they were in dispute, but said he was confident there would be no unilateral moves by the Tsipras government to default on Greece's debt or abrogate the terms of its bailout agreements with the EU and the International Monetary Fund.
Given the new voting system introduced as part of the 1997 constitution, and the subsequent pattern of voting in May 1999, there is little room for compromise without abrogating the constitution.
But most of the material that individuals saved has been lost or determined, rightly or wrongly, not to be important enough for preservation.The libraries that are presently wringing their hands over collecting everything digital have abrogated this basic responsibility of appraising documents for the future.
But Italians were called to the polls last weekend, for a referendum on whether to abrogate parts of a fertility law enacted in 2004 that banned research using stem cells from embryos, and imposed stringent requirements on test-tube pregnancies.To succeed, the vote needed not just a simple majority but also a quorum of 50% of eligible voters.
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