Dictionary
are derogation
noun
An act which belittles; disparagement.
synonyms
Exact(1)
Examples of deontic actions are derogation and amendment (laws can be annulled or amended), while contraction and expansion are analogous doxastic actions (beliefs can be given up, new beliefs can be added).
Similar(57)
However, there is a widespread acceptance elsewhere in Europe that there can be "derogations", as the jargon has it, to such rules.
Experience varied between countries although a common feature is derogations to competition policy (Nash et al. 1996; Del Cont et al. 2012, Carrau, 2012; Andries and Garcia Azcarate 2015).
"My whole life has been a derogation of my responsibilities to my fatal foetus".
"The truth is that derogation will protect no one except those at the MoD with something to hide.
This could have been a derogation of the president's policy or of the chief editorial writer's prose.
An epithet is a derogation or slur not as "dirty" as a vulgarism or as explosive as an expletive, with which it is often confused.
One strategy is competitor derogation - using tactics to make a rival inferior.' So I guess our desire to point our competitors' cellulite and wonky teeth together with the PMT can play on our moods can make some of us pretty formidable bitches.
Nonetheless, the fact that there is no derogation clause in ICESCR does not necessarily mean that states would be precluded from derogating from them.
[ 57] It also explicitly stipulates that there may be no derogation from the foregoing principles on any ground whatsoever, including public emergency.
But these should be pragmatic derogations from the principle of openness.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com