Dictionary
be forgone
verb
To let pass, to leave alone
Exact(8)
"In some instances, prosecution must be forgone in favor of national security interests.
"The characters would become wooden, and the mystery, the journey, would be forgone and mechanical".
The basic voting share will continue as now, but it will attract more votes the longer it is held; if shares are lent, voting rights will be forgone.
The media case was that in the very particular circumstances, where the crime was so serious and the interest of open justice so important, anonymity should be forgone.
Can they be forgone without ironclad guarantees?Mr Erdogan's record suggests he has the skill and the courage to heal Turkey's biggest wound.
It is replaceable with relative ease and could be forgone with no huge structural shifts in the way the world works.
The repayment of $300 million to Fox would cost each team owner $10 million, not to mention local television and radio revenue that would be forgone.
And a Guardian editorial weighed in: "The media case was that in the very particular circumstances, where the crime was so serious and the interest of open justice so important, anonymity should be forgone".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com