Exact(1)
("Would our customers want clothes wrapped by filthy fingers?") An unwise attempt to contact the soldier who infected her (not, as her accusers insist, the other way around) leads to Frieda's incarceration, without trial or legal recourse, as both a loose woman and a hazard to national security.
Similar(59)
Might the government issue a decree that alters the fundamentals of your business, without consultation or recourse, as often happens in China?
Recourse: As long as you make the change within 24 hours, you can either cancel your non-refundable fare or rebook different dates.
Vargas Llosa's repeated recourse, as an artist, to drearily masculine worlds can be read as both an exposure of and an homage to the dreaded father who didn't want his boy to be a pansy.
It's not something that's used as a last recourse, as it should be".
His first recourse, as you'd expect, would have included forceps.
He described that recourse as essential if steps toward holding schools accountable are to have any meaning.
"If it's an E.U. airline, they're bound to respect the law so you have recourse as a passenger," Mr. Kidd said.
Ammons had no other recourse, as his neglect to enforce anti-hazing regulations resulted in the violent death of a student.
If their marriage breaks down or her husband dies, women have little recourse as it becomes almost impossible to seek spousal support and even child support.
As he explained, the 1969 Vienna convention on the law of treaties permits recourse, as an aid to interpretation, to "any subsequent practice in the application of the treaty which establishes the agreement of the parties regarding its interpretation".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
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