Exact(1)
In no case would such a derogation be granted for use in an ordinary laundry detergent.
Similar(59)
But May has opposed such a move, saying it was "deeply flawed" and would require a derogation under EU law to make it legal.
Companies dislike it, since it eats into their sales in more lucrative markets, and they fear that it will grow when even lower-price markets, such as Poland, join the EU.To ease these worries, the G10 calls for a "derogation" or exemption of new member states from the EU's free trade in pharmaceuticals.
Others have suggested that we seek a derogation.
He needs to urgently answer why a derogation for Broadmoor was granted.
But in American political history, that word has profound resonance as a derogation of opportunism.
It is not a derogation but only a definition to say that workable theatricality is the measure of successful playwriting.
"My whole life has been a derogation of my responsibilities to my fatal foetus".
Ukraine gave notice of a derogation in June 2015, in relation to the fighting on its border with Russia.
That meaning, metaphorically extended, landed -- plop! -- in the middle of political terminology as a derogation of moderation.
This could have been a derogation of the president's policy or of the chief editorial writer's prose.
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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