verba
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membatalkan
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cancel, void, annul, revoke, nullify, abrogate
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menghapuskan
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eliminate, abolish, eradicate, wipe out, blot out, abrogate
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memansuhkan
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abrogate, cancel, annul
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mencabut
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revoke, pull, repeal, lift, withdraw, abrogate
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mencabuntukan
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take, lift, pull, extract, pull out, abrogate
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memutuskan
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decide, break, disconnect, determine, sever, abrogate
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mempertiadakan
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annihilate, destroy, wipe out, exterminate, obliterate, abrogate
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mempertidak
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reject, deny, disclaim, disprove, abolish, abrogate
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mempertidakkan
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repeal, reject, deny, disclaim, disprove, abrogate
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mempertarikkan
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draw, draw out, pull, drag, extract, abrogate
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a proposal to abrogate temporarily the right to strike
- The employees submitted that the Premier Plan and the associated trust could not be separated and the merger could not lawfully abrogate the trust rights to which they were entitled.
- Accordingly, it is not within the competence of the Rules Committee, to abrogate the common law.
- It was the first time in Canadian legislative history that the national constitution had been amended to abrogate entrenched rights.
- In 1975, Moscow decided to abrogate this agreement.
- In the absence of a clear express intent to abrogate rights and obligations – rights of the highest importance to the individual – those rights remain in force.
- In 1948, the Soviets, in an attempt to abrogate agreements for Four-Power control of the city, blockaded Berlin.
- The more I ponder these simple points the more it seems likely that there will either be gigantic loopholes or the GMC will be forced to break its promise and abrogate the rights of retired doctors.
- We do not approve, generally, of plural marriages – the basis of our disapproval being that theyabrogate the rights of women and especially of young girls.
- a proposal to abrogate temporarily the right to strike
- a proposal to abrogate temporarily the right to strike
- It would depend on the detailed operation of the law and it is most unlikely that a blanket abrogation of legal professional privilege would survive.
- Congress initially passed legislation abrogating the agreement, then passed the Presidential Records Act to ensure that no similar agreements were made in the future.
- This section abrogates the common law principle, historically enshrined in the Judges’ Rules, that only a defendant’s voluntary statements can be relied on in a criminal trial.
- The administration’s arguments justifying the wholesale abrogation of civil liberties are by no means limited to an emergency response to an immediate threat.
- Those regulations could disappear without abrogating the property rights of the bookseller.
- On returning to Madagascar, both sides abrogated the agreement.
- Section 1 of the Suicide Act 1961 abrogated the rule that made suicide criminal.
- In the late 1820s Georgia passed legislation abolishing tribal governments and abrogating the civil rights of Indians.
- It is an established rule in English-based common law countries that statutes will not be interpreted asabrogating fundamental rights and freedoms unless clearly stated.
- In a matter so sensitive, to deny the court the capacity to take into account all the circumstances of a case, is a basic denial of justice and an abrogation of our International Treaty obligations.
- The courts accept that abrogation of these privileges can only be made by statute but nonetheless there is considerable scope for judicial definition of limits.
- If a regime abrogated the rights to life, liberty, and property, its subjects could overthrow it and choose a new one.
- His bankruptcy or winding-up usually abrogates the agreement, and may restore to the bank its right to combine the accounts without notice.
- In the course of a long conversation, the governor’s longtime chief strategist agreed that Davis hadabrogated our agreement.
- A government that can’t fight terrorism without abrogating the rights of law-abiding citizens has no right to exist.
- It had tightened its grip on power through unconstitutional legislation, abrogation of the rule of law, and crude violence.
- It is true that the Employees Liability Act abrogated that right, but at the same time it gave a right for the employer to proceed against the employee’s insurer if there was one.
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