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decreed

/dih-kree/US // dɪˈkri //UK // (dɪˈkriː) //

下令,下令的,颁布的,判决

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a formal and authoritative order, especially one having the force of law: a presidential decree.
    • : Law. a judicial decision or order.
    • : Theology. one of the eternal purposes of God, by which events are foreordained.
  1. 1

    de·creed, de·cree·ing.

    • : to command, ordain, or decide by decree.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • The source familiar with the investigation said it is significant the complaint was filed in San Francisco, and that Individual X signed a consent decree.

  • A federal court decree maintains that the government can only detain migrant children without their parents for a period of up to 72 hours before passing them on to a network of shelters and foster care.

  • The 2-to-1 decision issued Thursday voided part of a consent decree approved after a citizen’s group had challenged the state’s counting timeline.

  • You might be unconvinced by her argument that a recent law giving Orbán the power to effectively rule by decree isn’t a power grab, but she’ll keep at it.

  • Its primary tool—so-called consent decrees—don’t allow the agency to impose fines for a first offense and, when a company violates those decrees, the penalties haven’t been enough to change their behavior.

  • Atalanta is a young princess, and her father has decreed she must marry whichever man wins a footrace.

  • There would not be female priests, he decreed: “That door is closed.”

  • Harry, it has been decreed, will not be photographed near any alcohol.

  • In 1957 Nikita Khrushchev decreed that the Chechens could return to their ancestral homelands.

  • Restive al Anbar province, the decreed center of a new al Qaeda state, was lost.

  • The French convention decreed that no quarters be given to British and Hanoverian soldiers.

  • After all, the penalties inflicted on the press, though not decreed by juries, were somewhat more severe than those of to-day.

  • On one occasion they decreed that a certain man whom they considered in fault was to pay a fine.

  • That set the son, who had hitherto been acting just as custom decreed, thinking about things in a new way.

  • Why should he question the Sphinx of Fate, or quarrel with destinies the high gods had decreed?