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first amendment

第一修正案,第一个修正案,第一修正,第一项修正案

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : an amendment to the U.S. Constitution, ratified in 1791 as part of the Bill of Rights, prohibiting Congress from interfering with freedom of religion, speech, assembly, or petition.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • The lawmakers’ action is an affront to this fundamental First Amendment freedom.

  • Creating such a list would raise legitimate First Amendment concerns because it could potentially be used to target political dissidents on both the left and the right.

  • It’s your First Amendment right to access open-sourced information.

  • This is not about First Amendment rights, which some claim, rather the actions of their graduates trying to overturn a basic tenet of our democracy, the right to vote and have your vote counted.

  • It is companies’ First Amendment rights that enable them to curate their platforms as they see fit.

  • Fluoride first entered an American water supply through a rather inelegant technocratic scheme.

  • In the first episode, an officer is shown video of himself shooting and killing a man.

  • But since those rosy scenarios were first floated, the California political scene has grown more crowded.

  • Eric Garcetti succeeded Villaraigosa and has received high marks in his first year and a half on the job.

  • He sees himself as the first Muslim president of all Europe.

  • This is the first and principal point at which we can stanch the wastage of teaching energy that now goes on.

  • He was converted and baptized, and was the first Hebrew instructor at Harvard college.

  • And I have not had the first morsel of food prepared from this grain offered me since I reached the shores of Europe.

  • Now first we shall want our pupil to understand, speak, read and write the mother tongue well.

  • In treble, second and fourth, the first change is a dodge behind; and the second time the treble leads, there's a double Bob.