imposed upon 的 3 个定义
im·posed, im·pos·ing.
- to lay on or set as something to be borne, endured, obeyed, fulfilled, paid, etc.: to impose taxes.
- to put or set by or as if by authority: to impose one's personal preference on others.
- to obtrude or thrust upon others.
- (8)
im·posed, im·pos·ing.
- to make an impression on the mind; impose one's or its authority or influence.
- to obtrude oneself or one's requirements, as upon others: Are you sure my request doesn't impose?
- to presume, as upon patience or good nature.
imposed upon 近义词
等同于 deceived
等同于 taxed
imposed upon 的近义词 6 个
等同于 lumber
等同于 put out
等同于 trick
等同于 wrong
等同于 deceive
等同于 exploit
更多imposed upon例句
- Before the coronavirus pandemic imposed restrictions on physical contact, the Patrick Henry and Georgetown students gathered in person, and over the course of the program, they interacted with different partners.
- The second wave of internet regulation laws is now targeting platforms by imposing demands.
- In one case, the governor imposes strict lockdowns, mask wearing, and so on.
- The Reagan-era Lifeline program imposes fees on telecom giants such as AT&T and Verizon, which pass them along to phone subscribers on their monthly bills.
- If Amazon were to make what the FTC considers “deceptive earnings claims” for a second time, the agency would then have the authority to impose civil penalties as well.
- Expectations, reasonable or unrealistic, remain so even if we impose them on ourselves.
- The United Nations was prompted to impose a ban on selling mainframe computers or laptops to North Korea.
- The United States has tools to impose costs on the North Koreans.
- We can, due to the critical issues at stake, also go one more step and impose an embargo.
- I make a distinction between personal essays and memoir, which is a personal distinction, not one I would impose upon others.
- Any delay in covering such deficit shall be subject to such charge as the Federal Reserve Board may impose.
- Hence, in their professed attempt to aid the memory, they really impose a new and additional burden upon it.
- An attempt to impose an imitation on a practised judge is always productive of an unpleasant result.
- But he failed to impose upon the Colonel, and was even far from impressing him with this trumped-up knowledge of bygone days.
- Moreover, it must be prejudicial to the national interest to impose parliamentary taxes.