ratified 的定义
- confirmed by formal or authoritative consent or approval: The international Convention on the Rights of the Child is the most widely ratified human rights treaty of all time.
ratified 近义词
affirm, authorize
更多ratified例句
- NFL owners also ratified a proposal by the competition committee to add two teams to the playoff field, increasing it from 14 to 16, if the regular season is cut short by the pandemic.
- All proposed ownership sales are vetted by the NFL’s finance committee and must be ratified by a three-quarters vote of the league’s 32 owners.
- The deal is supposed to be ratified within the next two years.
- Its mission is to uphold international treaties and binational agreements, which the commission itself writes but Congress has to ratify.
- Approval by three-fourths of the states is required for an amendment to be ratified.
- The men who drafted and ratified the Bill of Rights had no issue with the ultimate penalty for the ultimate crimes.
- Kerry was a major proponent of the New START treaty with Russia, which the Senate ratified after a long debate in December 2010.
- The law, already passed by the cabinet on October 10, has yet to be officially ratified by the interim president, Adly Mansour.
- They came of age as Reagan defined a new political era and Clinton ratified it.
- Firstly, the API withstood the turmoil of the “Arab Spring,” and was ratified twice in its last two summits in Baghdad and Doha.
- Mechem says that if at the time of signing, the person doing so purported to act as agent, the act might be ratified.
- Both their and my agreements were immediately ratified, and they are in high spirits.
- But offerings of this kind were presented when federal transactions were ratified by the worshippers of God.
- Thus if a secretary calls a meeting instead of the directors, and his action is properly ratified by them, the call is effective.
- The 1851 State Constitution was ratified by the voters by an overwhelming majority at the next election.