stipulation 的定义
- a condition, demand, or promise in an agreement or contract.
- the act of stipulating.
stipulation 近义词
condition of agreement
更多stipulation例句
- In an effort to ensure the federal money is distributed equitably, local governments have imposed a patchwork of stipulations.
- “The president and regents try to address this necessarily deliberative process as quickly as possible, even without stipulations on timing,” said UC Office of the President communications specialist Stett Holbrook.
- In addition to opposing payments to publishers in order to link to them within the main search results, Google has also objected to these other Code stipulations.
- Instacart said it will provide both in-store shoppers and contractors with a $25 stipend if they get vaccinated, with the stipulation that they must have completed five deliveries in the last 30 days.
- To try them legally — an important stipulation for Young — she would have to look abroad.
- His one stipulation before okaying a poster of his Jockey ad, for example, was that all proceeds go to cystic fibrosis.
- He had one stipulation: nothing in his home could be touched or rearranged.
- The stipulation likely to be most widely felt is what experts are calling an effective shutdown of medication abortions.
- The stipulation that Ai cannot talk to media is part of what technically is called "obtaining a guarantee pending a trial".
- And any stipulation on how to spend the money is unlikely this time around, too.
- But why, thought Aristide, did he not at once consent to sell the papers on the stipulation that he should be paid in notes?
- The same is true of a stipulation insuring against death by suicide while sane.
- When that time arrived, however, for carrying this stipulation into effect, an unexpected difficulty occurred.
- There is nothing offensive in such a stipulation,” said I; “and I even sympathise with the feeling that inspired it.
- The effect of this stipulation was probably never considered.