unenforceable / ɛnˈfɔrs, -ˈfoʊrs /

无法执行无法执行的不可执行无法实施

unenforceable 的定义

v. 有主动词 verb

en·forced, en·forc·ing.

  1. to put or keep in force; compel obedience to: to enforce a rule; Traffic laws will be strictly enforced.
  2. to obtain by force or compulsion.
  3. to impose upon a person: The doctor enforced a strict dietary regimen.
  4. to support by force: to enforce one's rights as a citizen.
  5. to impress or urge forcibly; lay stress upon: He enforced his argument by adding details.

unenforceable 近义词

unenforceable

等同于 void

更多unenforceable例句

  1. Many sheriffs in the area have said they don’t plan on enforcing the law, either.
  2. Capacity limits in bars or mask requirements in stores can be enforced through fines and closures.
  3. Swipe them all, turn an event that normally signifies the arrival of spring into an appetizer for Thanksgiving, and the 2020 Masters will have an entirely unprecedented feel, a pandemic-enforced flavor and visuals all its own.
  4. But, of course, there’s a big difference between having a noise code and enforcing it.
  5. E-commerce sales, which account for less than 5% of all retail sales in India, skyrocketed during the pandemic after New Delhi enforced a two-month nationwide lockdown.
  6. Rick Hasen, a professor at University of California, Irvine, dismissed the Mississippi statute as essentially unenforceable.
  7. Thus, a son worked for his father on his father's farm under an unenforceable contract with his uncle.
  8. The document was plainly one-sided and would be regarded in an English court as against public policy and unenforceable.
  9. The statute thus changed the common law wherein such contracts were merely unenforceable but not criminal.
  10. It is generally held to be unenforceable if the insured suicided while insane.
  11. The Statute of Frauds does not invalidate a verbal guarantee, but renders it unenforceable by action.