unenforceable 的定义
en·forced, en·forc·ing.
- to put or keep in force; compel obedience to: to enforce a rule; Traffic laws will be strictly enforced.
- to obtain by force or compulsion.
- to impose upon a person: The doctor enforced a strict dietary regimen.
- to support by force: to enforce one's rights as a citizen.
- to impress or urge forcibly; lay stress upon: He enforced his argument by adding details.
unenforceable 近义词
等同于 void
更多unenforceable例句
- Many sheriffs in the area have said they don’t plan on enforcing the law, either.
- Capacity limits in bars or mask requirements in stores can be enforced through fines and closures.
- 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.
- But, of course, there’s a big difference between having a noise code and enforcing it.
- 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.
- Rick Hasen, a professor at University of California, Irvine, dismissed the Mississippi statute as essentially unenforceable.
- Thus, a son worked for his father on his father's farm under an unenforceable contract with his uncle.
- The document was plainly one-sided and would be regarded in an English court as against public policy and unenforceable.
- The statute thus changed the common law wherein such contracts were merely unenforceable but not criminal.
- It is generally held to be unenforceable if the insured suicided while insane.
- The Statute of Frauds does not invalidate a verbal guarantee, but renders it unenforceable by action.