arrogating in English

verb
1
take or claim (something) for oneself without justification.
they arrogate to themselves the ability to divine the nation's true interests

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Below are sample sentences containing the word "arrogating" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "arrogating", or refer to the context using the word "arrogating" in the English Dictionary.

1. Arrogating - find the meaning, anagrams and hook words with Arrogating and much more

2. General (12 matching dictionaries) Arrogating: Merriam-Webster.com [home, info]

3. Definition of Arrogating in the Definitions.net dictionary

4. Italian words for Arrogating include arrogarsi, attribuire and arrogando

5. It stopped a prime minister Arrogating the crown for partisan ends

6. What does Arrogating mean? Information and translations of Arrogating in the most comprehensive dictionary definitions resource on the web.

7. Arrogating is playable in: Words With Friends 15

8. She viewed him as silently Arrogating to himself the …

9. Arrogating: Present participle of <xref>arrogate</xref>

10. Local ones accomplish their respective ends without, however, Arrogating those tasks to itself

11. Johnson was eroding the tripartite government and Arrogating all power to himself

12. We found 13 dictionaries with English definitions that include the word Arrogating: Click on the first link on a line below to go directly to a page where "Arrogating" is defined

13. Synonyms for Arrogating include appropriating, commandeering, expropriating, seizing, usurping, assuming, acquiring, securing, annexing and claiming

14. Definition of Arrogating with photos and pictures, translations, sample usage, and additional links for more information.

15. The word Arrogating uses 10 letters: a, a, g, g, i, n, o, r, r, t

16. 1 would centralize presidential elections, taking responsibility for oversight away from the states, where the Constitution placed it, and Arrogating

17. Citizen who saw the habit of Arrogating America to mean the United States as the arrogance that it clearly is

18. The International Criminal Court (ICC) recently issued a decision Arrogating to itself jurisdiction over the so-called “Situation in Palestine.” This

19. In Arrogating the right to overthrow the Iraqi government and depose of Saddam Hussein by force, the Bush administration is violating international law and the UN Charter.

20. After Arrogating that he would have to vet any vaccine produced during the Trump administration, he has done nothing but botch the actual distribution

21. Arrogating In English, many past and present participles of verbs can be used as adjectives. Some of these examples may show the adjective use

22. Otherwise, courts of justice would be Arrogating upon themselves a power conferred by the Constitution upon another branch of the service to the exclusion of the others

23. The International Criminal Court (ICC) recently issued a decision Arrogating to itself jurisdiction over the so-called “Situation in Palestine.” This highly irregular decision amounts to a

24. If you want your neighbor to work with you on urgent repairs along your boundary line, you don’t draw up a blueprint that includes Arrogating an acre of his property.

25. "Arrogant" comes from Latin arrogant-, arrogans, the present participle of "arrogare." "Arrogant" is often applied to that sense of superiority which comes from someone claiming (or Arrogating) more …

26. They will say that the Spanish court is interfering in the internal affairs of the new government in Iraq, Arrogating to itself powers over an incident that does not directly concern Spain as no Spanish nationals were involved

27. 'As is becoming glaring by the day, this President has been arrogating unto himself powers he does not exclusively possess, Bastardizing all mechanisms of checks and balances so essential in a functioning democracy,' the law dean said

28. Arrogance is a range of mental dispositions to disregard the proper rights of others, typified by haughtiness, self-assumption, and habits of arrogating or assuming an authority or right to control, constrain or direct others, and acting in an overbearing manner with a proud contempt of others and their rights

29. "Unless you believe in the right of the government to regulate and control what the press says — a power which the First Amendment explicitly prohibits — how can anyone be comfortable with members of Congress Arrogating unto themselves the power to dictate what media outlets are permitted to report and control how they discuss and analyze

30. ‘A president who makes such a claim would be Arrogating the right to be the ultimate arbiter of war and peace and to stand in judgment over the world.’ ‘Rauschenberg's re-telling of the story becomes a sardonic portrait of American foreign policy, in which the imperial power claims exclusive rights to victim-status as a prelude to

31. As nouns the difference between Arrogance and hubris is that Arrogance is the act or habit of arrogating, or making undue claims in an overbearing manner; that species of pride which consists in exorbitant claims of rank, dignity, estimation, or power, or which exalts the worth or importance of the person to an undue degree; proud contempt of others; lordliness; haughtiness; self-assumption