disregards in English

noun
1
the action or state of disregarding or ignoring something.
blatant disregard for the law
verb
1
pay no attention to; ignore.
the body of evidence is too substantial to disregard
synonyms:ignoretake no notice ofpay no attention/heed tooverlookturn a blind eye toturn a deaf ear toshut one's eyes togloss overbrush asideshrug offsneeze at
noun
verb

Use "disregards" in a sentence

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

1. + And whoever disregards you disregards me also.

2. An impatient king disregards the explicit instructions of God’s prophet.

3. If one disregards the ghost, there is only one suspect.

4. Covetousness is a way of thinking that disregards and resists God’s status and …

5. 19 Any person who disregards this order will be in contempt of court.

6. But that sort of clear thinking completely disregards the romance and revulsion offered up by this particular turn of events.

7. Amoral refers to a state where an action disregards the presence of a moral code or is simply unconcerned with morality

8. Adventurism is recklessness or risk-taking that disregards accepted standards of behavior. It is often used in political context to refer to rash or reckless policies or military actions

9. For it is written that the one who disregards it and does not go up is to be cut off from among the people (cf. Lev Num .

10. However, such a notion disregards the fact that human beings—the only desiring beings in the strict sense of the term—are also living beings, that is to say, mortal beings.

11. This way of working requires Aloofness and disregards the commitment, and therefore the risks of interpretation and any actions, which, through doubt and participation, would constitute an essential component of understanding and analysis.

12. The Achilles heel in Canada’s argument is that it disregards substantial portions of the investigatory record and, despite the presence of significant contrary evidence, offers little more than conjecture to support its theory that future increases in demand would improve prices.

13. A fundamental concept in text processing is the Collation, which is a set of rules determining how text values are ordered and compared for equality. For example, while a case-insensitive Collation disregards differences between upper- and lower-case letters for the purposes of equality comparison, a case-sensitive Collation does not.