imprimatur|imprimaturs in English

noun

[im·pri·ma·tur || ‚ɪmprɪ'mɑtər /-'meɪtə]

official permit to publish a book; permit, license; official approval of a perso

Use "imprimatur|imprimaturs" in a sentence

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

1. Bush had managed to acquire United Nations imprimatur.

2. Applying the label often serves as an imprimatur of management respectability.

3. Best of all, the imprimatur seems to last for years.

4. The project cannot go ahead without the imprimatur of the Treasury.

5. His actions have the imprimatur of the Secretary of State.

6. They can also get the imprimatur of the Constitutional Court to achieve this.

7. The cynicism and materialism already so prevalent in our culture are given the imprimatur of policy.

8. If the agencies'views are given a regulatory imprimatur , they should be subject to legal challenge.

9. The SEC's imprimatur, he says, had become worthless after the Bear Stearns and Lehman debacles.

10. The imprimatur was obtained from the Papal censor and the book was published in 16

11. Higher education staff see their academic imprimatur as more important in career terms than being accepted by a commercial publisher.

12. It was as if users had developed an immune sys-tem that resisted outsiders not tagged with the Macintosh imprimatur.

13. The two schools ultimately agreed the Lisbon MBA project could provide both, with the added cachet of the Sloan imprimatur.

14. Thus, rather than receiving the imprimatur of paleoanthropology 's elite, the jaw from Dmanisi came away with question marks.

15. Yet he could have brought in most of these changes without a year-long study and without the Treasury's imprimatur.

16. And even long-time Anchorer Bernhard Langer has received the imprimatur from the USGA and tour rulemakers and officials on his modified …

17. He is a serious, competent manager and runs charity schemes that help the poor. Egypt's successful economic liberalisation, too, bears his imprimatur.

18. What it looked like at the time was, the Fed had regulated its institutions well, and its validation was a good imprimatur.

19. It may still be used to seal formal legal or royal decree and academic parchments such as placing an awarding stamp imprimatur of the university upon completion of postgraduate degrees.

20. The IMF is waiting in the wings, prepared to provide a much bigger loan if necessary, and to deliver an important public imprimatur of the government's economic policies.

21. One group from Tokyo struggled to find an evacuation centre willing to accept its offer of food because, coming from out of town, it lacked the local government's imprimatur.

22. Our chief mechanism is by granting charters to various committees that will carry out the actual tasks, and stamping the results of these efforts with our imprimatur.

23. When it lent its imprimatur, and its command structures, to the war in Afghanistan, its forces were engaged in combat beyond the European theatre for the first time.