put into effect in English

make happen, perform

Use "put into effect" in a sentence

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

1. The verb Accomplish also means to bring about or put into effect.

2. To consent to and put into effect, as to Adopt a constitution or a law.

3. The Utah Controlled Substance Database Program was legislatively created and put into effect on July 1, 1995.

4. (d) Switzerland shall put into effect the measures necessary to allocate FISIM, at the latest, 2006 onwards;

5. A new Advertising and POR Management Framework consistent with the Communications Policy was put into effect for all government institutions.

6. Hebrews 6:15 And so, when he had been waiting Calmly for a long time, God's word to him was put into effect

7. In Japan the government clamped down on the yakuza when it put into effect the Anti-Organized Crime Law on March 1, 1992.

8. Several ceasefires were put into effect after the June offensive but the implementation of a European peacekeeping force, endorsed by Armenia, never came to fruition.

9. The Circle One naval expansion program which had been formulated in 1927 and put into effect in 1931, called for the creation of 28 new air groups.

10. It is listed as a threatened species in Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil and in Paraguay; in the latter country, a five-year fishing ban was put into effect.

11. He also knew that the unifying influences that Jehovah had put into effect among his people could overcome such differences, and Paul urged them to appreciate and cooperate with these influences.

12. Definition of Contaminate to make something dirty, dangerous or less pure Examples of Contaminate in a sentence A boil order would be put into effect because an unknown substance had begun to Contaminate the local water

13. ♦ Consequentially adv Although both consequential and consequent can refer to something which happens as the result of something else, consequent is more common in this sense in modern English: the new measures were put into effect, and the consequent protest led …