Use "derogate|derogated|derogates|derogating" in a sentence

1. Don't derogate from our principle!

2. Such behavior will derogate from your image.

3. Such a conduct derogates from his merit.

4. Such conduct will derogate from your reputation.

5. Such a habit may derogate from your reputation.

6. Such shameful behaviour will certainly derogate from his fame.

7. An error that will derogate from your reputation.

8. Superintolerable refractedness derogates Fiddletown congener steer Muslem Analogions pre-elemental

9. Statutes are not to be presumed to derogate from international law.

10. Such shameful behaviour will certainly derogate from his fame ( or reputation ).

11. The parties may not derogate from or vary the effect of this article.

12. In fact, use a network to derogate, bespatter competitor, had emerged in endlessly.

13. The law does not allow a man to derogate from his grant.

14. The King felt that summoning a parliament would derogate from his authority.

15. The king felt that summoning a parliament would derogate from his authority.

16. Synonyms for Belittles include ridicules, decries, defames, deprecates, depreciates, derogates, disparages, maligns, minimises and minimizes

17. As such it cannot be derogated from by contrary international agreement and a fortiori by a national law

18. Parties cannot exclude the application of this rule or derogate from or vary its effects.

19. I am here not derogate the England players, but you know they've been always overrated.

20. A law may be Abrogated or only derogated from; it is Abrogated when it is totally annulled; it is derogated from when only a part is Abrogated: derogatur legi, cum pars detrahitur; abrogatur legi, cum prorsus tollitur.

21. The final product including any component or accessory shall not, unless specifically derogated, contain substances that:

22. As such it cannot be derogated from by contrary international agreement and a fortiori by a national law.

23. derogating from Regulation (EEC) No 2915/79 in respect of the application of annual tariff quotas, for certain types of cheese, allotted to Finland

24. The final product including any component or accessory shall not, unless specifically derogated, contain substances that fulfil the following conditions:

25. ‘The final product including any component or accessory shall not, unless specifically derogated, contain substances that fulfil the following conditions:

26. Parker J: The plaintiffs ... relied on the maxim that no one can be allowed to derogate from his own grant.

27. There is a long-standing presumption that Acts of Parliament are not intended to derogate from the requirements of international law.

28. It does not exempt the operator from any other proceedings instituted against him, apart from this Act, nor derogates from any other law in force in India.

29. In this respect, please describe steps taken to ensure that interrogation rules, instructions or methods do not derogate from the principle of absolute prohibition of torture.

30. 4 Therefore, there is the maxim that says special legislation is not derogated from by general legislation, unless the two are absolutely repugnant and inconsistent with each other.

31. In relations between a trader and a consumer the parties may not, to the detriment of the consumer, exclude the application of this Article or derogate from or vary its effects.

32. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 4 "Bulgaria" to "Calgary" The Baron resumed his favourite topic — ‘However it may please you to derogate from the honour of your Burgonet, Colonel Talbot, which is doubtless your

33. The suggestion has been made that contracts of affreightment and volume contracts should be subject to the draft instrument as a default rule, but that the parties to these contracts should have the freedom to derogate from the terms of the draft instrument

34. Chaffs lardon gas alarm, warning access code make do macrohardheid transportar (tonalidade) verification of the existence and authenticity of documents to give an inkling of metaalglansverf Italic grief niettemin certero derogate (adj.) eldoni country person, of shepherds, of the countryside, pastoral poem, pastoral poem; writer of pastoral

35. As it became clear that the Biocidal Products Review programme was having negative effects on substances that were not really intended to be controlled by this legislation (eg foodstuffs such as jam used as attractants in wasp traps), the EU Commission proposed to derogate such foodstuffs from the requirements of the review programme with the aim to eventually amend the Directive itself to

36. The Islamic Republic of Iran is disappointed by the overall approach of the United States because, by promoting a self-centred, unilateral and naïve policy, which focuses only on the threat or use of force against what the United States has arrogated to itself to call terrorism, and leaving the self-evident global realities as well as the root causes of terrorism to the abyss, it tends to derogate from the cherished global momentum against this global menace.