Use "forfeit" in a sentence

1. 5 His lands were forfeit.

2. Lucis must forfeit all territories to Niflheim rule.

3. 6 Give me your watch as a forfeit.

4. I know my life is forfeit.

5. Ajaccio forfeit home field in promotion playoff

6. 10 They won the game by forfeit.

7. I can't afford to forfeit the bail.

8. Should I forfeit my trust in you, then?

9. 8 That is the forfeit he must pay.

10. 7 The company's property may even be forfeit.

11. If furniture is damaged, you will forfeit your deposit.

12. 17 By our law your lives are forfeit.

13. 11 If you cancel your flight, you will forfeit your deposit.

14. 2 If you cancel now I'm afraid you forfeit your deposit.

15. Forfeit Godart masturbate unfriendly, he Anagrammatising his enchondroma very fatalistically

16. 4 Passengers who cancel their reservations will forfeit their deposit.

17. 8 If you cancel now I'm afraid you forfeit your deposit.

18. 1 Passengers who cancel their reservations will forfeit their deposit.

19. 9 If furniture is damaged, you will forfeit your deposit.

20. 20 The same rule applies to athletes who forfeit their scholarships entirely.

21. 21 If the plate falls the player must pay a forfeit.

22. 18 Those who did not sign would forfeit some legal rights.

23. 15 For him to forfeit his favourite hobby would be impossible.

24. 13 She was fined £000 and ordered to forfeit her car.

25. 12 He argues that murderers forfeit their own right to life.

26. 4 He was ordered to forfeit more than £5m in profits.

27. 14 All goods may be forfeit to the State in time of war.

28. If not, you will be subject to arrest and you will forfeit the Bail

29. Antonyms for Bestowal include receipt, blockage, hindrance, hurt, injury, loss, obstruction, stop, forfeit and tax

30. Antonyms for Actuality include fantasy, fiction, illusion, irreality, phantasy, unreality, failure, forfeit, lie and delusion

31. Failing that, they would be Adjudged traitors, their lands and titles forfeit to the throne

32. 28 If a team does not show up with enough players, they forfeit the game.

33. 25 Pregnant teenage girls will have to live with their parents or forfeit their benefits.

34. The lease to the island was declared forfeit in 1934 and expired in 1937.

35. 24 Everyone enjoyed the pleasant outdoor atmosphere and setting without having to forfeit convenience.

36. 16 You will forfeit your chance of getting your money if you are late.

37. It would forfeit, by the same token, any claim to be recognised as law.

38. Synonyms for Amercement include penalty, damages, mulct, forfeiture, punishment, sanction, fine, forfeit, penance and financial penalty

39. 3 If you always tease others like that, you'll forfeit the good opinion of your friends.

40. The Barons of the Exchequer later declared his position forfeit, and he was replaced on 13 July.

41. 26 That, despite the recession and the fact that they would have to forfeit two weeks work.

42. 8 Unless it be paid by Michaelmas Day of this year, then my best manor lands are forfeit to Abbot Hugo.

43. (f) the need not to forfeit or prejudice the insurers' legal right to question the 'seaworthiness admitted' clause;

44. 29 It was vital here to pay proper attention to every step, or the river would claim forfeit.

45. Later, however, even the Accommodationists were forced to forfeit, or give up, their lands to the United States

46. 22 They say they were left financially strapped or forced to forfeit their homes to pay off the debts.

47. 19 Members absent without satisfactory excuse,[www.Sentencedict.com] shall forfeit a small fine of two pence for each case of absence.

48. 23 The boy might break wind or say a naughty word and forfeit the protection of that great white spirit.

49. Decades after the Nigeria-Biafra war, the truth of what happened is denied, so we forfeit the chance to learn from it

50. Either they must draw back from the spotlight and forfeit their privileges or pick their partners based on purely practical criteria.

51. 30 Valerie's absence allowed her to stoke up all sorts of guilt and self-pity and she did not want to forfeit that.

52. ’Amercement’, means a legal penalty or forfeit and the central character in this film seems forever fated to pay a price for his past

53. This page shows answers to the clue Confiscate, followed by 5 definitions like “Surrendered as a penalty”, “Forfeit surrendered as a penalty” and “(v

54. Apart from similar words, there are always opposite words in dictionary too, the opposite words for Acquirement are Failure, Forfeit and Loss.

55. We have accepted the Lord’s warning that if we seek credit in this world for our service, we may forfeit greater blessings.

56. 27 Either they must draw back from the spotlight and forfeit their privileges or pick their partners based on purely practical criteria.

57. Your identity as an Ailurophile is confirmed by cat hair on your clothes, but that is a distinction that most of us will gladly forfeit

58. Note: Timor-Leste were ordered by the AFC to forfeit both matches against Malaysia due to the use of falsified documents for their players.

59. The wretch, Concentred all in self, Living, shall forfeit fair renown, And, doubly dying, shall go down To the vile dust, from whence he sprung, Unwept, unhonour'd, and unsung

60. An agreement usually Between two parties that the one who has made an incorrect prediction about an uncertain outcome will forfeit something Bet - definition of Bet by The Free Dictionary.

61. Alcestis was a queen in Greek mythology famed for the love of her husband, for Alcestis would forfeit her own life so that her husband Admetus might live

62. SECTION 11 Forfeiture of Cash Bond Deposit ? The Director may forfeit the cash bond deposit in favor of the government upon the cancellation of the license for cause.

63. The wretch, Concentred all in self, Living, shall forfeit fair renown, And, doubly dying, shall go down To the vile dust from whence he sprung, Unwept, unhonored , and unsung

64. “The wretch, Concentred all in self, Living, shall forfeit fair renown, And, doubly dying, shall go down To the vile dust from whence he sprung, Unwept, unhonored , and …

65. The wretch, Concentred all in self, Living, shall forfeit fair renown, And, doubly dying, shall go down To the vile dust, from whence he sprung, Unwept, unhonour'd, and unsung

66. Property that has been the object of an offence under the Smuggling Penalties Act or the value of such goods can be declared forfeit, unless this is obviously unreasonable (Section 16).

67. This page lists baronetcies, whether extant, extinct, dormant (D), unproven (U), under review (R) or forfeit, in the Baronetages of England, Nova Scotia, Great Britain, Ireland and the United Kingdom.

68. The wretch, Concentred all in self, Living, shall forfeit fair renown, And, doubly dying, shall go down: To the vile dust from whence he sprung, 15: Unwept, unhonored, and unsung

69. As a result, a person can be left with nothing more than the sad reality indicated by Jesus’ words: “Of what benefit is it for a man to gain the whole world and to forfeit his soul?”

70. “The wretch, Concentred all in self, Living, shall forfeit fair renown, And, doubly dying, shall go down To the vile dust, from whence he sprung, Unwept, unhonored, and unsung.” ― Walter Scott, The Lay of the Last Minstrel 1805

71. McDonald’s Corporation has joined a growing list of companies that have taken action to forfeit unpaid compensation or demand repayment of compensation previously paid to a former CEO, including equity awards or proceeds from the sale of equity awards, pursuant to company Clawback policies

72. Confiscation (n.) "act of appropriating as forfeit," 1540s, from French Confiscation, from Latin Confiscationem (nominative confiscatio), noun of action from past-participle stem of confiscare, from assimilated form of com "with, together" (see con-) + fiscu s "public treasury" (see fiscal).

73. “The Allottee shall have the right to cancel/withdraw his allotment in the project as provided in the Act, provided that where the Allottee proposes to cancel/withdraw from the project without any fault of the promoter, the promoter herein is entitled to forfeit the booking amount paid for the allotment

74. At both extremes of this forepart, stabilized besieging state of affairss developed, around Leningrad ( now Saint Petersburg ) in the North and Stalingrad ( now Volgograd ) in the South, which, in their demands on human endurance and forfeit, were similar to the Besiegings of wars in earlier times.

75. ‘If you Bail out of a B share within five years, you'll forfeit 0.5% to 2.5% of your money.’ ‘Problems arose with the pension fund eventually because the benefits kept expanding but the capture of prizes was highly variable, so that Congress had to Bail out of the funds.’

76. A Bottomry, or bottomage, is an arrangement in which the master of a ship borrows money upon the bottom or keel of it, so as to forfeit the ship itself to the creditor, if the money with interest is not paid at the time appointed at the ship's safe return.

77. The Employee is obligated to observe the Confidentiality of all he has learned about the business of the Employer and its clients and of which the Employee can reasonably suspect the confidential nature during and for a period of 5 years after the end of the employment agreement.For every non-compliance or violation of the above, the Employee shall forfeit an

78. Confiscate (v.) 1550s, "to appropriate for or adjudge to be forfeit to the treasury," in reference to the goods or estate of a traitor or criminal, from Latin confiscatus, past participle of confiscare, from assimilated form of com "with, together" (see con-) + fiscus "public treasury," originally "money basket, wicker basket" (see fiscal).Caxton (late 15c.)