impliedly उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- The Court ruled that the words " injunctive relief " in Section 16 of the Clayton Act impliedly included the power to force divestiture of assets in order to ameliorate harm to the market from an anticompetitive merger.
- In deciding whether s27 impliedly created an exception to s1738, the " general question is whether the concerns underlying a particular grant of exclusive jurisdiction justify a finding of an implied partial repeal of s1738 ."
- The Divisional Court and Lord Hope and Baroness Hale suggested that there might be limits to parliamentary sovereignty ( although Lord Bingham and Lord Carswell impliedly supported the orthodox view that there are no limits to parliamentary sovereignty ).
- These comments were perceived by Sir William Wade as " revolutionary ", in that Lord Bridge suggests that Parliament has, in passing the European Communities Act 1972, managed to bind its successors from repealing the Act impliedly.
- Isn't it somewhat problematic that the debate over a basic topical categorization is noted in the body of the article but impliedly contradicted by the lead ? talk ) 20 : 07, 11 August 2014 ( UTC)
- The promisor impliedly promises " not " to revoke the offer and the promisee impliedly promises to furnish complete performance, but as the name suggests, the promisee still retains the " option " of not completing performance.
- The promisor impliedly promises " not " to revoke the offer and the promisee impliedly promises to furnish complete performance, but as the name suggests, the promisee still retains the " option " of not completing performance.
- In 2012, in " BH v The Lord Advocate ( Scotland ) ", Scotland Act can only be expressly repealed; it cannot be impliedly repealed; that is because of its fundamental constitutional nature ."
- Although the original toll bridge company claimed that its corporate charter impliedly conferred monopoly status that the state could not abridge, Taney declared that a corporate charter should be strictly construed to encompass only express guarantees, not implied privileges.
- When a man holds himself out as a skilled man he thereby impliedly warrants that he is competent at his work, see " Harmer v Cornelius ", but he does not warrant that he will use reasonable care.