Synonym: article. Similar words: claustrophobic, claustrophobia, plausible, implausible, laud, laugh, cause, pause. Meaning: [klɔːz] n. 1. (grammar) an expression including a subject and predicate but not constituting a complete sentence 2. a separate section of a legal document (as a statute or contract or will).
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91. Courts ruled that prayer in school violates a clause of the First Amendment.
92. To be sure, this Court has construed the Commerce Clause to accommodate unanticipated changes over the past two centuries.
93. Subsequently, the Government inserted a clause of their own which went some way to meet Lord Scarman's amendment.
94. Decided cases suggest that the burden of proving a clause reasonable will often be difficult to discharge.
95. The clause was criticized by some as giving implicit authority to the army to stage further coups should they be deemed necessary.
96. Clearly, the Delaney clause makes little sense in the modern age, but regulatory activists refuse to even discuss its repeal.
97. Clause 6 is a clause which sellers often try to impose.
98. However, when a subordinate clause follows a main clause this additional processing load does not occur.
99. This clause was construed by both Evershed J and the Court of Appeal to include acting as a consultant.
100. How if at all did the existence of the penalty clause affect the consideration given by the plaintiff?
101. The most notable is the relative pronoun that, which can only be used with a restrictive relative clause.
102. The owners of the dredger required it to complete a contract which contained an onerous penalty clause.
103. The agreement included a clause setting up a joint committee to oversee air quality.
104. If one party freely consents to a clause, a court is unlikely to hold it unreasonable.
105. The clause among the Fourth Lateran Council decrees that proposed regulated taxes for the churches and provinces of Christendom suggests as much.
106. This means that, even though an exemption clause on its wording apparently provides a defence, it may nevertheless be ineffective.
107. The newly inserted clause in the lease required a tenant to vacate the premises on 90 days notice.
108. A general exclusion clause which excludes liability altogether is thus very unlikely to be reasonable under s 3.
109. Mr. Wilson: The new clause and amendments are primarily concerned with consumer interests.
110. The clause is relatively mild[Sentencedict], requiring international agencies to commit themselves to support eradication efforts.
111. All those cases turned on the effect of particular words in the rent review clause.
112. Much of the vagueness of the due process clause disappears when the specific prohibitions of the First become its standard.
113. The dependent clause functions as a substitution item in a frame, the frame being the rest of the sentence.
114. They risk eviction under a new clause being introduced in the tenancy condition from next month.
115. In the sentence "Can you tell me what time it is?" 'Can you tell me' is the main clause, and 'what time it is' is a subordinate clause.
116. It is important to remember that a classic type of restraint of trade clause frequently mentions two quite separate time periods.
117. The interrelationship of this clause with the rent review clause should be considered.
118. The Equal Access Act was challenged in several cases, raising questions about its constitutionality as violative of the establishment clause.
119. However, most leases incorporate a rent review clause which provides for the periodic raising of the rent.
120. Equally important is the last sentence of the clause which excludes prior representations and extraneous material, such as sales catalogues.
More similar words: claustrophobic, claustrophobia, plausible, implausible, laud, laugh, cause, pause, launch, applaud, laundry, laugh at, glaucoma, plaudits, plaudit, nausea, laureate, laughing, cum laude, because, laudatory, laughable, onslaught, austria, sausage, austere, exhaust, austrian, because of, ad nauseam.