Similar words: superimposed, composed, impose, composedly, impose on, superimpose, compose, decompose. Meaning: [ɪm'pəʊz] adj. set forth authoritatively as obligatory.
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91) The Securities Commission chastised the firm but imposed no fine.
92) The council has imposed a ban on alcohol in the city parks.
93) Many nations have imposed sanctions on the country because of its attacks on its own people.
94) The army is now on patrol in Srinagar and a curfew has been imposed.
95) The treaty was imposed by force, and therein lay the cause of its ineffectiveness.
96) Many companies have imposed curbs on smoking in the workplace.
97) The United Nations has imposed strict conditions on the ceasefire.
98) The government have imposed a freeze on civil service appointments.
99) Peace cannot be imposed from the outside by the United States or anyone else.
100) Motivation to learn must come from the child; it cannot be artificially imposed.
101) A total smoking ban has been imposed throughout the building.
102) The ban was imposed after the magazine published an article satirising the government.
103) He vociferously opposed the state of emergency imposed by the government.
104) The government has imposed a sharp credit squeeze in an attempt to hold down inflation.
105) The president imposed a complete blockade on the island's harbours.
106) The government imposed a ceiling on imports of foreign cars.
107) The union imposed an overtime ban in protest at the sacking of two workers.
108) The bureaucrats imposed rules and regulations on big business.
109) Mediators have imposed a news blackout on the talks.
110) This restriction is often imposed to avoid prolonged arguments between seller and buyer.
111) The mass is politically apathetic and impotent(sentencedict.com),[sentence dictionary] and policy is imposed upon this large proportion of the population.
112) The judge said he had asked for the case to be re-listed because he had anxiety about the sentence he imposed.
113) Meanwhile, a curfew was imposed in Pristina, the provincial capital.
114) It must also be remembered that the fundamental duty imposed on the police is to prevent a breach of the peace.
115) It imposed fines totalling £328,500 on 105 solicitors, compared with 76 solicitors fined an aggregate of £216,000 the year before.
116) In his decision, Reinhardt said voters had not been properly informed that the law imposed a lifetime ban on candidates.
117) Some were imposed by monasteries on benefices of which they were the patrons, sometimes as a half way stage to appropriation.
118) Life insurance levies Relief for levies imposed under the Lautro Indemnity Scheme will be available for life assurance companies as management expenses.
119) Or have earthworms already attained the maximum size possible within the physical limits imposed by a hydraulic skeleton?
120) There was no nationwide obligation imposed on organisers to warn the police in advance that such a march was to take place.
More similar words: superimposed, composed, impose, composedly, impose on, superimpose, compose, decompose, supposed, opposed, exposed, imposing, impostor, imposter, disposed, proposed, imposture, supposedly, impossibly, imposition, unimposing, impossible, transposed, indisposed, predisposed, be supposed to, be opposed to, impossibility, compost, import.