Similar words: oblige, obligation, obliquely, diligent, oblivious, diligently, belligerent, tiger. Meaning: [ə'blaɪdʒd] adj. under a moral obligation to do something.
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91. He was obliged to eat with the servants, and was completely at the archbishop's beck and call.
92. As the editor in chief of such a magazine, I am obliged to answer a lot of questions about men.
93. Ruth found herself obliged to share a bedroom with Polly Beard.
94. Legally, the government was obliged to maintain strong control of transport, making privatisation problematic.
95. After the judgment the Government was obliged to alter the law on the right to beat one's children.
96. Dismissal may include constructive dismissal: the employer's behaviour proves so objectionable that the employee is obliged to leave.
97. What animal products are used in other wines, and why are producers not obliged to list the ingredients?
98. Faced with such a direct question, and from Mrs Langham, he felt obliged to reply.
99. But we are not obliged to join in a single currency if we do not want to.
100. Users have to register, but aren't obliged to enter into a lengthy contractual agreement.
101. The Independent, in London,(http://sentencedict.com/obliged.html) obliged with another blast of hot air.
102. I would also hold that he was not obliged to do so in discretionary life sentence cases.
103. The income from private tutoring was falling and the Joyces were obliged to move to a basement flat near Brompton Cemetery.
104. Creditors are all too frequently obliged to terminate the consumer credit agreement because the debtor is in default.
105. The corporatist countervision argues that corporate managers are obliged to weigh the interests of a whole range of different constituents.
106. The band obliged with musical chairs, but after two of the dining room chairs were broken, they left off playing.
107. Perhaps being gay, they do not feel obliged to conform to traditional male standards.
108. Careers officer LEAs are obliged to set up a Careers Service, which is staffed by careers officers.
109. Instances occur where the courts feel obliged to construe a statute in a way that they themselves acknowledge creates outrageous injustice.
110. Bob felt obliged to go and look at a certain number of these places out of politeness.
111. I do not feel obliged to believe that the same God who has endowed us with sense, reason, and intellect has intended us to forgo their use. Galileo Galilei
112. She had wild visions of being obliged to invite him to dinner every night.
113. Disappointed, we retraced our footprints and were obliged to camp on the same patch of ice as the night before.
114. Science may be obliged to find a new word free from religious associations.
115. That is why soldiers called Metaxas and Papadopoulos have from time to time felt obliged to step forward and try a spot of military dictatorship.
116. Nevertheless, in accordance with the regulations of the shipping company, they had all been obliged to buy return tickets.
117. The Mayor was obliged to adjourn the meeting pending discussion by the Corporation.
118. Instead, she was obliged to subscribe to Emerson's misleading account of their acquaintance.
119. As there are no plans to examine, the council is not obliged to issue any formal letter of approval.
120. By the 1890s civil servants had become obliged to retire on reaching pensionable age.
More similar words: oblige, obligation, obliquely, diligent, oblivious, diligently, belligerent, tiger, ignoble, problem, alleged, managed, engaged, allegedly, challenged, engaged in, discouraged, indigenous, refrigerator, blip, light, blink, malign, flight, slight, public, light up, delight, lightly, publisher.