Similar words: arrested, infested, digestive system, contested, congested, interested, uninterested, disinterested. Meaning: [vest] adj. fixed and absolute and without contingency.
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31, To that extent, I declare a vested interest.
32, Jerry has obvious vested interests to protect.
33, The committee should be independent of all vested interest.
34, They thus have a vested interest in their conservation.
35, Legislative power is vested in the bicameral Legislative Assembly.
36, There are too many vested interests.
37, The beneficial interests are normally vested in the beneficiaries.
38, Well, he obviously has a vested interest in having some one else to blame.
39, The dominance of the academic tradition is patently supported by the major vested interest groups within education and the broader society.
40, Each team has a direct and vested interest in the quality and delivery performance.
41, The Housing Act 1957 vested the management of local authority houses in the Corporation and gave it power to charge reasonable rents.
42, To be very hard-nosed there is also a vested interest in running an efficient information service for a band.
43, In a sea power economy[sentencedict.com], vested interests are in open markets and free trade.
44, Under the 1978 Constitution, considerable power is vested in the King and exercised by a Cabinet appointed by him.
45, Even fewer are unattached to vested interests in the debate.
46, But all the endowments which funded chantries were confiscated at Easter 1548 and vested in the Crown.
47, Thus reform could involve a clash with the vested interests of local aristocracies.
48, Apparently the idea is being spiked by vested interests in the sugar industry.
49, Or to create a rational design that goes against vested interests will likely not be implemented.
50, The power to grant pardons is vested in the president alone.
51, It also recognises that day-to-day business and executive authority is vested in line management.
52, Exciting, unfamiliar and lively means fresh copy for the press,[sentencedict.com/vested.html] which has a vested interest in chaos.
53, Civil rights, equal opportunity and Great Society legislation in the 1960s also vested more power in the federal government.
54, If your company has a five-year plan you become fully vested after five years.
55, It almost certainly means they must counter those forces within the prison system which have a vested interest in expansion.
56, This is the strange case with the vested interests in production.
57, Legislative authority is vested in a unicameral 12-member Parliament which is popularly elected for up to four years.
58, Both the newspaper and the advertising agency have a vested interest in encouraging advertising.
59, Critics of opponents to development frequently accuse them of being blinded by nostalgia and motivated by personal vested interest.
60, Legislative power is vested in a bicameral Parliament, the lower chamber of which is popularly elected for up to five years.
More similar words: arrested, infested, digestive system, contested, congested, interested, uninterested, disinterested, vest, invest, divest, vestige, harvest, investor, vestment, travesty, livestock, investing, vestigial, investment, investiture, investigate, investigator, transvestite, investigation, fisted, busted, direct investment, investment banker, fester.