violate

  • 61break the Sabbath — violate the holy day of rest observed by Jews …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 62contravene the law — violate the law, break the law …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 63infringe rights — violate rights …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 64transgress the law — violate the law, break the law, commit a crime or illegal action …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 65violation — violate ► VERB 1) break or fail to comply with (a rule or formal agreement). 2) treat with disrespect. 3) rape or sexually assault. DERIVATIVES violation noun violator noun. ORIGIN Latin violare treat violently …

    English terms dictionary

  • 66violator — violate ► VERB 1) break or fail to comply with (a rule or formal agreement). 2) treat with disrespect. 3) rape or sexually assault. DERIVATIVES violation noun violator noun. ORIGIN Latin violare treat violently …

    English terms dictionary

  • 67DrinkOrDie — For other uses, see DOD. DrinkOrDie DrinkOrDie ASCII .nfo header. Their slogan reads warez bearz from Russia and beyond . Origin Moscow Country …

    Wikipedia

  • 68Law, Crime, and Law Enforcement — ▪ 2006 Introduction Trials of former heads of state, U.S. Supreme Court rulings on eminent domain and the death penalty, and high profile cases against former executives of large corporations were leading legal and criminal issues in 2005.… …

    Universalium

  • 69infringe — in·fringe /in frinj/ vb in·fringed, in·fring·ing [Medieval Latin infringere, from Latin, to break, crush, from in in + frangere to break] vt: to encroach upon in a way that violates law or the rights of another the right of the people to keep and …

    Law dictionary

  • 70NSA warrantless surveillance controversy — For the related controversy about data mining of domestic call records see NSA call database. National Security Agency logo The NSA warrantless surveillance controversy (AKA Warrantless Wiretapping ) concerns surveillance of persons within the… …

    Wikipedia