Sentences with abrogate
ab·ro·gate
A a - The next prime minister could abrogate the treaty. [VERB noun]
- To abrogate a law.
- This God's revelation of himself, in the Hebrew Bible and the Christian New Testament, does not cancel out or abrogate human reason.
- The airline's machinists had gone on strike a month earlier, and Lorenzo set out to abrogate Continental's union contracts.
- And the president has the power to abrogate any international treaty at will.
- But many simply do not know what to say or abrogate their responsibility to teachers.
- While the Government duds audiences by letting the new commercial digital channels abrogate their local content obligations.
- Another memo said the president could unilaterally abrogate treaties with other nations.