English to Arabic Dictionary recourse

recourse

طعن
definition
noun
surgery may be the only recourse
a source of help in a difficult situation.
translation of 'recourse'
noun
طعن,
استعانة,
نقد,
استجارة,
التجاء,
ملجأ,
ملاذ
example
There are other, often more immediately beneficial, sources of assistance during unemployment besides 'recourse' to the courts for damages.
all three countries had 'recourse' to the IMF for standby loans
When hegemony breaks down, as it did for liberal democracy in late Weimar, there will be a 'recourse' to extreme measures to preserve the status quo.
On another note, I had 'recourse' to the calamine lotion bottle last night when I realised I'd applied suntan lotion so cack-handedly that my left shoulder was completely unprotected.
Such research suggests that the proscription concerning the 'recourse' to ethnographic particulars is honoured more by some discourse analysts than others.
surgery may be the only 'recourse'
To make matters worse, you will have no 'recourse' because a compensation clause will rarely be in your contract.
In these terms, religion is the 'recourse' of isolated individuals seeking to find a spiritual pattern and meaning for their lives.
Hence it had 'recourse' to adjudication to advance that process of agreement.
Whether those kangaroo courts (if they ever come to pass) or the regular federal courts will have 'recourse' to the death penalty remains to be seen, but it seems likely.
In this respect, the Community has had 'recourse' to various instruments, including production quotas.
The rest of the population could not afford such measures; the only stone-built and relatively fire-proof building they had 'recourse' to for defence was the village church or chapel.
Many trade unions have had 'recourse' to what is called, rightly or wrongly, fictitious employees.
Such a diplomatic 'recourse' , while potentially offering short-term successes, does not last, as the Agreed Framework has shown.
Although participants remained highly critical of unregulated ethnomedicine, few had 'recourse' to desired alternatives.
In other times, and in other societies, it has had 'recourse' to the Inquisition and the gulag.
They have no 'recourse' to the courts to review the question of whether they should be locked up.
Has the ability to use force with impunity lowered the moral standard for the 'recourse' to force considerably from the last-resort requirements of just war?
If this does not happen, there will be a possible 'recourse' to arms.
a means of solving disputes without 'recourse' to courts of law
Clients have considered 'recourse' to the European Court over this.
It's a reassuring 'recourse' for women like me who might even be accused of approaching life too conservatively, too responsibly.
Now, the Pastons had 'recourse' to the courts, but also felt able to join the political conflict themselves.
the bank has 'recourse' against the exporter for losses incurred
As a result, some politicians have begun to think of war, not as the high-risk 'recourse' of last resort, but as an attractive foreign policy option in times of domestic scandal or economic decline.
It should therefore not surprise us that ‘Popular writers often had 'recourse' to classical myths, looking to them as a fount of imagery’.
surgery may be the only 'recourse'
The judge said 'recourse' to the courts should be a last resort, particularly when family circumstances and the care and welfare of children were involved.
At this point the only possible 'recourse' was to retire, which we did.
If the company declares bankruptcy within two years of the deal you risk being charged with conspiracy in asset-stripping and could lose the property without compensation or 'recourse' .
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