English to Malay Dictionary recourse

recourse

jalan
definition
noun
surgery may be the only recourse
a source of help in a difficult situation.
example
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.
the bank has 'recourse' against the exporter for losses incurred
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.
To make matters worse, you will have no 'recourse' because a compensation clause will rarely be in your contract.
Although participants remained highly critical of unregulated ethnomedicine, few had 'recourse' to desired alternatives.
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.
We hope that 'recourse' to the High Court will not be necessary in this case.
surgery may be the only 'recourse'
Violence should not be a first 'recourse' , but that doesn't change the fact that some people really need to be dealt with.
Hence it had 'recourse' to adjudication to advance that process of agreement.
In other times, and in other societies, it has had 'recourse' to the Inquisition and the gulag.
Tampering tends to be the 'recourse' of underdeveloped political forces or rulers that are weak or unable to afford the luxury of costly campaigns.
Now, the Pastons had 'recourse' to the courts, but also felt able to join the political conflict themselves.
‘If the customer terminates the contract without a good reason there is a 'recourse' we can take,’ he said.
There are other, often more immediately beneficial, sources of assistance during unemployment besides 'recourse' to the courts for damages.
In this respect, the Community has had 'recourse' to various instruments, including production quotas.
If the precedent of other provinces was followed in Britain, larger landowners would have had 'recourse' to two strategies to protect their interests.
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?
Clients have considered 'recourse' to the European Court over this.
But, as is so often the case, such strong measures were the 'recourse' of a weak regime.
Let us not forget that this is a business and as such should be maintained by its directors, shareholders and supporters, and if this is not possible then the only 'recourse' is closure.
If this does not happen, there will be a possible 'recourse' to arms.
Such a diplomatic 'recourse' , while potentially offering short-term successes, does not last, as the Agreed Framework has shown.
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' .
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.
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 the commercial world, 'recourse' through copyright and legal means is available to those who believe their ideas and works have been stolen.
all three countries had 'recourse' to the IMF for standby loans
Victims who have not issued proceedings by that deadline will not have 'recourse' to the High Court, and have no alternative but to seek redress at the compensation tribunal.
It should therefore not surprise us that ‘Popular writers often had 'recourse' to classical myths, looking to them as a fount of imagery’.
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