English to Marathi Dictionary recourse

recourse

आधार
definition
noun
surgery may be the only recourse
a source of help in a difficult situation.
translation of 'recourse'
आधार,
आसरा
example
Mayer contrasts this process with the 'recourse' NAFTA gives corporations to fight local laws that interfere with their ability to profit.
the bank has 'recourse' against the exporter for losses incurred
As the branch had, functionally, agreed to negotiate or collect the cheque, it had a collecting bank's right of 'recourse' when the cheque was dishonoured.
In other times, and in other societies, it has had 'recourse' to the Inquisition and the gulag.
I'll venture that we believe religion is an effective 'recourse' against mortality.
We hope that 'recourse' to the High Court will not be necessary in this case.
But, as is so often the case, such strong measures were the 'recourse' of a weak regime.
There are zillions of ways to deal with any difficult situation, immediate 'recourse' to magic might not be the best.
The concept gives a payee a direct right of 'recourse' against the drawee bank, although if there are no funds then generally the drawee does not have to pay.
all three countries had 'recourse' to the IMF for standby loans
In this respect, the Community has had 'recourse' to various instruments, including production quotas.
It should therefore not surprise us that ‘Popular writers often had 'recourse' to classical myths, looking to them as a fount of imagery’.
This is often a last 'recourse' , only reluctantly resorted to when a party is clearly concealing income.
Elsewhere, lustration - laws preventing wrongdoers of the past from holding office - has been the 'recourse' .
Political and ideological arrangements upheld this right, and when they failed, the ruling class had 'recourse' to force.
If the precedent of other provinces was followed in Britain, larger landowners would have had 'recourse' to two strategies to protect their interests.
Many trade unions have had 'recourse' to what is called, rightly or wrongly, fictitious employees.
There are other, often more immediately beneficial, sources of assistance during unemployment besides 'recourse' to the courts for damages.
So, a private individual is entitled to automatic 'recourse' if a supplier fails to deliver, but a company may not.
the bank has 'recourse' against the exporter for losses incurred
Although participants remained highly critical of unregulated ethnomedicine, few had 'recourse' to desired alternatives.
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.
In these terms, religion is the 'recourse' of isolated individuals seeking to find a spiritual pattern and meaning for their lives.
Such a diplomatic 'recourse' , while potentially offering short-term successes, does not last, as the Agreed Framework has shown.
Such research suggests that the proscription concerning the 'recourse' to ethnographic particulars is honoured more by some discourse analysts than others.
Though much of his career was outside South Australia, the abilities of Sir Richard Blackburn greatly impressed those before whom he appeared and those who have had 'recourse' to his judgments.
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.
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.
Now, the Pastons had 'recourse' to the courts, but also felt able to join the political conflict themselves.
Violence should not be a first 'recourse' , but that doesn't change the fact that some people really need to be dealt with.
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