violate

மீறும்
definition
verb
they violated the terms of a ceasefire
break or fail to comply with (a rule or formal agreement).
translation of 'violate'
ஆக்கிரமி,
மீறு
verb
கட்டு மீர்
example
This speech may 'violate' the law, rules a federal judge.
Another concern is ensuring that amateur video featuring people doesn't 'violate' privacy rights.
Native American petitioners had argued that the project would seriously damage what they held sacred and therefore 'violate' the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment.
The law also rules that those who 'violate' the law shall be punished with a prison term of up to three years and a fine of up to 6 million won.
The plantation owners, although willing to 'violate' organisational rules in normal times, closed ranks in times of troubles.
Moreover, transforming this view into a legal ban, and imposing it on Jane Doe and other parents, would 'violate' their Constitutional right to privacy.
‘What matters to us is to rid our countries of the aggressors, to confront those who attack us, who 'violate' what we hold sacred, or steal our riches,’ he said.
Their rule of law is might makes right and that they can ignore, change or 'violate' any rules or laws that are incompatible with their criminal activities.
Such wars reinforce the lesson that it is okay to kill, beat up and 'violate' other people's partners and children, while it is not acceptable - at least in words - at home.
By taking the lives of their children, along with their own, parents 'violate' this sacred and most fundamental right of their children.
The laws also endanger women's health, and 'violate' privacy rights and the Equal Protection clause of the constitution.
In California, making an agreement to 'violate' the law can be a misdemeanor - or a felony!
If the new rules 'violate' the law, the courts will take care of that.
Extreme cases come from martyrs who choose death rather than 'violate' principles which are sacred to them.
Some laws are so sacred that we must willingly die rather than 'violate' them.
All should bear in mind an Egyptian curse on a tomb of the second millennium BC: ‘May he who 'violates' my site and damages my grave or takes my body be reviled by the Ka of Re.’
He was the quintessential intellectual maverick - a man who thrived on bending the rules and 'violating' the regulations.
Police previously had to pore laboriously over dusty records in regional transport offices to find the addresses of traffic 'violators' .
It seemed to Crosse that her decomposition was relentlessly visible, that the rain was driving through her and out, 'violating' her further even in death.
‘Action has to be taken against anyone 'violating' the law,’ said the minister.
The streets emptied after the curfew - which authorities warned on Monday gave the police the right to shoot 'violators' .
Privacy advocates say that giving the government access to data held by commercial third parties 'violates' constitutional privacy rights.
The idea of who wants what, where, and when sexually can be expressed without 'violating' anyone and without getting anyone raped.
Although authorities regularly raid mining areas and confiscate mining machinery, 'violators' are not arrested.
But what makes his otherwise inspiring story so troubling is that he is now 'violating' young people in much the same way that he was violated.
Even when its methods are rudimentary, fraud remains a deeply complex and 'violative' crime; it takes a psychological toll on victims.
They do not differentiate or discriminate between domestic, social and public violence, viewing all of them as equally 'violative' of human rights.
She then decided to join them and shortly after a few drinks the men forced her onto the bed, restraining her while each of the 13 delinquent youths 'violated' her.
No political or other force should support such 'violators' .
Such imbalances should be corrected but in manner that equally protects, not equally 'violates' the privacy rights of men and women.
Credits: Google Translate