English to Turkish Dictionary repeal

repeal

Yürürlükten kaldırmak
definition
verb
the legislation was repealed five months later
revoke or annul (a law or congressional act).
noun
the House voted in favor of repeal
the action of revoking or annulling a law or congressional act.
translation of 'repeal'
verb
geçersiz kılmak,
iptal etmek,
yürürlükten kaldırmak
noun
fesih,
yürürlükten kaldırma,
iptal
example
The bill makes a mockery of the double-dividend-tax 'repeal' the President is seeking, with its partial, phased-in cut that would cancel out the desired effects.
There has been no 'repeal' of the Law of Economics.
The 'repeal' of the Corn Law is these days commonly regarded as the ultimate victory of the classical liberal economic doctrine over wrong-headed mercantilism.
The candidates are unanimous in favoring a 'repeal' of some or all of the tax cuts.
The commission's report called for the immediate 'repeal' of the 9 per cent stamp duty.
As most professionals now understand, the recently enacted estate tax repeal means that there is no estate tax 'repeal' .
This aimed to push for greater democracy inside the union, implement left policies, such as 'repeal' of the Conservative employment legislation and build a more open left organisation.
A tax-reform panel has recommended eliminating the tax, but 'repeal' would cost $1.2 trillion over the next decade.
It is perfectly legitimate for him, as a strategic measure in that desired direction, to push for a drastic reduction or 'repeal' of the income tax.
Skeel argues that the enactment and 'repeal' of the first three bankruptcy acts is an example of legislative cycling.
Are you sure 'repeal' will get you all the money you need?
The 'repeal' of the import duty would brush away at one stroke the danger of monopoly.
He will learn that knowledge of liberalism cannot be derived from Adam Smith alone, and that the demand for 'repeal' of interventionist measures is not identical with the call, Return to Adam Smith.
And since most experts agree that a full, permanent 'repeal' of the estate tax under the new legislation is unlikely - there's no time like the present.
Though many of the interest group representatives in favor of 'repeal' indicated that the time for Glass-Steagall reform was urgent, legislators did not possess that same feeling of urgency.
One claims that the Bubble Act effectively put a hold on new joint-stock companies in Britain until its 'repeal' in 1825.
This 'repeal' will be challenged as an invasion of state sovereignty, but recall that Congress had no trouble in 1939 repealing the tax exemption of state and local employees.
The 'repeal' of the Bubble Act in 1825 was followed by a series of tentative statutory initiatives which left the private joint-stock company in legal limbo.
The 'repeal' of Rule 42 was defeated by two votes last year.
the House voted in favour of 'repeal'
the House voted in favor of 'repeal'
We know that reasonable men and women with access to the same facts urged 'repeal' of Prohibition, presumably because they weighted good and harm differently; in short, because they had different values.
They insist, and profess to believe, that treaties like acts of assembly, should be 'repealable' at pleasure.
The Act was 'repealed' in 1822 after Smith caused a smallpox epidemic in Tarboro, North Carolina.
To prevent self-entrenching amendments, assume that the amendment will be 'repealable' under currently-existing constitutional procedures and voting rules, even if it purports to change those procedures and rules.
Finally, the Act of 1534 'repealed' the Act of 1484, and further stated that aliens could only sell wholesale wares to English-born printers or stationers, and that no bound books were to be imported at all.
In other words, although Parliament was 'repealing' the Stamp Act, it retained its right to govern America.
Two more acts followed in 1861 and 1863, 'repealing' hundreds of old laws; these acts and subsequent legislation abrogated much of Magna Carta.
More has been said in recent years - even in recent days - about 'repealing' the Act of Settlement.
Between 1830 and mid-century, colonial licensing laws were 'repealed' , temporary, or rarely enforced.
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