0 to say officially that an agreement, permission, a law, etc. is no longer in effect: --
The authorities have revoked their original decision to allow development of this rural area.
1 to say officially that an agreement, permission, or law is no longer effective: --
Licenses can be revoked for up to five years.
2 to state officially that an agreement, right, or legal document is no longer effective: --
Reactions can range from simply talking about the incident or giving warnings for the future, to revoking privileges that are very important to the person.
Consent can be revoked very easily in general research.
They were often unjustifiably revoked, especially for the employed.
Both of these agreements may be revoked at any time.
However, this argument ignores the fact that husbands had the right to revoke their wives' authority to pledge their credit.
Even here, possibilities to revoke decisions and an arbitrary order of steps are called for, as well as change propagation, decomposition and reuse.
The courts, however, ruled that the tax subsidies that had been legally mandated were an ' acquired right ' that the government could not revoke.
The last of the leases permiting grazing of livestock in that area was revoked in 1972.