0 to place (a tax, fine, task etc) on someone or something -- uvalit, zavést
The government have imposed a new tax on cigarettes.
1 to force (oneself, one’s opinions etc) on a person -- vynucovat si
The headmaster liked to impose his authority on the teachers.
2 (often with on) to ask someone to do something which he should not be asked to do or which he will find difficult to do -- zneužít
Rigorous validation and quality control procedures have been imposed throughout the development course.
That experience taught me that life's zero-sum nature imposes the hard responsibility of using limited time and energy wisely.
On the contrary, when a double support phase takes too long, the trajectories for the following single support phase are imposed on the system.
Even if the creation is overall beneficial for the child, that is not alone a sufficient reason to refuse to impose liability.
Treatise writers attempt to impose some order on the decided cases-to reconstruct rationally what has been said and done in those cases.
However, ideas and cultural practices, unlike institutions, are difficult to impose from above.
I think of this as a mandatory code, imposed by each home country, unlike the voluntary code approach discussed below which is complementary.
This patience derives from understanding that the intervention will have little impact if it is forcibly imposed, an insight that develops during a speaker's life.
中文繁体
迫使, 推行, 強制實行…
More中文简体
迫使, 推行, 强制实行…
MoreEspañol
imponer, molestar, aprovecharse…
MorePortuguês
impor, abusar…
MoreTürk dili
yürürlüğe koymak, uygulamak, yüklemek…
MoreFrançais
imposer, s’imposer, taxer…
MoreDansk
pålægge, påtvinge, være til ulejlighed…
MoreIndonesia
membebankan, memaksakan, memaksa…
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