0 to force to accept or have -- imposer
to impose a ban/tax/condition/belief on sth/sb imposer une interdiction / un impôt / une condition / une conviction à qqn/sur qqch
2 to place (a tax, fine, task etc) on someone or something -- taxer, imposer
The government have imposed a new tax on cigarettes.
3 to force (oneself, one’s opinions etc) on a person -- imposer
The headmaster liked to impose his authority on the teachers.
4 (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 -- s’imposer
The principle of legal equality imposes the duty to tax according to economic capacity.
There are clear tendencies to merge to create colossal companies which can impose their terms and conditions on trade and industry.
Secondly, freedom of budgetary and tax policy should be restored, and attempts to impose and standardise these policies abandoned.
It is very difficult to impose ideas on working time across so many different industries.
We should consider that lesson when we try to impose peace agreements in the future.
Let us impose training for male and female candidates in politics - but why especially compel women to undergo training?
It will be up to working women to impose equality themselves, joining forces with the workers to demand a living wage for all.
It needs to be converted into a task force which will impose terms and conditions and procedures.
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迫使, 推行, 強制實行…
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impor, abusar…
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yürürlüğe koymak, uygulamak, yüklemek…
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