0 present participle of breach
1 to break a law, promise, agreement, or relationship:
2 to make an opening in a wall or fence, especially in order to attack someone or something behind it:
But what is the compensation owed for breaching a duty to compensate?
And what is the compensation owed for breaching that duty?
It is part of an ongoing process of breaching the many dividing forces of the discipline.
Is there any other way of dealing with the problem without breaching confidentiality?
Like computer-hackers breaching elaborate security systems to disrupt large organizations, they may have been secretly demonstrating their own cleverness.
There is no case of breaching the boundaries.
Several parasites produce proteases that degrade matrix proteins, facilitating the breaching of the dermal barrier to spread the infection.
But assuming that neither will give me a release, there seems to be no way to avoid breaching my obligation to someone.