0 a situation in which someone expects another person to do something that they do not want to do or that is not convenient:
1 the introduction of a new law or system:
2 something done that causes inconvenience to another person:
3 the act of establishing a rule or law to be obeyed:
the imposition of new taxes
4 the introduction of a new law , tax, rule, or punishment:
the imposition of laws/legislation/rules
Our approach makes no assumptions or impositions on the nature of any particular new algorithms or system configuration.
Such strong connections are supplemented by strict directional impositions due to weak connections.
The conflict over impositions foregrounded the need to define and to clarify the constitutional relationship between king and parliament.
Against the particular forms of subjectification experienced under the regime, they operated through incremental moves at the microlevel to resist the local impositions of dominating power.
Ultimately, strong popular resistance and uniform international condemnation against these authoritarian impositions helped to restore ' limited democracy ' and provided decisive momentum to reinvigorate the peace process.
Beyond the material impositions of machinery and bodies, radio spawned new visions for imaginary flights while securing opportunities for economic expansion through networks of capital and exchange.
The picture he draws serves the ironic tone of the interpretation marvelously: selfabsorbed academics at their ivory-tower games, fending off or capitalizing upon the silly impositions of equally self-seeking ministries.
A consensus is replaced by another consensus, not by impositions.
中文繁体
期望, 勉強, 打擾,麻煩…
More中文简体
期望, 勉强, 打扰,麻烦…
MoreEspañol
abuso, molestia, imposición…
MorePortuguês
incômodo, imposição…
MoreTürk dili
yürürlüğe koyma, uygulama, etkin kılma…
MoreFrançais
mise [feminine] en place, imposition…
MoreČeština
uložení, požadavek…
MoreDansk
ulejlighed…
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