0 past simple and past participle of ratify
1 (especially of governments or organizations) to make an agreement official:
Some of these reservations have rendered the ratified international treaty virtually meaningless or of no practical legal utility.
Regulation, however comprehensive and widely ratified and implemented, is unlikely to prove highly successful since it is prone to enforcement deficit.
That law protected the brotherhoods' insurance funds and established national mediation mechanisms that ratified the brotherhoods' industrial position.
Firstly, many states have failed to enact the legislation to implement duly ratified international treaties.
Dozens of international environmental treaties have been negotiated and ratified.
By 2001, 30 member states had signed and ratified the document.
For an activity within a setting, then, we can have levels of ratified speakership and listenership.
Categorization of adverse events was ratified by anesthetists in the research team and on the scientific advisory group.