0 present participle of infringe --
1 to break a rule, law, etc.: --
They infringed building regulations.
She suggests we use the term "infringing" in this sense and contrast infringing a right with violating it, the latter implying that the action in question is morally wrong.
You are infringing a licence, to court!
These grounds will be present to greater or lesser degrees depending upon the nature of the right and the nature of the rule infringing the right.
New settlement schemes are being planned and implemented in the western lowlands, directly infringing traditional pastoral areas.
Fighting contagious diseases has always prompted the question of how the state should shoulder its responsibilities as defender of public health without infringing on civil liberties.
Illusion and reality tend to merge into a single theatrical unit, infringing upon the theatre's already fragile hold on illusion and lessening the psychological distance between action on- and offstage.
One tendency, as we have been arguing, was towards a scientific authoritarianism, extending bureaucratic control and infringing local rights in often overtly repressive ways.
Since a harm is merely a setback to an interest, there are ways of setting back a person's interest without infringing on a claim.