ENFORCES vs IMPOSE: NOUN
- The act of enforcing; insuring observance of or obedience to
- A command; injunction.
- Command; injunction.
ENFORCES vs IMPOSE: VERB
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of enforce.
- Ensure observance of laws and rules;
- Compel to behave in a certain way
- Compel to behave in a certain way
- Impose and collect
- Impose something unpleasant
- To establish or apply by authority.
- To be an inconvenience
- To enforce: compel to behave in a certain way
ENFORCES vs IMPOSE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To bring about by authority or force; force to prevail.
- To arrange (type or plates) on an imposing stone.
- To offer or circulate fraudulently; pass off.
- To force oneself on or take unfair advantage of others.
- To practice tricks or deception.
- To take unfair advantage of (a person, a friendship).
- To establish or apply as compulsory; levy.
- To obtrude or force (oneself, for example) on another or others.
ENFORCES vs IMPOSE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To lay on; to set or place; to put; to deposit.
- To lay as a charge, burden, tax, duty, obligation, command, penalty, etc.; to enjoin; to levy; to inflict.
- To lay on, as the hands, in the religious rites of confirmation and ordination.
- To arrange in proper order on a table of stone or metal and lock up in a chase for printing; -- said of columns or pages of type, forms, etc.
ENFORCES vs IMPOSE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- To lay on, or set on; put, place, or deposit: as, to impose, the hands in ordination or confirmation.
- To lay as a burden, or something to be borne or endured; levy, inflict, or enforce, as by authority, power, or influence: as, to impose taxes or penalties; to impose one's opinions upon others.
- To obtrude fallaciously or deceitfully; palm off; pass off.
- To fix upon; impute.
- To subject by way of punishment.
- In printing, to lay upon an imposing-stone or the bed of a press and secure in a chase, as pages of type or stereotype plates.
- To practise misleading trickery or imposture; act with a delusive effect: with upon: as, to impose upon one with false pretenses.
- To lay or place a burden or restraint; act with constraining effect: with upon: as, to impose upon one's patience or hospitality.
ENFORCES vs IMPOSE: RELATED WORDS
- Obliges, Executes, Conducts, Ensures, Operates, Deploys, Applies, Upholds, Administers, Implements, Establishes, Imposes, Apply, Impose, Implement
- Introduce, Uphold, Apply, Exert, Implement, Punish, Foist, Enact, Imposition, Reimpose, Bring down, Visit, Levy, Inflict, Enforce
ENFORCES vs IMPOSE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Applicable, Applied, Enables, Implementing, Uses, Provides, Obligates, Obliges, Operates, Applies, Establishes, Imposes, Apply, Impose, Implement
- Dictate, Sanction, Declare, Establish, Introduce, Uphold, Apply, Implement, Punish, Foist, Enact, Bring down, Visit, Levy, Enforce
ENFORCES vs IMPOSE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Python enforces indentation as part of the syntax.
- During the year, no one enforces any controls.
- Campus Security enforces these policies at all times.
- Each company enforces its own specific dress code.
- Web Site Blocking enforces your Internet usage policy.
- FERC, which strictly enforces airly, honestly and openly.
- Such ludicrous supposition only re enforces my view.
- This option enforces the default configuration in Outlook.
- Bureaucratic This leader stringently establishes and enforces rules.
- Hive enforces schema on read time whereas RDBMS enforces schema on write time.
- No county asked voters to impose the tax.
- Court should not impose identical discipline in Massachusetts.
- Therefore, the rule does not impose this requirement.
- Commercial fungicides are expensive and impose health risks.
- Sometimes banks impose a monthly debit card fee.
- However, individual investors can impose additional eligibility requirements.
- Although some states authorize local government limits or impose limits only in select geographic areas, most impose statewide, uniform assessment limits.
- DBMS may impose limitations while another may impose none.
- Though hiring goals may burden some innocent individuals, they simply do not impose the same kind of injury that layoffs impose.
- Canadian municipalities may impose business license fees but do not impose income taxes.
ENFORCES vs IMPOSE: QUESTIONS
- Who monitors and enforces data protection in China?
- Who enforces tax delinquencies in Egg Harbor Township?
- Who enforces the Asbestos Hazard Emergency Response Act?
- Who enforces the drinking water standards in Minnesota?
- Who enforces compliance with the requirements of USP?
- Who enforces the Slovak environmental policy and legislation?
- Who enforces the rules for disaster preparedness plans?
- Who enforces the Federal Regulations for materials handling?
- Who enforces the Constitution at Boston University?
- Who enforces traffic laws on military installations?
- Do SBA regulations impose unnecessary burdens or costs?
- Should states impose sales taxes on Internet access?
- Can RBI impose monetary penalties on compound contraventions?
- Should adjudicators impose censures under individual sanction guidelines?
- Which GCC countries do not impose withholding taxes?
- Which countries impose financial sanctions on the UK?
- When did Canada impose retaliatory tariffs on China?
- Do Christians impose ethnocentric ideas on cultures?
- Should Singapore impose restrictions on foreign investors?
- Do gorillas impose hard boundaries like chimpanzees?