FORBIDS vs VETO: NOUN
- An official prohibition or edict against something
- An instance in which this right is exercised.
- An official document or message from a chief executive stating the reasons for rejection of a bill.
- The power of one party or entity to forbid the actions or decisions of another party or entity.
- A prohibition or rejection of a proposed or intended act.
- The power or right to prohibit or reject a proposed or intended act (especially the power of a chief executive to reject a bill passed by the legislature)
- A vote that blocks a decision
- Any right or power of authoritatively forbidding or effectively negativing, or the exercise of such right or power; prohibition; interdict.
- The constitutional power of the chief executive of a state or nation to prevent or delay the enactment of legislation passed by the legislature.
- An authoritative prohibition or negative; a forbidding; an interdiction.
- A power or right possessed by one department of government to forbid or prohibit the carrying out of projects attempted by another department; especially, in a constitutional government, a power vested in the chief executive to prevent the enactment of measures passed by the legislature. Such a power may be absolute, as in the case of the Tribunes of the People in ancient Rome, or limited, as in the case of the President of the United States. Called also the veto power.
- The exercise of such authority; an act of prohibition or prevention.
- A document or message communicating the reasons of the executive for not officially approving a proposed law; -- called also veto message.
- A political right to disapprove of (and thereby stop) the process of a decision, a law etc.
- An invocation of that right.
- In a constitutional government, the right vested in one branch of it to negative the determinations of another branch; specifically, the right, under constitutional restrictions, of the executive, as a king, a president, or a governor, to reject a bill passed, by the legislature; also, the act of exercising this right.
FORBIDS vs VETO: ADJECTIVE
- Excluded from use or mention
- N/A
FORBIDS vs VETO: VERB
- Command against
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of forbid.
- Keep from happening or arising; have the effect of preventing
- Command against
- Vote against; refuse to endorse; refuse to assent
- To use a veto against.
FORBIDS vs VETO: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To prevent or delay (a legislative bill) from becoming law by exercising the power of veto.
- To prohibit; to negative; also, to refuse assent to, as a legislative bill, and thus prevent its enactment.
- To forbid, prohibit, or decide against.
FORBIDS vs VETO: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- Refuse to assent
- Refuse to endorse
- Vote against
- To forbid authoritatively; specifically, to negative by exercising the constitutional right of veto: as, to veto a bill.
FORBIDS vs VETO: RELATED WORDS
- Precludes, Bans, Proscribes, Prevents, Prohibiting, Prohibits, Foreclose, Interdict, Veto, Forestall, Prevent, Proscribe, Disallow, Preclude, Prohibit
- Nix, Ban, Objection, Rejection, Reject, Oppose, Opposes, Overrule, Negative, Interdict, Disallow, Forbid, Proscribe, Prohibit, Blackball
FORBIDS vs VETO: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Restricts, Denies, Prohibition, Proscribes, Prohibiting, Prohibits, Foreclose, Interdict, Veto, Forestall, Prevent, Proscribe, Disallow, Preclude, Prohibit
- Disapprove, Opposition, Ban, Objection, Rejection, Reject, Oppose, Overrule, Negative, Interdict, Disallow, Forbid, Proscribe, Prohibit, Blackball
FORBIDS vs VETO: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Forbids the sale of American birth certificate records.
- The eighth amendment forbids cruel and unusual punishment.
- ISDA Master Agreement governing such deals forbids this.
- The law also forbids forced or compulsory labor.
- Forbids cruel and unusual punishment, although not defined.
- It forbids moderation actions in return for compensation.
- Immoral just because God forbids it commanded by God and immoral just because God forbids it behaviour as.
- It forbids cruel and unusual punishment and it forbids punishments without what we would call the due process of law.
- One principle forbids expressing disrespect for the dignity of humanity; the other forbids treating others merely as means.
- Ted Baehr, never tries to explore what magic God forbids or the reasons he forbids it.
- Many in the conclave, including Rampolla, protested against the veto, and it was even suggested that he be elected pope despite the veto.
- So what constitutes a good veto right as opposed to a bad veto right?
- There is a second way that a president can veto a proposal called a pocket veto.
- Congress: I will veto this bill, and I am confident that my veto will be sustained.
- That controversy continued on Veto Day, and after the veto votes were completed the House moved to the matter of extension.
- Mayor vetoes an ordinance, written reasons for the veto shall accompany the veto message delivered to the City Council.
- Cooper did veto the bill but as expected the veto was overridden.
- Veto Host, where Alex, Monte, Shane, Danielle, Scott and Shelby competed for the Power of Veto.
- The veto would be similar to a neighborhood veto of liquor establishment licensing.
- There are several types of vetoes: the package veto, item veto, amendatory veto, and pocket veto.
FORBIDS vs VETO: QUESTIONS
- Did Zappala email prosecution forbids to offer plea deals to Raiford?
- What sign forbids pedestrians to cross the street in this place?
- Apakah hak veto bisa digunakan secara serampangan oleh pemiliknya?
- Why did Guatemala's president veto the abortion bill?
- How does Texas Legislature override the governor's veto?
- Is veto activity selective or T-cell receptor mediated?
- Can the President impound appropriate funds without a veto?
- Does Volkswagen have a veto on the Supervisory Board?
- Why could the British establishment not veto Brexit?
- Can individual countries veto the EU withdrawal Treaty?
- Will Spain veto Scotland's EU membership application?
- Why did Jefferson veto the first presidential veto Quizlet?