VIOLATE vs BREACH: NOUN
- N/A
- Disorderly conduct, disturbing the public peace.
- An act or default in violation of the privilege or either house of Parliament, of Congress, or of a State legislature, as, for instance, by false swearing before a committee.
- The breaking of waves or surf.
- A leap of a whale from the water.
- A breaking up or disruption of friendly relations; an estrangement.
- A violation or infraction, as of a contract, law, legal obligation, or promise.
- A breaking, or a failure to keep, an expressed or implied promise; a betrayal of confidence or trust.
- An opening, tear, or rupture.
- A personal or social separation (as between opposing factions)
- An opening (especially a gap in a dike or fortification)
- A failure to perform some promised act or obligation
- Violation of one's plighted word, esp. of a promise to marry.
- Violation of one's duty or faith in a matter entrusted to one.
- A breaking or infraction of a law, or of any obligation or tie; violation; non-fulfillment; as, a breach of contract; a breach of promise.
- A gap or opening made by breaking or battering, as in a wall, fortification or levee; the space between the parts of a solid body rent by violence; a break; a rupture; a fissure.
- A gap or rift, especially in a solid structure such as a dike or fortification.
- Implies that everything on deck is swept away.
- Implies that the waves roll over the vessel without breaking.
- A breaking of waters, as over a vessel; the waters themselves; surge; surf.
- A gap or opening made made by breaking or battering, as in a wall or fortification; the space between the parts of a solid body rent by violence; a break; a rupture.
- Specifically: A breaking or infraction of a law, or of any obligation or tie; violation; non-fulfillment.
- The act of breaking, in a figurative sense.
- A bruise; a wound.
- The breaking of waves; the dashing of surf.
- Injury; would; bruise.
- Infraction; violation; infringement: as, a breach of the peace, of a promise, or of a contract.
- A breaking out upon; an assault.
- A rupture of friendly relations; difference; quarrel.
- A break or interruption in utterance.
- An opening made by breaking down a portion of a solid body, as a wall, a dike, or a river-bank; a rupture; a break; a gap.
- The act of breaking: now used only figuratively of the violation or neglect of a law, contract, or any other obligation, or of a custom.
- A hernia; a rupture.
- A breaking up of amicable relations; rupture.
VIOLATE vs BREACH: VERB
- Destroy and strip of its possession
- Violate the sacred character of a place or language
- Act in disregard of laws and rules
- Force (someone) to have sex against their will
- To break, disregard, disagree or not act according to (rules, conventions, etc.).
- To rape.
- Act in disregard of laws, rules, contracts, or promises
- Fail to agree with; be in violation of; as of rules or patterns
- Destroy
- (of a whale) to leap clear out of the water
- , to break into a ship or into a coastal defence
- To violate or break.
- To make a breach in.
- Make an opening or gap in
- Act in disregard of laws and rules
VIOLATE vs BREACH: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To break or violate (an agreement, for example).
- To leap from the water.
- To develop a hole or opening. Used especially of protective embankments.
- To break the water, as by leaping out; -- said of a whale.
- To make a hole or gap in; break through.
VIOLATE vs BREACH: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To do harm to (property or qualities considered sacred); desecrate or defile.
- To assault (a person) sexually.
- To treat in a violent manner; to abuse.
- To do violence to, as to anything that should be held sacred or respected; to profane; to desecrate; to break forcibly; to trench upon; to infringe.
- To disturb; to interrupt.
- To commit rape on; to ravish; to outrage.
- To disregard or act in a manner that does not conform to (a law or promise, for example).
- To disturb rudely or improperly; interrupt.
- N/A
VIOLATE vs BREACH: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To treat roughly or injuriously; handle so as to harm or hurt; do violence to; outrage.
- To break in upon; interrupt; disturb.
- To desecrate; dishonor; treat with irreverence; profane, or meddle with profanely.
- To infringe; transgress, as a contract, law, promise, or the like, either by a positive act contrary to the promise, etc., or by neglect or non-fulfilment: as, to violate confidence.
- To ravish; deflower by force; commit rape on.
- Fail to agree with
- Be in violation of
- As of rules or patterns
- Act in disregard of laws, rules, contracts, or promises
- To make a breach or opening in.
- To spring from the water, as a whale.
VIOLATE vs BREACH: RELATED WORDS
- Infract, Go against, Plunder, Rape, Dishonour, Ravish, Outrage, Break, Despoil, Dishonor, Profane, Desecrate, Offend, Transgress, Breach
- Violating, Violated, Breech, Violation, Infract, Go against, Falling out, Severance, Gap, Rift, Offend, Break, Rupture, Transgress, Violate
VIOLATE vs BREACH: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Infringe, Violation, Contravene, Go against, Dishonour, Ravish, Outrage, Break, Despoil, Dishonor, Profane, Desecrate, Offend, Transgress, Breach
- Contravened, Contravention, Violating, Violated, Breech, Violation, Go against, Severance, Gap, Rift, Offend, Break, Rupture, Transgress, Violate
VIOLATE vs BREACH: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- These provisions violate the Act in two ways.
- That governments violate human rights is hardly surprising.
- The landlord can terminate your rental agreement if you violate the terms of the agreement or if you violate the law.
- Federal crimes are defined as acts that violate federal laws, as opposed to crimes that violate state or local laws.
- DUI offenders who violate their restricted license are subject to similar penalties that are applied to offenders who violate the terms of their probation.
- The strip searches conducted upon admission do not violate Fourth Amendment standards, but the searches after contact visits violate the Fourth Amendment.
- In short, the prior examples of wrongdoing must violate the same constitutional rights and violate them in the same way.
- Other types of entropies that violate the Shore and Johnson axioms, including nonadditive entropies such as the Tsallis entropy, violate this basic consistency requirement.
- Viewing, transmitting, downloading, or seeking obscene or pornographicmaterials or materials that violate or encourage others to violate the law.
- While such disparities will not violate constitutional guarantees, they may violate core policy imperatives to avoid racially unjust outcomes.
- Party shall be entitled to seek specific performance and injunctive relief as remedies for such breach or any threatened breach of this Section.
- Counsel should make it easy for the court and guide them through the calculation breach by breach.
- Lyon for negligence, breach of fiduciary duty, breach of contract and indemnity.
- Complainants seek additional damages for breach of contract and breach of warranty.
- Workmen sued Carpenter for negligence, breach of fiduciary duty, and breach of contract.
- Any breach of this Clause will be deemed to be a Material Breach.
- While a breach of these duties may be easy to identify, seeking relief for the breach is frequently more complicated.
- Data breach notification laws in most states require an organization notify breach victims, which can damage its reputation.
- Relief against breach or threatened breach of contract and penalty for interference.
- Any breach of the contract is a material breach.
VIOLATE vs BREACH: QUESTIONS
- Why do people violate conversational implicature maxims?
- Does reasonable suspicion violate the 4th Amendment?
- Does alixarx violate the Controlled Substances Act?
- Does political correctness violate the First Amendment?
- Do extraterritorial animal laws violate international law?
- Does teaching evolution violate the First Amendment?
- Does marital status discrimination violate Title VII?
- Does representativeness heuristic violate Bayes'theorem?
- Did SmileDirectClub violate consumer protection laws?
- Does quantum tunneling violate energy conservation?
- Did RBC-Dominion Securities breach its legal duties?
- Does reporting FGM breach patient confidentiality regulations?
- Does Australia's Beetaloo project breach sanctions?
- Did MediaCorp artistes breach safe distancing measures?
- What is breach of recognizance or breach of probation?
- What will happen to the hearings on breach of access and breach of maintenance for separated parents?
- Is a breach of s106 the same as breach of planning control?
- Can a breach that caused no loss amount to a repudiatory breach?
- Do breach parameters affect dam failure progress and breach profile?
- How do you breach a room with multiple breach methods?