[
US
/əˈmɛndmənt/
]
[ UK /ɐmˈɛndmənt/ ]
[ UK /ɐmˈɛndmənt/ ]
NOUN
- the act of amending or correcting
- a statement that is added to or revises or improves a proposal or document (a bill or constitution etc.)
How To Use amendment In A Sentence
- It may be a little early but I was just wondering if you could characterize the impact of the label amendment in terms of the new patient starts in to the new year? SeekingAlpha.com: Home Page
- When the United States allowed the President to make himself a dictator, Cubans promulgated a new constitution that abnegated the hated Platt Amendment.
- After that, Feingold joined a Madison law firm and practiced civil litigation, including First Amendment law.
- On Nov. 17, Havel broadcast his proposed amendments to the referendum law and the existing Constitution.
- The amendment would bar the Interior Department from prohibiting individuals from legally carrying firearms inside national parks and wildlife refuges.
- So an embarrassed clerk in the table office wrote to Mr Wilson, advising him of proposed amendments to his motion.
- Cameron's amendment would render the proposed backbench business committee "flimsier" than it otherwise could be, he added. Epolitix News
- The amendments allow the next parliament to make changes after the document is approved.
- If you want to add any amendments, such as compost or peat moss, work them into the soil.
- The amendments to the Armed Forces Act include a provision under which the contracts of the professional soldiers would include a paragraph for precursory agreement for participation in missions abroad.