derecognise

VERB
  1. cause to be no longer approved or accepted
    Carter derecognized Taiwan in 1979 after the U.S. recognized the People's Republic of China
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How To Use derecognise In A Sentence

  • The company has derecognised the union by refusing to negotiate.
  • Management try to impose a back to work agreement which would rip up national agreements and in effect derecognise the union.
  • Residency programmes are derecognised if they do not improve.
  • It tried to derecognise the union there in the 1980s, and only backed down after a strike vote.
  • There is much talk across Liverpool that the council would like to derecognise the union.
  • But the effects were felt right across the country, with union branches being derecognised.
  • Rules should be set for private colleges and those violating them, derecognised.
  • The council arrogantly believed ordinary staff would not respond to the strike call but they finally realised that we would not allow the council to derecognise our union.
  • The council had tried to derecognise our union branch.
  • That is because many recent recognition agreements were at companies that had previously derecognised the union, but where membership remained at relatively high levels.
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