[
US
/ˌɪnˈfɹɪndʒmənt/
]
[ UK /ɪnfɹˈɪndʒmənt/ ]
[ UK /ɪnfɹˈɪndʒmənt/ ]
NOUN
-
an act that disregards an agreement or a right
he claimed a violation of his rights under the Fifth Amendment - a crime less serious than a felony
How To Use infringement In A Sentence
- Like other police forces, Wiltshire constabulary is not setting up a special squad or unit to deal with possible hunting law infringements.
- Federal law allows plaintiffs to collect up to $ 100, 000 per infringement.
- During war, the right of postliminy can only be claimed in the tribunals of the belligerent powers, and not in the courts of neutrals; for by a general law of nations, neutrals have no right to enquire into any captures, except such as are an infringement of their own neutrality. [ The Laws Of War, Affecting Commerce And Shipping
- Some few poets were bought over; but, among men following the profession of the press, a change of politics is an infringement of the point of honor, and a man must FIGHT as well as apostatize. The Paris Sketch Book
- Preliminary Injunction means the court forces the infringers to stop ongoing infringement or events that are about to happen upon obligee's request before or during infringement litigation.
- The judge left it to counsel to submit suggestions for appropriate relief for the limited infringement of copyright.
- During a substantial part of their lives, they existed either under the shadow of public rejection, or in the clandestinity of aesthetic infringement. 2666 WEEK: FRANCISCO GOLDMAN
- If one manufactures, sells, or uses a patented invention without authorization of the patent owner, he has probably committed patent infringement.
- sells" potassium nitrate, and Block's attempted limitation of the staple / nonstaple inquiry to that mere ingredient would eliminate the § 271 (c) - mandated inquiries relating to whether what was actually sold was a material part of the invention and whether the seller knew that what was actually sold was especially made or adapted for use in infringement of the patent. Promote the Progress - Patent case bibliographic summaries
- When it showed more prisoners, the Australian Defence Department said that its failure to pixelate the faces of captives was an infringement of the Geneva Conventions.