单词 | ratify |
释义 | ratify (rætɪfaɪ ) Word forms: ratifies , ratifying , ratified verb When national leaders or organizations ratify a treaty or written agreement, they make it official by giving their formal approval to it, usually by signing it or voting for it. The parliaments of Australia and Indonesia have yet to ratify the treaty. [VERB noun] Synonyms: approve, sign, establish, confirm Collocations: ratify a deal Any sensible pro-European would ratify the deal. Times, Sunday Times (2016) But when the smoke cleared, the government got enough votes to ratify the deal. The Sun (2010) Those who stay on will get a $3,000 bonus once the deal is ratified and an annual bonus of at least 3 per cent of salary. Times, Sunday Times (2007) They just needed 50 countries to ratify the treaty. Times,Sunday Times Most will ratify the treaty by a vote in parliament. Times, Sunday Times Asked if they would vote to ratify the treaty if a referendum were held tomorrow, respondents were split, with 35% saying yes and 35% no. Times, Sunday Times One faction believed that seven states could ratify the treaty; arguing that they were merely ratifying and not entering into a treaty. Retrieved from Wikipedia CC BY-SA 3.0 In other words, only after all countries ratify the treaty are they obligated to implement the changes domestically after ratification by three members. Retrieved from Wikipedia CC BY-SA 3.0 Translations: Chinese: 批准 条约或书面协议 Japanese: 批准する条約・協定を |
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