释义 |
Definition of rescission in English: rescissionnoun rɪˈsɪʒ(ə)nrəˈsɪʒən mass nounformal The revocation, cancellation, or repeal of a law, order, or agreement. the plaintiff agreed to the rescission of the agreement Example sentencesExamples - Non-compliance with the disclosure requirement under the Act exposes franchisors to significant consequences, including rescission of franchise agreements.
- The plaintiff seeks restitution based on rescission of the contract as a result of the failure of the defendant to disclose.
- The defendants claim rescission of the Charge Agreement or damages.
- So this was not a threat to revoke, this was a notice of rescission or revocation.
- ‘As has been seen, that has been the decision where rescission is ordered of a sale by a trustee to himself’.
Synonyms revocation, repeal, cancellation, rescindment, reversal, abrogation, annulment, nullification, invalidation, voiding, setting aside, retraction archaic recall rare disannulment
Origin Mid 17th century: from late Latin rescissio(n-), from resciss-, 'split again', from the verb rescindere (see rescind). Definition of rescission in US English: rescissionnounrəˈsɪʒənrəˈsiZHən formal The revocation, cancellation, or repeal of a law, order, or agreement. the plaintiff agreed to the rescission of the agreement Example sentencesExamples - The defendants claim rescission of the Charge Agreement or damages.
- ‘As has been seen, that has been the decision where rescission is ordered of a sale by a trustee to himself’.
- So this was not a threat to revoke, this was a notice of rescission or revocation.
- The plaintiff seeks restitution based on rescission of the contract as a result of the failure of the defendant to disclose.
- Non-compliance with the disclosure requirement under the Act exposes franchisors to significant consequences, including rescission of franchise agreements.
Synonyms revocation, repeal, cancellation, rescindment, reversal, abrogation, annulment, nullification, invalidation, voiding, setting aside, retraction
Origin Mid 17th century: from late Latin rescissio(n-), from resciss-, ‘split again’, from the verb rescindere (see rescind). |