释义 |
Definition of retrospectively in English: retrospectivelyadverb rɛtrə(ʊ)ˈspɛktɪvliˌrɛtrəˈspɛktɪvli 1With consideration of past events or situations. medical records were retrospectively reviewed on 120 patients Example sentencesExamples - The early notebooks retrospectively make ample reference to the rooms that Valéry occupied during this decade.
- He seemed to her, at least retrospectively, to have been the first man she loved enough to have married.
- I get them taped when I'm at university, and then spend my holidays watching TV retrospectively.
- Dated to the 1470s, it no longer seems like the work of an imitator, retrospectively evoking an earlier moment in the master's career.
- Films that retrospectively examine growing up in the 1980s are a recent phenomenon.
- The film pieces together Caravaggio's life retrospectively, from the vantage point of the dying artist.
- In our model, he is a myth invented retrospectively.
- We later learn it is the voice of Joshua, now a middle-aged man, speaking retrospectively.
- Thinking retrospectively about any exhibition is always a complicated assignment.
- His approach reflects a nostalgia for the gloriously learned mind and limber memory of a retrospectively constructed Renaissance reader.
- 1.1 With effect from a date in the past.
the rebates apply retrospectively from 1 April Example sentencesExamples - A procedural statute should not generally speaking be applied retrospectively where the result would be to create new disabilities or obligations.
- Only substantive civil laws can be operated retrospectively, if the statute specifically prescribes it or there exists large interest of the public as a whole.
- It prohibits the legislature to make retrospective criminal laws—however, it does not prohibit a civil liability retrospectively.
- In the last 40 years, Congress has extended the term of copyright retrospectively 11 times.
- The principle of not legislating retrospectively is supported by the interpretative principle (1999) that enactments do not have retrospective effect.
- According to the legislation, a tax can be imposed retrospectively.
- Some laws are still passed retrospectively.
- The act applies retrospectively to contracts entered into before the act was passed.
- Does this bill affect rights or impose obligations, retrospectively?
- The act did not reverse the decision itself, nor did it apply retrospectively, but carefully specified the way in which it applied to existing claims.
Definition of retrospectively in US English: retrospectivelyadverbˌretrəˈspektivlēˌrɛtrəˈspɛktɪvli 1With consideration of past events or situations. medical records were retrospectively reviewed on 120 patients Example sentencesExamples - He seemed to her, at least retrospectively, to have been the first man she loved enough to have married.
- The film pieces together Caravaggio's life retrospectively, from the vantage point of the dying artist.
- Films that retrospectively examine growing up in the 1980s are a recent phenomenon.
- Thinking retrospectively about any exhibition is always a complicated assignment.
- I get them taped when I'm at university, and then spend my holidays watching TV retrospectively.
- The early notebooks retrospectively make ample reference to the rooms that Valéry occupied during this decade.
- His approach reflects a nostalgia for the gloriously learned mind and limber memory of a retrospectively constructed Renaissance reader.
- In our model, he is a myth invented retrospectively.
- We later learn it is the voice of Joshua, now a middle-aged man, speaking retrospectively.
- Dated to the 1470s, it no longer seems like the work of an imitator, retrospectively evoking an earlier moment in the master's career.
- 1.1 With effect from a date in the past.
the rebates apply retrospectively from 1 April Example sentencesExamples - Does this bill affect rights or impose obligations, retrospectively?
- According to the legislation, a tax can be imposed retrospectively.
- In the last 40 years, Congress has extended the term of copyright retrospectively 11 times.
- The act applies retrospectively to contracts entered into before the act was passed.
- The act did not reverse the decision itself, nor did it apply retrospectively, but carefully specified the way in which it applied to existing claims.
- Some laws are still passed retrospectively.
- The principle of not legislating retrospectively is supported by the interpretative principle (1999) that enactments do not have retrospective effect.
- Only substantive civil laws can be operated retrospectively, if the statute specifically prescribes it or there exists large interest of the public as a whole.
- It prohibits the legislature to make retrospective criminal laws—however, it does not prohibit a civil liability retrospectively.
- A procedural statute should not generally speaking be applied retrospectively where the result would be to create new disabilities or obligations.
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