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词汇 revocable
释义

Definition of revocable in English:

revocable

adjective ˈrɛvəkəb(ə)l
  • Capable of being revoked or cancelled.

    可撤回的;可取消的

    a revocable settlement

    可取消的协议。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Because of Florida's complicated probate system and the high statutory attorneys' fees, most people in Florida create revocable living trusts rather than write wills.
    • That was why the Bastille was such a powerful symbol - it was where unnamed state prisoners could be confined without trial, under the notorious lettres de cachet, sealed warrants signed by the king and revocable only by him.
    • This union is neither a revocable contract between independent and equal parties nor mandated by an unchanging divine law which legitimates the subordination of women.
    • The reason that waivers are not always revocable is that the party who has obtained the waiver may develop an interest in relying on that waiver, because the party has reciprocally given up something valuable as well.
    • They are backed by a powerful government committed to the servicing of its debt and wielding enormous money-printing and taxing powers that are revocable only in a shattering political upheaval.
    • Yet the effects, even in a few American states, will be neither containable nor revocable.
    • This result is accomplished only if assets, including a person's interest in his or her accountancy practice, are transferred to the revocable trust during the settlor's lifetime.
    • The city gave the telco an interim revocable permit earlier this year, but officials insisted a city charter requires that the franchise be voted on by residents.
    • As long as they are easily revocable in the event of a change of mind (just as ordinary wills are), they should be respected as evidence of a well thought out conviction.
    • He may even attempt to establish that, although payment was complete as between the originator's bank and the beneficiary's bank, it was revocable or reversible as between himself and the originator.
    • The renewal is possible because the superimposition of names is artificial, the delimitation of place revocable through restoration.
    • However, transportation also constituted citizenship as revocable, and it is significant that in its representation in Moll Flanders this aspect is revised.
    • And if you ever decide you don't want the revocable trust, it can be time-consuming to revoke.
    • It implies no promise by the wisher to actually implement any of the wishes for her/himself or others, and is void where prohibited by law, and is revocable at the sole discretion of the wisher.
    • This decision should not be revocable and the financing should be fully provided for to avoid either the Kolkata or Delhi experience.
    • They were a grace, extended by the pleasure of the authorities, and they were revocable at any time.
    • Citizenship, along with the rights inhering in that status, is revocable.
    • Similarly, where a power of attorney is given to a purchaser for value and is expressed to be irrevocable, the authority is not revocable nor is it revoked by the death or disability of the donor.
    • The problem with taste was that, however much it resulted in periods of large agreement within communities of art lovers, it issued from private, immediate, and revocable responses to art.
    • Your mother's will most likely transfers property to the revocable trust, rather than the other way around, in case she failed to transfer something to the trust prior to her death.

Derivatives

  • revocability

  • noun rɛvəkəˈbɪlɪti
    • I'm not sure that revocability of free software licences really is a problem.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The hallmarks of the Paris Commune were responsibility and revocability.
      • A licence that is in the form of a contract might be ineffective in achieving non-revocability.
      • In 1746, an English judge explained the ancient doctrine of revocability as based on the petty jealousy of courts fearing ouster of their jurisdiction.
      • One of the most consequential effects of that new situation is the endemic porosity and frailty of all boundaries and the in-built futility, or at least the provisional nature and revocability, of all boundary drawing.

Definition of revocable in US English:

revocable

adjective
  • Capable of being revoked or canceled.

    可撤回的;可取消的

    a revocable settlement

    可取消的协议。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It implies no promise by the wisher to actually implement any of the wishes for her/himself or others, and is void where prohibited by law, and is revocable at the sole discretion of the wisher.
    • The renewal is possible because the superimposition of names is artificial, the delimitation of place revocable through restoration.
    • This result is accomplished only if assets, including a person's interest in his or her accountancy practice, are transferred to the revocable trust during the settlor's lifetime.
    • He may even attempt to establish that, although payment was complete as between the originator's bank and the beneficiary's bank, it was revocable or reversible as between himself and the originator.
    • As long as they are easily revocable in the event of a change of mind (just as ordinary wills are), they should be respected as evidence of a well thought out conviction.
    • Your mother's will most likely transfers property to the revocable trust, rather than the other way around, in case she failed to transfer something to the trust prior to her death.
    • And if you ever decide you don't want the revocable trust, it can be time-consuming to revoke.
    • This union is neither a revocable contract between independent and equal parties nor mandated by an unchanging divine law which legitimates the subordination of women.
    • Because of Florida's complicated probate system and the high statutory attorneys' fees, most people in Florida create revocable living trusts rather than write wills.
    • The problem with taste was that, however much it resulted in periods of large agreement within communities of art lovers, it issued from private, immediate, and revocable responses to art.
    • Citizenship, along with the rights inhering in that status, is revocable.
    • Yet the effects, even in a few American states, will be neither containable nor revocable.
    • The city gave the telco an interim revocable permit earlier this year, but officials insisted a city charter requires that the franchise be voted on by residents.
    • However, transportation also constituted citizenship as revocable, and it is significant that in its representation in Moll Flanders this aspect is revised.
    • They are backed by a powerful government committed to the servicing of its debt and wielding enormous money-printing and taxing powers that are revocable only in a shattering political upheaval.
    • This decision should not be revocable and the financing should be fully provided for to avoid either the Kolkata or Delhi experience.
    • Similarly, where a power of attorney is given to a purchaser for value and is expressed to be irrevocable, the authority is not revocable nor is it revoked by the death or disability of the donor.
    • They were a grace, extended by the pleasure of the authorities, and they were revocable at any time.
    • The reason that waivers are not always revocable is that the party who has obtained the waiver may develop an interest in relying on that waiver, because the party has reciprocally given up something valuable as well.
    • That was why the Bastille was such a powerful symbol - it was where unnamed state prisoners could be confined without trial, under the notorious lettres de cachet, sealed warrants signed by the king and revocable only by him.
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