Countermand in a sentence as a noun

If the web is used to countermand existing laws, then it invites further intrusion of government to uphold those existing laws.

* If you have opted to officially register with YouTube, you are given the ability to text back a countermand to the alert.

The executive has the power to execute, the legislature and the People are slower acting but at this point have had plenty of time to countermand.

On top of that it gets worse -- there might be dependencies between the orders, orders might be to countermand other orders or in response to others which may or may not exist.

MS deserves to be denigrated when they do bad, and they certainly have a mountain of web-karma to countermand, but they did good in this respect and deserve to be praised for it.

How dare he countermand these particular infallible and always-correct lawyers!!

Humans at both Mizuho and the Tokyo Stock Exchange saw the trade and all declined to intervene because they assumed they had insufficient authority to countermand the trader.

But if those orders countermand the direction and mandate the patent office receives from congress as interpreted by the courts, the executive branch has overstepped its authority.

Countermand in a sentence as a verb

He was also assuming that he didn't have to follow direct commands given to him because he was in posession of certain facts which, if the officers were made aware of them, would certainly countermand those orders.

In both cases, the Occam's Razor explanation is this: the public notoriety of the case led a senior prosecutor to pay closer attention and countermand the decision of junior prosecutors not to pursue it.

* If you countermand the copyright violation flag, your video is immediately unmuted, and the copyright holder receives instructions that if it still believes the content is an IP violation, commencing legal proceedings are the next option.

I think there are a few cases where we have, cases where we have used law or religion or spiritual awakenings or technology or bureaucracy to countermand the emergent will of the mindless collective of history, economy, and ecology.

The problem with that model is that as was previously said, the electromagnetic, nuclear, and gravitational forces easily countermand the expansion on non-inter-galactic scales, to the point of not being measurable on the scale of a meter.

When I broke the alliance, I allowed him to deliver the orders that we worked out together, but then I secretly delivered a separate set of orders for my own forces with a note saying that they were to countermand any other orders that might be received.

From the article:>Two administration officials said they believed Mr. Trump had not been briefed in any detail about the steps to place “implants” — software code that can be used for surveillance or attack — inside the Russian grid.>Pentagon and intelligence officials described broad hesitation to go into detail with Mr. Trump about operations against Russia for concern over his reaction — and the possibility that he might countermand it or discuss it with foreign officials, as he did in 2017 when he mentioned a sensitive operation in Syria to the Russian foreign minister.

Countermand definitions

noun

a contrary command cancelling or reversing a previous command

verb

cancel officially; "He revoked the ban on smoking"; "lift an embargo"; "vacate a death sentence"

See also: revoke annul lift reverse repeal overturn rescind vacate