Enjoin in a sentence as a verb

Don't worry, we can start out by getting a judge to enjoin the probable infringement.

Typically, the remedy for such a ruling would be for the judge to enjoin the program.

Yes, you enjoin asshats from promoting themselves as you, but it's still a net negative.

Withdraw employees, liquidate assets, and force Austria to enjoin it overseas and/or block it.

If found valid by the court, they are free to enjoin others from using their technology for the duration of the patent period.

That is clearly nonsense -- find a user using it for an act of blatant infringement and you'll be able to collect damages or enjoin that infringement.

A court could theoretically enjoin Sony to restore the feature for those individual plaintiffs, but the plaintiffs would have to show that monetary damages would be insufficient.

""I even had to endure her attempt to enjoin my companies, which would have required her participation and permission in every significant corporate decision.

That said, it will get very interesting when Illinois goes full Constitutional Carry on June 9th, or, well, after the District courts enjoin the state from enforcing its unique besides Hawaii absolutely no issue law. And we'll have to see if they and the Circuit court will play wack-a-mole with all the localities that will ban or unduly restrict concealed carry.

The particular forces driving these changes are varied and complicated, but particular sounds that have adjacencies on various axes twist and enjoin and diverge, dancing about according to constraints that produce surface complexity like in a multibody system.

What do you love about talking about gender and sexuality?Would you consider than any part of your interest has anything to do with your lived experience as a gendered human?If not, then I can understand the analogy you enjoin when you draw a line between Rust and Steve Klabnik.

Enjoin definitions

verb

issue an injunction

verb

give instructions to or direct somebody to do something with authority; "I said to him to go home"; "She ordered him to do the shopping"; "The mother told the child to get dressed"

See also: order tell