Abrogate in a sentence as a verb

The Constitution did not, and was not intended to, abrogate most of the common law powers of the courts.

But I do not abrogate my duties as a thinking, feeling human being because I don't care about what they pay me for.

CSS has a mechanism for defining rules in such a way to abrogate the need for variables.

There will always exist groups of people who want to abrogate the rights of the average person for the benefit of a select class.

Our homegrown power lusters, such as Obama, are paying lip service to our rights while doing everything in their power to abrogate them.

It's like judges want to abrogate their responsibility to check executive power.

Social systems either recognize and protect individual rights or they abrogate them and consume and use individuals for their own ends.

The only problem being that in the Third World, they won't just abrogate your Internet freedom; if they don't like what you say, they'll come and beat you with large blunt objects, or just **** you.

I have multiple friends who T-Mobile tried to prevent from being allowed to abrogate their contracts due to poor coverage surrounding military bases, as allowed by law.

You'd have to abrogate property rights with some kind of right-to-information-privacy that supersedes the fact that it's my server and I own its contents.

The problem which Moglen identifies -- and is absolutely correct to call out -- is that there is absolutely no legitimate reason to abrogate the freedoms that are being abrogated.

Except for the biggest 6, most film distributors don't have multinational operations and even the big 6 don't have offices in every territory, so they can't just wave magic wands and abrogate existing international distribution contracts.

Google's solution was to just abrogate all the copyrights and see what happened... and what happened was a lawsuit, reminding Google that just because it would be inconvenient for them to negotiate contracts at scale did not mean they could accomplish a contract of adhesion by public notice.

To claim that people who are actively hiding their identities, deny, destroy evidence, pass blame, abrogate responsibility - and make sometimes millions of dollars tax-free by doing so are just revolutionaries for the progression and advancement of our society is ... disingenuous at best.

One can open-source his own works as a matter of commitment to the idea that all information ought to be free or for any other reason but that doesn't mean the law ought to abrogate protections for proprietary, trade secret information that most businesses need to keep confidential information as a matter of competitive advantage.

Abrogate definitions

verb

revoke formally