Annulment in a sentence as a noun

Divorce and annulment are not the same things in legal terms.

If I don't receive an annulment, the Church will not allow me to remarry within the Church.

Clement wasn't feigning disinterest, his interest was in not granting an annulment.

The typical terms sheet has an 'out' in that any surprises during DD are grounds for annulment without compensation.

Something to the effect that if the relationship doesn't work out during an initial period of time, each party's risk is limited to only the money and time they put into it. I'd rather get an annulment than a divorce if possible.

Legally if you fail to disclose that you knew you are a carrier for a severe disease to a prospective spouse prior to marriage it could be grounds for annulment, or a fault divorce.

Are there provisions for an 'annulment' from a legal perspective?I guess there are actual annulments, but I always thought of those from a religious perspective, not a legal one.

> Sometimes inability to bear children has been grounds for divorce or--in the case of royalty--annulmentNot just royalty.

Also keep in mind that the first strike was probably the annulment of the 1995 LegCo on handover, because it was too open to public influence so the Chinese dissolved it and created a new one in 1998.

The only reason divorce is not more common is because an annulment in the Philippines represents an astronomically prohibitive barrier for most citizens.

Apparently the ICE haven't bothered requesting or reading the annulment decision, or the Court's finding of my ex as "less than credible".It's been five years since the last court date and decision, but this still burns pretty deep.

Sometimes inability to bear children has been grounds for divorce or--in the case of royalty--annulment, but there has never anywhere been a test for non-sterility prior to marriage.

"Explain the English Reformation in one sentence" is a pretty tall order, but it seems reasonable to wonder whether Clement VII would have allowed the annulment if Catherine of Aragon's nephew hadn't just sacked Rome and taken Clement prisoner.

Annulment definitions

noun

the state of being cancelled or annulled

See also: revocation

noun

(law) a formal termination (of a relationship or a judicial proceeding etc)

See also: invalidation

noun

the act of abrogating; an official or legal cancellation

See also: abrogation repeal