Cease in a sentence as a noun

Of course, the whole game might cease to function pretty soon; things right now look an awful lot like 1998.

When a victim believes the same values as the aggressor, they cease to be a threat.

And cease all further involvement until it’s complete.

If the price of bitcoin stabilized it would cease to be newsworthy and I'm sure the daily submissions would stop.

I never cease to be amazed by how humane high modernist architecture often was.

While a cease-and-desist order is pretty unpleasant, all they're saying is that he has to stop work on the project.

If he wants to say here, there is one condition: He must cease his work aimed at inflicting damage to our American partners, as strange as it may sound from my lips.

Cease in a sentence as a verb

3taps changed their IP and continued scraping -- it's the ignoring of the cease & desist that's the problem; that they did so by changing IP is just a technical detail.

" - Craigslist sent a legally valid cease & desist letter to 3taps, explicitly revoking their default-allowed access.

If this continues farming as we know it will cease to exist in the traditional sense as we all know it and eventually the only farms that will exist will be corporately owned ones.

A single commuter parking their car for the day or a food truck servicing hundreds of consumers?Also, why do you believe the city will cease to function if consumers have more options for lunch?

The whole game would cease to function if a majority of cooler heads weren't making wiser investments with better chances of pretty-good payouts, in companies that actually turn a profit.

Laws on this point can be very strict, for example you cannot necessarily threaten lawsuit, but Apple is within its right to send cease and desist with formal demand when it feels its patents are being violated.

It's fine that you've decided it's better for your business to cease offering the free tier, but it's unprofessional to use a pejorative to describe customers who accepted your offer of a free product.

Cease definitions

noun

(`cease' is a noun only in the phrase `without cease') end

verb

put an end to a state or an activity; "Quit teasing your little brother"

See also: discontinue stop quit

verb

have an end, in a temporal, spatial, or quantitative sense; either spatial or metaphorical; "the bronchioles terminate in a capillary bed"; "Your rights stop where you infringe upon the rights of other"; "My property ends by the bushes"; "The symphony ends in a pianissimo"

See also: stop finish terminate