Clearance in a sentence as a noun

" [1]He also has, or at the very least had, a Top Secret security clearance.

Does he give up his password to the disk drive violating his top clearance status or does he shut the **** up.

Someone who actually has clearance can probably speak on this much more usefully than I can.

Bob had a TopSecret clearance however, and couldn't tell anyone - not even his wife.

Just because classified information is leaked does not mean that people with clearance can treat it as unclassified.

The only potential means he had to deal with it was finding a competent labor lawyer who also had clearance.

[...] Jiang had not had clearance to such projects at Langley as an employee of the National Institute of Aerospace""A press release issued by Wolf after the arrest and copy of Jiang's arrest warrant have since disappeared off the the congressman's website.

I read about intelligence oversight committees being told they don't have clearance to see things and it just blows my mind: our entire system of using force rests on civilian oversight.

[0] That's the statistical confidence level for clearance required of contractors and to declare an area safe, because it's impossible to prove beyond any doubt that there is no longer a single mine left in an area.

- Does the computing power of Raspberry Pi offer new possibilities for cheap clearance -- maybe gather seismographic data with controlled explosions to be analyzed for "echoes" of a landmine?

But the alternative is for individuals with clearance to effectively declassify information unilaterally, which would be disastrous.

As a soldier I'd be happy to know they're helping me not do things on their hardware that would get me in trouble.#4 Each soldier signs agreements to follow the rules around classified information, including not reading documents they do not have clearance to read.#5 Being a good soldier requires shouldering an immense amount of responsibility without the frivolity of youthful indignation.

Reason being, the ''L'' shaped conductor hugs the body so closely it cannot establish a connection if 3/64" clearance is not provided...Anecdotal evidence supports the view that the 90 magsafe connector design that Apple has reverted to using is the safer of the two designs in terms of accidents as it reduces the chances of a 'shear pull' which made the ''L'' clip vulnerable to pull downs when the Macbook is left on slick or glass like surfaces.

Clearance definitions

noun

the distance by which one thing clears another; the space between them

noun

vertical space available to allow easy passage under something

See also: headroom headway

noun

permission to proceed; "the plane was given clearance to land"