Sanctioned in a sentence as an adjective

Most of the time, it just seems like the agency in question doing its statutorily-sanctioned job.

The difference is of course: with Apple, rooting a device is not an officially sanctioned thing to do.

"At a certain stage of life, aggressive medical treatment can become sanctioned torture.

When an engineer at google comes up with a great idea during work hours not sanctioned by google, google still owns that idea and its success.

The judge found serious procedural misconduct by RH and gave it two weeks to "show cause," in writing, why it should not be sanctioned.

It's fairly obvious that if the US wants to take action that's not sanctioned by the UN, it will find a way to take that action or get the UN to follow along.

And not having a sanctioned committee with varying interests wrangling each other and slowing down progress has also worked out well for Google and Android.

That is, to a potential licensee, there was no reason to believe that the open source licensing was anything but company-sanctioned.

> If we were talking about free software, users would have control of their data; not some distant programmersExample Gnome3, which is free software, even a officially sanctioned GNU project.

Martin Luther King didn't live in a world where we imprison innocent men in legal limbo without trial or habeas corpus, or where we officially sanctioned torture and the oubliette.

Sanctioned definitions

adjective

conforming to orthodox or recognized rules; "the drinking of cocktails was as canonical a rite as the mixing"- Sinclair Lewis

See also: canonic canonical

adjective

formally approved and invested with legal authority

See also: ratified

adjective

established by authority; given authoritative approval; "a list of approved candidates"

See also: approved