Waiver in a sentence as a noun

Caltrain was awarded such a waiver for a future rolling stock purchase, and the Sprinter was awarded one as well.

I was entering on a visa waiver for some meetings, and I was just coming off the back of another visa waiver trip.

The team in charge of the app could have requested a waiver to use non-approved software, but decided not to because of time constraints.

" [0] Of particular note, it only seems to come up in the case of requesting a waiver or other sort of legal exception.

Which, unfortunately, you cannot sign a waiver that says I won't hold anyone responsible for me burning up in a fire here.

The rules say you have to leave the country the last day of work, so I left for Canada to stay with a friend, and planned to come back on the visa waiver program.

Rail operators are occasionally able to get waivers from the FRA to run non-compliant rolling stock.

I was asked to sign a waiver of liability, presumably for insurance purposes.

There's no standard for light passenger rail in the US, there's just a bunch of hyper-specific waivers for each case and operators must re-apply if their rolling stock changes.

In any case, in lieu of casca's seniority, please accept mine as a waiver for that particular anachronistic guideline.

They gave us pushback when we refused to sign a liability waiver before getting treatment and we had some security guy who kept insisting to come into our room to photograph the shoes my wife was wearing at the time.

We are talking about the land of the free, and you continue to be astonished that people from first world countries just go to the US to do business and then leave again?The Netherlands has had a visa waiver program with the US for a very long time.

Have we collectively forgotten the time when journalists went to jail rather than reveal their sources, and publishers didn't waiver in their support?However understandable Google's position may be, fighting the law is not an "absurdly high standard".

So if you are signing a waiver of liability of injury thinking about things like falling off a ladder, but not considering that the producers deliberately attack you with a pack of wolves, the latter might be an "unknown" claim that you didn't consider when signing the release.

Waiver definitions

noun

a formal written statement of relinquishment

See also: release discharge