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imposition
[im-puh-zish-uhn]
noun
the laying on of something as a burden or obligation.
something imposed, as a burden or duty; an unusual or extraordinarily burdensome requirement or task.
an instance of imposing imposing upon a person.
He did the favor but considered the request an imposition.
the act of imposing imposing fraudulently or deceptively on others; imposture.
the ceremonial laying on of hands, as in confirmation or ordination.
Printing., the arrangement of page plates in proper order on a press for printing a signature.
the act of putting, placing, or laying on.
imposition
/ ˌɪmpəˈzɪʃən /
noun
the act of imposing
something that is imposed unfairly on someone
(in Britain) a task set as a school punishment
the arrangement of pages for printing so that the finished work will have its pages in the correct order
Other Word Forms
- nonimposition noun
- preimposition noun
- reimposition noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of imposition1
Example Sentences
He did not address any Western nations specifically in his five-minute speech, but Chinese officials have previously called the US a "bully" for its imposition of tariffs on countries around the world.
Companies that fear the imposition of export fees on their own products might have to wait until they could show concrete damage to their own interests in order to bring a case in federal court.
"Sanctions maintenance is as big a task as the imposition of sanctions in the first place," US sanctions expert Richard Nephew of Columbia University says.
Leaseholders Mr Hemmings, Mr Jones and Ms Shaw said the changes that might stop the imposition of for-profit professional management companies by landlords could not come soon enough.
Their voyage, and subsequent guerrilla campaign, would culminate in 1959 in a historic overthrow of Batista and the imposition of a communist government in Havana.
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