abeyance in the Oxford-Hachette French Dictionary

abeyance in the PONS Dictionary

Translations for abeyance in the English»French Dictionary (Go to French»English)

Translations for abeyance in the French»English Dictionary (Go to English»French)

abeyance Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

to be in abeyance
American English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Their application was held in abeyance because their population did not meet the needed number required by law.
en.wikipedia.org
He scored one goal in his ten appearances and departed when the club went into abeyance in 1940.
en.wikipedia.org
This tournament has gone into abeyance since 2008.
en.wikipedia.org
Local barony courts and heritable jurisdictions, in abeyance from 1651, were officially abolished in 1657.
en.wikipedia.org
Unlike peerages created by writ this peerage can not fall into abeyance between female co-heirs but is inherited by the senior co-heir.
en.wikipedia.org
The theme of his thesis was the nature of concordats and the function of canon law when a concordat falls into abeyance.
en.wikipedia.org
The title has been in abeyance since 1554, although it is possible to argue that it has been merged.
en.wikipedia.org
Contractor lawsuits and other actions seeking monetary damages or claims against the district will be held in abeyance while the district addresses its financial situation.
en.wikipedia.org
However, on his death in 1982 the peerage once again fell into abeyance, this time between his three daughters.
en.wikipedia.org
Under such a disposition, the charge is held in abeyance (continued) without any verdict (without a finding).
en.wikipedia.org

Would you like to add some words, phrases or translations?

Submit a new entry.

Choose your language Deutsch | Ελληνικά | English | Español | Français | Italiano | Polski | Português | Русский | Slovenščina | Srpski