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mandated
[ man-dey-tid ]
adjective
- authorized or decreed, as by the passing of a law:
Federal agencies are making preparations to manage the mandated spending cuts.
- ordered or required; made mandatory:
There were not enough faculty to teach the mandated core curriculum.
- operating under a mandate or obligation, as an elected government, a person to whom a certain law or regulation applies, etc.:
After a record voter turnout, it will be interesting to see how this heavily mandated government performs.
All first responders have been added to the list of mandated reporters of elder abuse.
- (of a territory, colony, etc.) consigned to the charge of a particular nation under a mandate:
Following World War I, the 1919 Peace Conference gave the losers' overseas territories to the victors as “mandated territories.â€
verb
- the simple past tense and past participle of mandate ( def ).
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ³Ü²Ô·³¾²¹²Ô·»å²¹³Ù·±ð»å adjective
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of mandated1
Example Sentences
The district has mandated employees receive training about what assistance or documentation they cannot or should not provide to federal immigration authorities.
While the administration is claiming the ruling as a win, the justices mandated that deportees must be given a chance to challenge their removal.
Because many women fear having their children taken away due to substance use, they may not disclose their use to their providers, who are mandated to report them.
Even if the White House could make its case, it didn’t bother to follow the legally mandated process for doing so.
Department of Justice’s consent decree, which mandated reforms to addressed basic problems of accountability that stretched back decades.
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