Online Google Dictionary

annulment 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Noun
/əˈnəlmənt/,
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annulments, plural;
  1. The act of annulling something
    • - the applicant sought the annulment of the decision
    • - grounds for an annulment

  1. revocation: the state of being cancelled or annulled
  2. (law) a formal termination (of a relationship or a judicial proceeding etc)
  3. abrogation: the act of abrogating; an official or legal cancellation
  4. (annul) invalidate: declare invalid; "The contract was annulled"; "void a plea"
  5. (annul) revoke: cancel officially; "He revoked the ban on smoking"; "lift an embargo"; "vacate a death sentence"
  6. Annulment is a legal procedure for declaring a marriage null and void. Unlike divorce, it is usually retroactive, meaning that an annulled marriage is considered to be invalid from the beginning almost as if it had never taken place (though some jurisdictions provide that the marriage is only ...
  7. In the Roman Catholic Church, annulment is a canonical procedure according to the Church's Canon Law whereby an ecclesial tribunal judges whether the bond of matrimony in a particular case was entered into validly. The Church presumes that a marriage is valid until proven otherwise. ...
  8. An act or instance of annulling; A state of having been annulled; An invalidation of something, especially a legal contract; A legal (notably judicial) declaration that a marriage is invalid; the procedure leading to it; Total destruction
  9. (annul) To formally revoke the validity of; To dissolve (a marital union) on the grounds that it is not valid
  10. (annul) to make void, as to dissolve the bonds of marriage
  11. (annul) To put an end to, cancel, render void (q.v.) in law.
  12. (2. annul) منسوخ،‌باطل،‌رد یا فسخ کرنا
  13. (annul) To make null and void.
  14. (annul) make/declare void/invalid, cancel, obliterate (existence/effect of), annihilate, abolish
  15. a case brought seeking to declare marriage void. This is a legal action and not the type sought for religious reasons. Grounds for annulment must have existed at the time of the marriage and include: bigamy, kinship, underage, impotency, false representation of pregnancy, incompetence, or duress.
  16. To make void; to cancel an event or judicial proceeding both retroactively and for the future. Where, for example, a marriage is annulled, it is struck from all records and stands as having never transpired in law. ...
  17. A legal decree that states that a marriage was never valid. Has the legal effect of wiping out a marriage as though it never existed.
  18. The legal ending of an 'Invalid Marriage'. To the law neither party was ever married, but all the children born of the annulled marriage remain legitimate.
  19. a marriage can be dissolved in a legal proceeding in which the marriage is declared void, as though it never took place. In the eyes of the law, the parties were never married. It is available only under certain limited circumstances.
  20. The court?s judgment that a so-called ?marriage? was never legally valid or became invalid after the marriage.
  21. An annulment is an action to set aside a marriage based upon certain limited legal deficiencies.
  22. In England and Wales, this is when a marriage is declared void by a court, either because it was not legally valid when it took place or because it has since become not legally valid. ...
  23. Technically called a decree of nullity, an annulment of a marriage is a decision by a church court, confirmed by an appellate court, that a putative marriage was not valid from the start because something was lacking: full knowledge and consent by both parties, freedom from force or grave fear, ...
  24. A marriage is declared to be annulled where the law does not recognise it as a valid marriage. (This is different to religious procedures for annulment. Any inquiry about church granted annulments should be made through the relevant church.)