DEBARMENT - significado y definición. Qué es DEBARMENT
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Qué (quién) es DEBARMENT - definición


Debarment         
·noun Hindrance from approach; exclusion.
Debarment         
Debarment is the state of being excluded from enjoying certain possessions, rights, privileges, or practices and the act of prevention by legal means. For example, companies can be debarred from contracts due to allegations of fraud, mismanagement, and similar improprieties.
debar         
  • [[Balli Kombëtar]] forces in Debar
  • 15px
  • The mosque of Debar.
  • 100px
  • 15px
  • Monastery of [[Saint Jovan Bigorski Monastery]] near Debar.
  • Skanderbeg]] in Debar
  • [[Lake Debar]]
CITY IN NORTH MACEDONIA
Dibra e Madhe; Debre; Upper Dibra; Debre-i Bala; Debre-i Bâlâ; History of Debar; Dibra e Sipërme; Dibra Sipërme
(debars, debarring, debarred)
If you are debarred from doing something, you are prevented from doing it by a law or regulation. (FORMAL)
If found guilty, she could be debarred from politics for seven years...
= ban
VERB: usu passive, be V-ed from n/-ing

Wikipedia

Debarment
Debarment is the state of being excluded from enjoying certain possessions, rights, privileges, or practices and the act of prevention by legal means. For example, companies can be debarred from contracts due to allegations of fraud, mismanagement, and similar improprieties.
Ejemplos de uso de DEBARMENT
1. The letters also requested records pertaining to the debarment proceedings.
2. The Marines issued "debarment letters" banning the contractors from all coalition bases in western Iraq.
3. According to Army spokesman Dave Foster, eight individuals or companies have been barred from doing business with the Army, and another eight have been proposed for debarment.
4. "These are all negotiated settlements. . . . A criminal conviction brings mandatory debarment and effectively puts a corporation out of business." Prosecutors for months have been sifting through documents in an effort to separate bad business decisions from possible criminal conduct.
5. The GSA‘s debarment office initiated "suspension actions" against the companies and issued "show–cause" letters, asking the firms to explain why they should not be suspended or debarred, according to a Sept. 7 e–mail obtained by The Post.