Waive - définition. Qu'est-ce que Waive
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est Waive - définition

VOLUNTARY RELINQUISHMENT OR SURRENDER OF SOME KNOWN RIGHT OR PRIVILEGE
Waivor; Waive; Waived; Wavier

waive         
¦ verb refrain from insisting on or applying (a right or claim).
Origin
ME (orig. as a legal term relating to removal of the protection of the law): from an Anglo-Norman Fr. var. of OFr. gaiver 'allow to become a waif, abandon'.
Usage
Waive is sometimes confused with wave. Waive means 'refrain from insisting on or demanding' (he waived all rights to the money), whereas the much more common word wave means 'move to and fro' (the flag waved in the wind).
waive         
v. a.
1.
Relinquish, renounce, surrender, remit, give up, forego, give up claim to.
2.
Throw away, cast off, reject, desert.
3.
(Law.) Throw away, relinquish voluntarily.
waive         
v. to voluntarily give up something, including not enforcing a term of a contract (such as insisting on payment on an exact date), or knowingly giving up a legal right such as a speedy trial, a jury trial or a hearing on extradition (the transfer to another state's jurisdiction of one accused of a crime in the other state). See also: waiver

Wikipédia

Waiver

A waiver is the voluntary relinquishment or surrender of some known right or privilege.

Regulatory agencies of state departments or the federal government may issue waivers to exempt companies from certain regulations. For example, a United States law restricted the size of banks, but when banks exceeded these sizes, they obtained waivers. In another example, the United States federal government may issue waivers to individual states so that they may provide Medicaid in different ways than the law typically requires.

While a waiver is often in writing, sometimes a person's words can also be used as a counteract to a waiver. An example of a written waiver is a disclaimer, which becomes a waiver when accepted. When the right to hold a person liable through a lawsuit is waived, the waiver may be called an exculpatory clause, liability waiver, legal release, or hold harmless clause.

In some cases, parties may sign a "non-waiver" contract which specifies that no rights are waived, particularly if a person's actions may suggest that rights are being waived. This is particularly common in insurance. Sometimes the elements of "voluntary" and "known" are established by a legal fiction. In this case, one is presumed to know one's rights and that those rights are voluntarily relinquished if not asserted at the time.

In civil procedure, certain arguments must be raised in the first objection that a party submits to the court, or else they will be deemed waived.

Exemples du corpus de texte pour Waive
1. Justice Department to waive Kuznetsov‘s diplomatic immunity.
2. The president, however, could waive that restriction.
3. The state is prepared to waive the tax on electric cars, but perhaps instead of doing that, it should waive the import tax on buses.
4. "We are going to waive the bill for the cost of the concert and waive the bill for the cleaning up," he said, speaking on GMTV.
5. Speaking on GMTV, he said÷ "We are going to waive the bill for the cost of the concert and waive the bill for the cleaning up.