Dictionnaire Anglais - Ojibwé:

treaty

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La définition du mot "treaty":
+1 rate 1. Brussels Treaty
+1 rate 2. Treaty of Adrianople
+1 rate 3. Nerchinsk Treaty of
rate 4. Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, agreement signed between the United States and the Soviet Union in 1987 that required the removal of short-range and intermediate-range nuclear missiles from Europe
rate 5. 1842 treaty between the United States and Britain that settled territorial disputes and established plans for suppressing the slave trade
rate 6. formal agreement between two states, compact, covenant, contract
rate 7. officially Pacific Security Treaty; Security pact for the South Pacific, signed in 1951 by Australia, New Zealand and the United States (hence its acronym). The United States first suggested a pact to Australia in the wake of the U.S.-Japan Security Treaty and fears of Japanese rearmament. The signatories agreed to maintain a consultative relationship for their collective security. In the 1980s New Zealand refused to let ships carrying nuclear weapons dock at its ports; the U.S., refusing to identify its nuclear-armed ships, suspended its treaty obligations to New Zealand in 1986 and the treaty has since been nonoperative with reference to New Zealand.
rate 8. Warsaw Treaty Organization; Military alliance of the Soviet Union, Albania (until 1968), Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland and Romania, formed in 1955 in response to West Germany's entry into NATO. Its terms included a unified military command and the stationing of Soviet troops in the other member states. Warsaw Pact troops were called into action to suppress uprisings in Poland (1956), Hungary (1956) and Czechoslovakia (1968). The alliance was dissolved in 1991 after the collapse of the Soviet bloc and Soviet troops departed. Several Warsaw Pact members later joined NATO.
rate 9. Contract or other written instrument binding two or more states under international law. The term is generally reserved for the more important international agreements, usually requiring, in addition to the signatures of authorized persons, ratification by the governments involved. A treaty may be bilateral or multilateral; it usually contains a preamble, an enumeration of the issues agreed on and clauses that discuss its ratification procedures, lifespan and terms for termination. Treaties may be political, commercial, constitutional, or administrative, or they may relate to criminal and civil justice or codify international law.
rate 10. North Atlantic Treaty Organization
rate 11. Aix la Chapelle Treaty of
rate 12. Amiens Treaty of
rate 13. Pacific Security Treaty
rate 14. Brest Litovsk Treaty of
rate 15. Brétigny Treaty of
rate 16. Bucharest Treaty of
rate 17. Cambrai Treaty of
rate 18. Campo Formio Treaty of
rate 19. Carlowitz Treaty of
rate 20. Cateau Cambrésis Treaty of
rate 21. Chaumont Treaty of
rate 22. Clayton Bulwer Treaty
rate 23. Dover Treaty of
rate 24. Edirne Treaty of
rate 25. Guadalupe Hidalgo Treaty of
rate 26. Hünkâr Iskelesi Treaty of
rate 27. Jassy Treaty of
rate 28. Küçük Kaynarca Treaty of
rate 29. Lateran Treaty
rate 30. Lausanne Treaty of
rate 31. London Treaty of
rate 32. Maastricht Treaty
rate 33. Nanjing Treaty of
rate 34. Neuilly Treaty of
rate 35. Paris Treaty of
rate 36. Portsmouth Treaty of
rate 37. Pressburg Treaty of
rate 38. Pyrenees Treaty of the
rate 39. Rapallo Treaty of
rate 40. Reinsurance Treaty
rate 41. Riga Treaty of
rate 42. Rio Treaty
rate 43. Saint Germain Treaty of
rate 44. San Stefano Treaty of
rate 45. Sèvres Treaty of
rate 46. Southeast Asia Treaty Organization
rate 47. Tordesillas Treaty of
rate 48. Trianon Treaty of
rate 49. Venice Treaty of
rate 50. Verdun Treaty of
rate 51. Versailles Treaty of
rate 52. Warsaw Treaty Organization
rate 53. Webster Ashburton Treaty
rate 54. Central Treaty Organization
rate 55. Middle East Treaty Organization
rate 56. Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty
rate 57. Treaty on the Nonproliferation of Nuclear Weapons
rate 58. Nuclear Test Ban Treaty
rate 59. Fort Stanwix Treaties of
rate 60. Nijmegen Treaties of
rate 61. Rastatt and Baden treaties of
rate 62. Rome Treaties of
rate 63. Tilsit Treaties of;
rate 64. a contract or other written instrument binding two or more states under international law. According to modern diplomatic usage the term treaty is confined to the more important international agreements, whereas those agreements of lesser or subordinate importance have been called conventions, agreements, arrangements, protocols and acts. A treaty is normally negotiated between plenipotentiaries provided by their respective governments with full power to conclude the treaty within the scope of their instructions. Signature, however, is today presumed to be subject to ratification by the government unless explicitly waived. Apart from such express provision, the instrument does not become formally binding until ratifications have been exchanged. A multilateral treatysuch as the Treaty of Versailles of 1919 or the Charter of the United Nations of 1945is usually negotiated at a diplomatic conference ending with signature of the treaty. In making a treaty, the authors need not employ any special form. A treaty often takes the form of a contract, but it may take the form of a joint declaration or of an exchange of notes (as in the case of the RushBagot Agreement between the United States and Great Britain in 1817 for mutual disarmament on the Great Lakes). It is, however, customary to draw up all important treaties on a fixed plan. First comes the preamble, giving the names and styles of the high contracting parties, a statement of the general objectives which they have in view, the names and official designations of the plenipotentiaries charged with the negotiation and a statement that their full powers have been verified. Then follow the articles containing the stipulations agreed upon. If the treaty is concluded for a definite period, this is next stated; or, if it be in form perpetual, there may be a provision inserted that either party may denounce (i.e., give notice to terminate) the treaty. Next follows an article providing for ratification and for the time and place for the exchange of ratifications. At the end is a clause stating that in witness whereof the respective plenipotentiaries have affixed their names and seals. The signatures follow, with the place and date. Additional articles are often appended and signed by the plenipotentiaries, with the declaration that they have the same force and value as if they had been included in the body of the treaty or convention. International jurists have classified treaties on a variety of principles. Aside from the distinction between general (multilateral) and bilateral treaties, the distinction has been drawn between those that represent a definite transaction, such as a cession of territory (Rechtsgeschft) and those which seek to establish a general rule of conduct, such as the renunciation of war (Rechtssatz). They may be classified in a more practical way according to their object, as follows: political treaties, such as treaties of peace, of alliance, of cession of territory, of pacific settlement and of disarmament; commercial treaties, including tariff, consular, fishery and navigation agreements; constitutional and administrative treaties, such as the conventions establishing and regulating international unions, organizations and specialized agencies; treaties relating to criminal justice, such as treaties defining international crimes and providing for extradition; treaties relating to civil justice, such as conventions for the protection of human rights, trademarks and copyright and the execution of the judgments of foreign courts; treaties codifying international law, such as procedures for the peaceful settlement of international disputes, rules for the conduct of war and definitions of the rights and duties of states. In practice it is often difficult to assign a particular treaty to any one of these classes. A treaty may lapse naturally by the destruction of one of the states party to it, by the object of the agreement ceasing to exist, by the conclusion of a new agreement among the parties abrogating or superseding it or by denunciation by one of the parties under powers reserved in the treaty itself. Treaties are also in most cases suspended if not terminated by war between the contracting parties and are therefore usually revived in express terms of the treaty of peace.
rate 65. n a written agreement between two or more countries formally approved and signed by their leadersa peace treaty The treaty on European union calls for the creation of a single currency by 1999. We've signed/concluded a treaty with neighbouring states to limit emissions of harmful gases. (+ to infinitive) The treaty must be ratified (= approved and signed) by all member governments before it can take effect.
rate 66. A formal agreement between two states signed by official representatives of each state - Treaty - Treaty
rate 67. Refers to the Treaty establishing the European Community. The Treaty was signed in Rome on 25 March 1957 and entered into force on 1 January 1958. It established the European Economic Community (EEC), which is now the European Community (EC), and is often referred to as the "Treaty of Rome". The Treaty on European Union (which is often referred to as the "Maastricht Treaty") was signed on 7 February 1992 and entered into force on 1 November 1993. The Treaty on European Union amended the Treaty establishing the European Community and established the European Union. The "Treaty of Amsterdam", which was signed in Amsterdam on 2 October 1997 and entered into force on 1 May 1999, amended both the Treaty establishing the European Community and the Treaty on European Union. Equally, the "Treaty of Nice", which concluded the 2000 Intergovernmental Conference and was signed on 26 February 2001 and entered into force on 1 February 2003, amended both the Treaty establishing the European Community and the Treaty on Europ
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Tags: treaty, diba`amaadiwin+an, gichi-ashodamaagewin+an, nakondiwin+an, gaa-izhi`ind+waa, nakomidowin+an, nakomidiwin+an, Anglais - Ojibwé Dictionnaire
 
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