Codified
in sentence
55 examples of Codified in a sentence
The legalization of prostitution in October 2000 merely
codified
a long-standing Dutch tradition of tolerance towards buying and selling sex.
Technology is really three forms of knowledge: embodied knowledge in tools and materials,
codified
knowledge in recipes, protocols, and how-to manuals, and tacit knowledge or knowhow in brains.
Unlike in India, whose Supreme Court affirmed the right to privacy as a fundamental right, and the European Union, which has
codified
a “right to be forgotten,” there has not been any serious discussion about data privacy in China.
Their role is currently
codified
by a post-1945 law that gives them enormous influence, even though their membership has dwindled to a mere 8% of employees.
These institutions reflected American interests, but they also
codified
certain norms of behavior – rule-based decision-making, non-discrimination, multilateralism, transparency – which eventually came to constrain American power as well.
Nancy Reagan
codified
the misty-eyed gaze at the rugged man, the demure demurrals, and the aggregation of power behind the throne, while claiming, in interviews, interest in nothing more serious than the White House’s latest china patterns.
In many countries, adverse social norms are also
codified
in laws that limit women’s professional choices and their ability to obtain passports, travel outside their homes, start businesses, and own or inherit property.
This innovative document
codified
how banks should tailor products to clients with cognitive impairments.
In general, commercial laws come from two broad traditions: common law (developed originally by judges in England) and civil law (deriving from Roman legal principles and
codified
in various countries of continental Europe, with the French and German codes being the most influential).
The people who make them work accept a set of norms that often do not have to be
codified.
Britain’s lack of a
codified
constitution, combined with a level of political polarization now rivaling that of the United States, makes the potential outcomes of the current situation hard to foresee.
After that, a constitutional amendment
codified
the two-term limit.
The institution
codified
a set of archconservative rules on trade, capital flows, and fiscal and monetary policies, with which it then compelled developing economies around the world to comply.
Technology, we argue, is really three types of knowledge: embodied knowledge in tools;
codified
knowledge in codes, recipes, formulas, algorithms, and how-to-do manuals; and tacit knowledge in brains.
In 1967, it was
codified
in the preamble to UN Security Council Resolution 242, which established a roadmap for peace between Israel and Palestine, and further affirmed “the inadmissibility of the acquisition of territory by war.”
The UK has no
codified
constitution, but we had always assumed in the past that the “good guys” – irrespective of party – would know how to behave when in power.
For starters, there is no
codified
agreement or clarity on enforcement.
Such an investigation may find that many informal norms – from financial transparency to relations with the Department of Justice – need to be
codified.
After President Franklin D. Roosevelt violated the norm against serving more than two terms, the norm was
codified
in the US Constitution with the Twenty-Second Amendment.
But, as in the cases above, it reflected and
codified
recent political and social changes.
It is created by statute and subject to regular congressional oversight,
codified
by the 1978 Humphrey-Hawkins Act, which specified the Fed’s famous “dual mandate” of price stability and full employment.
But it is not “axiomatic” that a government must keep its word to other nation-states, even when this is
codified
in treaties.
And now, this principle is being implicitly
codified
in the EU budget.
It is little wonder, then, that Russia sees debates about the multilateral rules-based order either as hypocritical or, worse, as a sophisticated plot to undermine the role of international law as
codified
in the UN Charter.
The task of providing “human connection” is not just inherently emotional and psychological; it also requires tacit knowledge of social and cultural circumstances that cannot be
codified
into concrete, routine commands for computers to follow.
Back
Related words
Which
Rules
Their
Tacit
Other
Norms
Knowledge
Being
After
Tools
Three
Social
Rights
Right
Recipes
Principles
Power
Political
Manuals
Government