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infract
[in-frakt]
verb (used with object)
to break, violate, or infringe (a law, commitment, etc.).
infract
/ ɪˈڰæ /
verb
(tr) to violate or break (a law, an agreement, etc)
Other Word Forms
- infractor noun
- uninfracted adjective
- ˈڰپDz noun
- ˈڰٴǰ noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of infract1
Example Sentences
“A few weeks later, they searched my cell, they confiscated the book, and they infracted me for having the book that they gave me,” Wright said.
“Governments pay a lot of attention to the risk of being infracted because it is very expensive and it is not brilliant for your reputation,” she said.
It's a fixture that inverts the stereotypical differences between north and south, and proves that opposites infract.
These feudal tenures were established in law; woe to the tenant who presumed to infract them!
There was a retributive justice for all those who infracted the rules of the game.
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