CONTRAVENE


Meaning of CONTRAVENE in English

con ‧ tra ‧ vene /ˌkɒntrəˈviːn $ ˌkɑːn-/ BrE AmE verb [transitive] formal

[ Date: 1500-1600 ; Language: French ; Origin: contrevenir , from Late Latin contravenire , from Latin contra- ( ⇨ ↑ contra- ) + venire 'to come' ]

to do something that is not allowed according to a law or rule SYN violate :

Some portions of the bill may contravene state law.

• • •

THESAURUS

▪ disobey to not obey a person, order, rule, or law:

In the army, it is a crime to disobey a superior officer.

|

He had disobeyed the school rules.

▪ break a law/rule to not obey a law or rule:

Anyone who breaks the law must expect to be punished.

▪ defy formal to deliberately refuse to obey a rule or law, or what someone in authority tells you to do:

The police arrested the youth for defying a court order.

▪ flout /flaʊt/ formal to deliberately disobey a rule or law in a very public way:

Timber companies are continuing to flout environmental laws.

▪ violate formal to disobey a law, or do something that is against an agreement or principle:

Both countries have accused each other of violating the treaty.

|

Technically he had violated the law.

▪ contravene formal to be against a law, rule, or agreement, or to do something that is against a law, rule, or agreement:

The British government’s actions contravened the European Convention on Human Rights.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English.      Longman - Словарь современного английского языка.