1. breach
To breach an agreement.
If you breach the rules, you will be expelled from the school.
More to the point, he can't really bring up all the details of this supposed breach of the protocol without exposing his own ineptitude.
There was an electromagnetic breach of the floor above Section 5. What you're asking is a serious breach of our security.
convenants is not breached
They breached the agreement they had made with their employer.
It is absurd to claim that we have to breach international conventions, just because others do not comply with rules and standards.
It opens me up to prosecution for breach of the agreements I signed when I left the Agency.
security breach
Durham Tees Valley argued that the airline breached a contract, signed in April 2003, which obliged it to fly two of its planes out of the airport for a minimum of 10 years.
While the heat is on in Barcelona – where Airbnb have just been fined €30,000 for breaching local tourism laws – the company is also under attack in a growing number of other cities.
The definition of a breach is a break, or violation. An example of a breach is an agreement that has been broken.
The suit is claiming breach of contractcopyright infringement and breach of confidential relationship.
Last year pupils in Edinburgh complained that being forced to wear uniforms breached the European Convention of Human Rights.
The former president of a certain association has been arrested on suspicion of breach of trust.
Anglais mot "megszegi a szerződést"(breach) se produit dans des ensembles:
Business vocab 1.