Safeguard
a safeguard (verb, noun) - protect from being harmed
taxpayer safeguards
a safeguard in the proposals
essential safeguards
safeguard privacy
safeguard identity
safeguard their health
a safeguard to ensure the objectivity of the audit
safeguard the rights of consumers
properly safeguard
fully safeguard
take steps to safeguard
safeguard his interest
the secured creditor is entitled to appoint a receiver to safeguard his interest
still waiting to see what structural and corporate changes will be made to safeguard future operations and ensure stability
safeguard the creditor's security
safeguard privileges
safeguard their equipment
a safeguard against Y
a safeguard against the development of authoritarian police methods
the proverbial atheist who, on his deathbed, consents to receive the sacraments as a safeguard
safeguard and promote the child's welfare
let's safeguard it
safeguard hundreds of jobs
must do it to safeguard the residents
safeguard their place on the list
safeguard its assets
the added safeguard of judicial review
a safeguard on their financial position
the ultimate international safeguard against fascist barbarism and oppression
write a safeguard into the new law
safeguard existing pension rights
safeguard itself by including certain terms in the contract
failure to properly safeguard computer access cards
safeguard the welfare of the community and children in particular
safeguard funding
equities are a better safeguard against inflation
effective safeguards
follow the safeguards
subject to safeguards
the programme will be subject to safeguards
the provision of safeguards
the provision of cast-iron safeguards
constitutional safeguards
introduce strong safeguards
safeguards built into the statutory scheme
mounting pressure for it to institutionalize some safeguards
independent safeguards against infringement of legal and civil rights
safeguards provided by the Act
effectiveness of safeguards
Example sentences:
* The firm must safeguard its assets.
* Will the Minister write a safeguard into the Bill?
* The safeguards provided by the Act should not be dismissed lightly.
* The finance company can to some extent safeguard itself by including certain terms in the contract it makes with the customer.
* There is the added safeguard of judicial review.
* In his relations with the divine, he appears to have hedged his bets, rather like the proverbial atheist who, on his deathbed, consents to receive the sacraments as a safeguard, just in case.
* The House braced for a difficult vote set for Monday on a $700 billion rescue of the financial industry after a weekend of tense negotiations produced a plan that Congressional leaders portrayed as greatly strengthened by new taxpayer safeguards.
* The receiver's job is to safeguard the creditor's security, and to sell sufficient of the charged assets to pay off the secured debt.
* Generally, if security is given for a debt and default is made in repayment of that debt, the secured creditor is entitled to appoint a receiver to safeguard his interest.
* A principal shareholder came to the rescue, injecting $21mllion, but the ensuing crisis of confidence lost the bank $30million in deposits and people are still waiting to see what structural and corporate changes will be made to safeguard future operations and ensure stability.
* The involvement of a second partner should provide a sufficient safeguard to ensure the objectivity of the audit, even for listed and other public interest companies.
* Any deal between the two will have to safeguard the identity of car owners because of Britain's Data Protection Act.
* The proposals also have a safeguard in takeovers, where a preadator often has his eye on a rich pension scheme.
* To safeguard their health in the meantime you could give them advice about how to reduce the risks they are taking.
* Safeguards for the Spanish steel industry were incorporated in an additional protocol, the talks having been held up over Spain's concern that cheap steel exports from the three countries would disrupt its domestic industry.
* It is often argued that equities are more marketable as they are a better safeguard against inflation because they will reflect the rise in the nominal value of real assets during an inflationary period.
* The statutory responsibilities to safeguard the welfare of the community and children in particular often involves recourse to the courts.
* There is a specific power in s20(5) to accommodate young people between the ages of 16 and 21 years in any community home which takes children over the age of 16 if a local authority considers that this would safeguard and promote the child's welfare.
* And the only thing that seems to stand in the way of doing anything commercially sensible with County Farms is that every time we deal with it, somebody says, ah, but it can only exist as an entity, let's keep it as that, let's pass it on to a trust, let's safeguard it, let's do this and that.
* And it will safeguard hundreds of jobs.
* A new 250,000 refuge for Cleveland's Asian women fleeing from violent husbands is to open without an official ceremony in order to safeguard its residents.
* We shall see that in writing this letter Anselm was concerned to safeguard the privileges of Canterbury against the claims of legatine authority; but he was also inspired by a traditional respect for royal authority, and the common-sense view that in fact nothing could be accomplished without help from the king and his officials.
* The combination of these two functions in Britain is seen as a safeguard against the development of authoritarian police methods, but it brings other problems, as the methods of public control necessary to one function may not always be acceptable for the second.
* Midland Repayment Protector will safeguard your mortgage repayments for up to 12 months if you are unable to work because of unemployment, illness or an accident.
* List MdBs must emulate them if they wish to safeguard their place on their party's list or hope to win a constituency seat at the next election.
* As a final safeguard on their position, Chemco insisted on Virgin Atlantic taking out a forward-currency contract to protect the buy-back agreement against fluctuations in the pound against the dollar and to protect themselves if Virgin defaulted or went bust.
* On his return to France in 1935 Nizan's conviction that the Soviet state represented the ultimate international safeguard against fascist barbarism and oppression was strengthened by the growing success of the Popular Front movements in France and Spain.
* It seems that the Secretary of State will seek to safeguard the existing pension rights of those who work in the subsidiaries by looking closely at the buy-out proposals and that he will not favour any buy-out proposal which does not give some future security of pension rights to the workers who will be affected.
* This is an understandable fear and must be met by the provision of cast-iron safeguards, such as they have in Holland where, under the beneficent tutelage of Dr Admiraal, voluntary euthanasia has been legalized and practised with considerable success for several years.
* Having pledged its support for the environment and the poor, there is mounting pressure for it to institutionalize some safeguards.
* Professional safeguards apply to those who appear for the prosecution and the defence.






