stipulation
含义: A condition or requirement that is demanded as part of an agreement, contract, or arrangement.
Stipulation denotes a specific, often non-negotiable condition that one party insists upon. It is more forceful than a proviso, implying a firm demand rather than a gentle qualification. It appears in legal, contractual, and regulatory contexts, as well as in everyday speech for firm conditions. Common collocations include 'make a stipulation,' 'the stipulation that,' 'strict stipulation,' and 'meet the stipulations.'
例句
- The lease contained a stipulation that tenants must not keep pets on the premises. 租约中有一条规定:租户不得在房屋内饲养宠物。El contrato de arrendamiento contenía una estipulación que prohibía a los inquilinos tener mascotas en las instalaciones.賃貸契約には、テナントが敷地内でペットを飼ってはならないという規定が含まれていた。임대 계약에는 세입자가 건물 내에서 애완동물을 키워서는 안 된다는 규정이 포함되어 있었다.
- One stipulation of the scholarship was that recipients maintain a first-class average throughout their studies. 奖学金的一项规定是获奖者必须在整个学习期间保持一等成绩。Una de las estipulaciones de la beca era que los beneficiarios mantuvieran una media de sobresaliente durante toda la carrera.奨学金の規定のひとつは、受給者が在学中ずっと最優秀の成績を維持することであった。장학금의 규정 중 하나는 수혜자가 재학 기간 내내 최우수 성적을 유지해야 한다는 것이었다.
- She agreed to the interview on the stipulation that certain personal questions would be off limits. 她同意接受采访,但规定某些私人问题不在讨论范围之内。Aceptó la entrevista con la estipulación de que ciertas preguntas personales quedarían fuera de los límites.彼女はインタビューに応じたが、特定の個人的な質問は禁止という条件を付けた。그녀는 인터뷰에 응했으나, 특정 개인적인 질문은 하지 않는다는 조건을 달았다.
发音
用法指南
语境: legal, professional, general
语气: neutral
起源与历史
From Latin stipulatio (a formal promise, bargain), from stipulari (to demand a formal promise). In Roman law, stipulatio was a verbal contract made by question and answer, creating a binding obligation.
文化背景
Era: Modern
Generation: All ages
Social background: Universal
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