Caution! The site can't guarantee, that text has age permission. The site is not recommended, if you are less than 18 years old.
The site shows example sentences for English words. How the word or phrase could be used in a sentence?
" ... As we have said of similar arguments on previous occasions, petitioner's arguments are frivolous and devoid of any basis in the law. We need not refute them with somber reasoning and copious citation of precedent; to do so might suggest that they have some colorable merit. ... "
" ... The band is seeking damages, an injunction to stop the game from being produced and sold, and the destruction of "all products, labels, tags, signs, prints, packages, videos, and advertisements in their possession or under [3D Realms'] control, bearing or using the Ion Maiden name or any other simulation, reproduction, counterfeit, copy or colorable imitation of the IRON MAIDEN trademark, and all plates, molds, matrices and other means of making the same." ... "
" ... The more difficult issue was that of "possession". The Court of Appeals mused that there might be a hypothetical situation where somebody holding a naked right to possession might be entitled to the homestead protection, but could not find any Utah decisional authority on point. To the contrary, in all the prior Utah cases addressing the subject, the debtor always had some colorable claim to title, no matter how weak. ... "
" ... The questions of whether the Enquirer obtained Bezos’s personal photos through lawful means, whether the Enquirer has a First Amendment right to publish them, and whether the Enquirer has a colorable fair use defense to infringing Bezos’s copyrights in the photos are not dispositive of whether the Enquirer’s emails constituted extortion. In other words, the Enquirer isn’t necessarily off the hook if it otherwise could have lawfully published the photographs. Instead, the question is whether the Enquirer was threatening to embarrass Bezos or harm his reputation by publishing the photos unless Bezos complied with the Enquirer’s demand that he disavow the claim that the Enquirer’s news coverage was politically motivated. ... "
" ... caused by LBHI's fraud in inducing Strickler to stay on with LBI while the firm engaged in the infamous Repo 105 practice, in which LBI removed from its books the liabilities to repurchase assets that had been pledged to obtain cash. The Examiner appointed by the bankruptcy judge concluded that shareholders had "colorable claims" against management for this practice. ... "