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Showing results for nonintervention. Search instead for lohnkostensubvention.
Definitions

nonintervention

[non-in-ter-ven-shuhn] / ˌnɒn ɪn tərˈvɛn ʃən /




Example Sentences

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British, French, and other European powers pursued a policy of nonintervention, however, believing it prudent given Japanese expansion in Asia and elsewhere and the U.S. policy of neutrality.

From Textbooks • Dec. 14, 2022

Roosevelt tried to work around these nonintervention efforts, offering England advice and military supplies.

From Washington Post • Oct. 13, 2021

It was because of democracies’ nonintervention pact that Almudéver’s unit first made its way to the front with guns but no bullets.

From Slate • May 27, 2021

They remained until 1934, when President Franklin Delano Roosevelt pulled them out as part of his new Good Neighbor Policy, which called for regional nonintervention.

From The New Yorker • Oct. 24, 2019

By reducing the resources of Tipú in 1792 Cornwallis believed that he was establishing a balance of power in India which would enable the English to adopt a policy of nonintervention.

From The Political History of England - Vol. X. The History of England from the Accession of George III to the close of Pitt's first Administration by Poole, Reginald Lane