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obligation
noun as in responsibility
Strongest matches
accountability, agreement, bond, burden, commitment, constraint, contract, debt, duty, liability, necessity, need, promise, requirement, right, trust, understanding
Strong matches
business, call, cause, charge, chit, committal, compulsion, conscience, debit, devoir, dues, engagement, IOU, must, occasion, onus, part, place, restraint
Weak matches
Example Sentences
Although corporations can opt in to become a PBC, there is no obligation on them to do so and they need the support of their shareholders.
Right now, 71 percent of all non-agricultural part-time workers fit the latter category, and one of the biggest noneconomic reasons that people look for or accept part-time work is child care obligations.
Each of us has an obligation to befriend people who are different from us and invite them into our homes.
Earlier in lockdown, when people were always available — because life outside the home was essentially banned — there were new, complicated obligations to be virtually present.
By spreading out the payments over many years, he could keep his tax obligations low.
Obviously, the first obligation of all liberal democratic governments is to enforce the rule of law.
It is the obligation of citizens and journalists as well as governments.
“It is our Islamic obligation to pledge allegiance to the Islamic State and give it our Islamic fealty,” he said.
Even the best of us can hurt the people who come to us for care when we forget that our foremost obligation is to them.
This government obligation is limited by practical considerations of safety and security.
There is an implied obligation on the hirer's part to use the car only for the purpose and in the manner for which it was hired.
With this political subjection one is reluctant to associate a more sordid kind of obligation.
The swearing of an oath always brings under obligation to God, and therefore always includes the making of a vow.
If he carries these gratuitously his obligation is still less, nevertheless he must even then take some care of them.
Sometimes a moral obligation to pay money is a good consideration for a promising to pay it.
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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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