renege on造句1. If you renege on the deal now, I'll fight you in the courts.
2. As a result, he wanted to renege on his binding letter of intent, which he signed.
3. Local and national governments have been forced to renege on their own laws.
4. The chiefs renege on the deal and she is stabbed as she tries to entice Odoff herself.
5. Any more colourful candidate could renege on a deal.
6. You said you'd come, why did you renege on your promise?
7. You will almost surely have to renege on some of these promises.
8. But most workers fear employers would renege on these obligations, and that China's shoddy regulatory system would let them get away with it.
9. Allowing homeowners, for instance, to renege on mortgage debts in bankruptcy would have pushed banks to modify more loans, but weakened fragile banks.
10. The House of Lords ruled that the mutual insurer was wrong to renege on guarantees offered to about 90,000 pension policyholders.
11. At the same time, Landau persuaded the Boss to renege on statements that he never would play arenas or stadiums.
12. As the developer lurched toward bankruptcy, Prudential tried to renege on the deal.
13. Devolution proved to be the one area in which New Labour found it could not renege on pledges from its opposition years.
14. Good workers, with high self-esteem ... not the type to renege on a £60,000 mortgage or a £10,000 car loan.
15. Even as the new legislation was being passed, local leaders urged people to renege on their loans, and repayments on nearly $2 billion in loans in the state have virtually ceased.
16. The trading system will have much more trouble if the United States starts to renege on its traditional leadership role.
17. Some, like Cosco, a shipping giant, have brazenly tried to renege on contracts.
18. For one thing, history tells us that the Republican Party would renege on its side of any deal as soon as it got the chance.
18.try its best to collect and build good sentences.
19. In addition, about 44% showed their lack of loyalty by stating that they would renege on a job-acceptance commitment if a better offer came along.
20. What's more, you could damage the relationship you have with a recruiter if he or she believes you and you later renege on your promises.
21. As a result, the structure of banking was seriously weakened, and in 1814 a run on banks forced most to renege on their legal obligations to exchange notes for specie.
22. There was something deferential, even slightly servile, in Langdon's tone, as if he feared that Washington might renege on his promise and refuse to take the job.
23. They say such cuts would force the federal government to renege on promises made to senior citizens, the unemployed, and the poor and the vulnerable.
24. Equally the constituents face the dilemma that the ruler at some point may renege on his promises and confiscate the accumulated wealth of his constituents.
25. With bank finance disappearing, company profits under grave threat and a slump apparently on the way, investors feared that a wide range of firms would be forced to renege on their debts.
26. Yes, the government will have to impose drastic spending cuts and tax increases, but it will also have to massively renege on those retirement promises.