To formally approve something, specifically a document.
Ratify means to approve.
to confirm, affirm or authorize
Means approving it
Officially approved.
Legislative Executive Judicial States Amend Supremacy Ratify
To ratify means to approve and make binding an agreement that has been made by someone not able to make it binding himself. Typically, an agreement made between countries can be made by representatives of the countries but it will need to be ratified, i.e, accepted and approved by the countries' governments before it become a legally binding agreement.
repeat, insist, assert, declare, argue Also: state, maintain, swear, pronounce, endorse, certify, ratify, validate
Ratify/Ratification
Accept is another word for take in and adopt. Additional synonyms include embrace, approve and ratify.
Approve by accepting mean ratify. Have a great day !
To ratify a document, it is to accept it. By: a 5th grader
accept
3/4 of the states' approval is needed to ratify an amendment, if that's what you mean.
Yes, it does. The implication in the word ratify is that the approval is formal rather than casual. A state legislature would ratify something. It is not usually used to mean that an individual approves something.
Ratify means to write one's name in token of assent, responsibility, or obligation.
To ratify a document, it is to accept it. By: a 5th grader
no they do not because ratify means define an effect means what happens after the inncedent.
Legislative Executive Judicial States Amend Supremacy Ratify
Ratify is the constitution
I'm assuming you mean Virginia, which was the last state to ratify in 1791... but Massachusetts, Connecticut and Georgia actually ratified the Bill of Rights in a 1939 in an anniversary ceremony, as they hadn't then.
To ratify something is to approve