3. To become void, especially through the passage of time or an omission: an insurance policy that had run out. 4. To cause or allow (the time remaining in a sports contest) to elapse. run over 1. To collide with, knock down, and often pass over: The car ran over a child. 2....
Under ‘one country, two systems’, British institutions – from the common law tradition and the status of English as a co-official language (alongside Chinese) to capitalistic economic subsystems and horse-racing events – are preserved with minimal change after the handover.Footnote3As a corr...
2. To put out by force; compel to leave: We ran him out of town. 3. To become void, especially through the passage of time or an omission: an insurance policy that had run out. 4. To cause or allow (the time remaining in a sports contest) to elapse. run over 1. To collide ...
3. To become void, especially through the passage of time or an omission: an insurance policy that had run out. 4. To cause or allow (the time remaining in a sports contest) to elapse. run over 1. To collide with, knock down, and often pass over: The car ran over a child. 2....