Collocations withconsent

These are words often used in combination withconsent.

Click on a collocation to see more examples of it.

common consent
Thus, when only a few people had houses, there would be no "common consent" to consider them as property.
From theCambridge English Corpus
consent form
The consent form was read aloud to inform youth about the purpose of the study, confidentiality procedures, and the availability of psychological services.
From theCambridge English Corpus
consent order
Could not a consent order be made for them too?
From the
Hansard archive
Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under theOpen Parliament Licence v3.0
consent provision
Private prosecutions require authorisation only where the offence in question is subject to a consent provision.
From the
Hansard archive
Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under theOpen Parliament Licence v3.0
consent requirement
Without a consent requirement, the transplant team theoretically could remove the organs without contacting the family.
From theCambridge English Corpus
explicit consent
This condition, about which there was considerable debate, was eventually approved contingent on explicit consent from next of kin for a 72-hour study duration.
From theCambridge English Corpus
express consent
It is central to liberal nationalism that this should be the case with the express consent of the co-nationals.
From theCambridge English Corpus
formal consent
If he did give formal consent to his wife's action, the clerk did not think this was important enough to include in the written act.
From theCambridge English Corpus
implied consent
In this situation, it may be inevitable that coercion and not implied consent is the order of the day.
From theCambridge English Corpus
lack of consent
Those that genuinely involve coercion or lack of consent, for instance, are straightforwardly wrong.
From theCambridge English Corpus
legal consent
It is in these alternatives, if anywhere, that the moral justification for proceeding on the basis of legal consent must reside.
From theCambridge English Corpus
mutual consent
And it did so on the basis of mutual consent.
From theCambridge English Corpus
oral consent
All patients and their parents gave written and oral consent.
From theCambridge English Corpus
parental consent
It follows that young women found that their initiative to enter freely into courtship or to make contracts of marriage without parental consent was eroded.
From theCambridge English Corpus
patient consent
He suggests that the issues of psychiatric patient consent for their medical information, despite the guidelines, have not been satisfactorily resolved.
From theCambridge English Corpus
popular consent
In the modern world, after all, constitutional monarchy, if it is to survive, must be a monarchy which rests on popular consent.
From theCambridge English Corpus
prior consent
The requirement for such donations is prior consent from the donor.
From theCambridge English Corpus
signed consent
Not all countries, however, require a signed consent form.
From theCambridge English Corpus
tacit consent
Again one sees determined minorities acting perhaps with the tacit consent of many others, even if the minorities in question differed from those of previous years (p. 95).
From theCambridge English Corpus
unanimous consent
To understand this, consider a k-actor committee where decision-making requires unanimous consent.
From theCambridge English Corpus
verbal consent
With the staff's verbal consent, all interviews were taperecorded.
From theCambridge English Corpus
voluntary consent
They suggest that researchers obtain free and voluntary consent from subjects after the subjects are provided with all necessary information and explanations.
From theCambridge English Corpus
written consent
Written consent to inclusion was obtained from each subject.
From theCambridge English Corpus
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.