Want this question answered?
A court order MUST be complied with. The individual does NOT have the option of choosing which portions to obey and which to disregard. To disregard a court order, or any part of it, is contempt of court.
"Disregard the errors" I will now disregard everything, because I'm angry.
No. The word "disregard" has two PREFIXES: dis- and re-. If you mean "Can disregard take a suffix?" the answer is yes: disregarder, disregardful, disregarding.
Reckless Disregard was created in 1985.
The Disregard of Timekeeping was created in 1989.
He decided to disregard Bill's advice.
Disregarded is the past tense of disregard.
You can use "disregard" in a sentence like this: "Please disregard the previous email as it contained incorrect information."
Perhaps 'heed' could be considered the opposite of disregard.
His disregard for the road rules got him banned from driving.Do not disregard the law.
That is the correct spelling of "disregarded" (ignored, disobeyed).
ignore example sentence: He chose to disregard the "No Parking" sign and then, of course, he got a ticket.