Regulations cannot legally ignore the law; they must operate within the framework established by statutes or constitutional provisions. While regulatory agencies have the authority to create rules and guidelines to implement laws, these regulations must align with the underlying legal principles. If a regulation contradicts or exceeds the scope of the law, it can be challenged and potentially invalidated in court. Thus, regulations serve to clarify and enforce the law rather than disregard it.
ignore the law
That a state had the right to ignore a law, if it thought the law was unconstitutional
If the federal regulations to which you refer have the "force of law" then, yes.
I'm not sure what agency law is. Agencies don't make laws they make regulations, and no, regulations are not the same as laws. Regulations can have the force of laws.
You can find the total number of regulations in the IRS tax law on irs.gov/Tax-Professionals/Tax-Code,-Regulations-and-Official-Guidance
RULESA regulation is a rule or law
because you could get arrested.
To break a law. To be in conflict with the rules or regulations of some authoritative body.
Get a divorce, or ignore her
It is federal law that requires restrictions, not state law.
Regulations.
No, law is an abstract noun. The only verb form of law I can think of is legislate.