Sometimes the rules in place interfere with the job that needs to be done. In that case someone decides to do the job rather than abide by the rule.
For example: a path exist where trucks are not allowed. A tree falls down. To get that tree out of there someone decides to drive a truck down that path. The workers chop up the tree and load it into the truck. The truck drives off.
The unusable path that trucks were not allowed to use became usable after a truck used it. The truck bent the rules.
Should anyone bend the rules and advance their career.
"Bend the rules" means to slightly break or twist the rules in a way that allows for flexibility or achieving a desired outcome without fully violating the rules.
they cant
don't do it!
The Ewells are allowed to bend the rules in Maycomb due to their reputation for being poor, marginalized, and troublemakers. The community disregards their misconduct and overlooks their actions to maintain social order and avoid conflict with this troubled family. Additionally, there is a sense of societal hierarchy that places certain families, like the Ewells, at the bottom, leading to leniency in enforcing rules.
Not normally, but depending on the foreman you might get to bend the rules a little.
You can use it to the extent that you use it to bend your arm. If you're asking if you can strike your opponent with your elbow... no, that would be against the rules.
Yes. An apple has an axis and does not follow the rules of a sphere. Even if its original form is bent one degree, it can indeed be bent.
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To 'cut you some slack' means to ease up on someone, lighten up, bend the rules, give you a break.
The future tense of "bend" is "will bend" or "shall bend."
The founding fathers knew that they would not be ready for everything, so therefore they made a clause for which they could bend the rules a little bit.