The liberum veto was abolished; confederations were prohibited as inconsistent with the genius of the constitution; and it was provided, that, after every quarter of a century, the constitution should be revised and amended.
Indeed, the days of the liberum vetowere necessarily the days of legalized insurrection.
Konarski was the first who ventured publicly to assail the liberum veto.
A diet held by a confederacy was not subject to the liberum veto, but adopted decisions by a majority vote.
This law of the liberum veto, and the elective nature of the royal office, offered countless opportunities for foreign nations to interfere in the affairs of the Commonwealth.
A Diet, convoked under the forms of a confederacy, in order to avoid dissolution by the liberum veto, was obliged to sanction this partition.
Just as the liberty of the Shlakhta is impossible without the liberum veto, so is the Jewish matza impossible without Christian blood.
In the course of the seventeenth century the principle of the liberum veto had been so far extended as to recognize the lawful right of any one of the ten thousand noblemen of Poland to refuse to obey a law which he had not approved.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "liberum veto" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.