treaty
treaty — noun
1. an official written document in which countries state what they have agreed to d
an official written document in which countries state what they have agreed to do, with the signatures of their leaders making it a rule they must follow
The peace treaty signed in 1998 ended the long border conflict.
passive participle: treaty signed + time marker
Under the trade treaty, farmers on both sides pay lower taxes.
prepositional phrase: under + treaty
Kwame's government refused to sign the treaty until human rights were addressed.
The climate treaty was approved by fifteen nations last summer.
Adina studied the treaty carefully before presenting it to the president.
- pact
less formal; often used for specific limited agreements (e.g. a non-aggression pact)
- accord
slightly more formal; used for major diplomatic agreements (e.g. the Paris Accord)
- convention
often implies a multilateral agreement setting shared standards (e.g. the Geneva Convention)
- agreement
broadest term; can apply to any level from personal to international, while treaty is specifically between countries
文法句型
treaty + between + countries
treaty + on/over + topic (trade, climate, peace, etc.)
用法筆記
Frequently passive (the treaty was signed / ratified / approved). The subject of the verb 'treaty' is usually a formal body (government, parliament, senate) that approves or rejects it. Distinguish from 'agreement': treaties are always between sovereign states and typically require formal ratification by each country's legislature.