What's the difference between exterritorial and extraterritorial?
Exterritorial
Definition:
(a.) Beyond the territorial limits; foreign to, or exempt from, the territorial jurisdiction.
Example Sentences:
Extraterritorial
Definition:
(a.) Beyond the limits of a territory or particular jurisdiction; exterritorial.
Example Sentences:
(1) Its willingness to ignore diplomatic convention and use its Kuala Lumpur embassy to conduct an extraterritorial assassination will be seen as setting a dire precedent that cannot be allowed to stand.
(2) Certain extraterritorial cues constituting an agoraphobic cluster seem to be prepotent and prepared triggers or modifiers of fear during stress.
(3) Because of the extraterritorial reach in the Drip bill, it requires foreign internet service providers, who may be providing webmail services to British citizens (think of the expats living in Spain or Florida and using national ISPs for example), to store data about those British citizens in data or storage centres outside the jurisdiction of the UK Data Protection and other relevant Acts,” Davis told the Guardian.
(4) The shape of the extracellular potentials at long radial distances over the fibre and beyond its end were very similar to the shape of extraterritorial potentials of a single motor unit.
(5) Where there is a realistic possibility that an order with extraterritorial effect may offend another state’s core values, the order should not be made”, it said.
(6) Extraterritorial potentials of low and high threshold motor units (LMU and HMU) of m. biceps brachii were measured using a specially designed multielectrode and an electromyograph.
(7) There was a claim of “extraterritorial jurisdiction” that would allow warrants for bulk surveillance to be served to companies even if they weren’t headquartered in the UK.
(8) The prosecution is basing its case on the Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act, which generally has been used for crimes committed by members of the US military.
(9) Intracellular muscle action potentials, the corresponding to them extracellular action potentials recorded at short and long radial distances, extraterritorial motor unit potentials, evoked muscle potentials (M-, H- and T-potentials) and averaged potentials of the summated electromyogram were studied experimentally and compared with the calculated potentials.
(10) Also, the rural and extraterritorial environment, by reducing exposure to stimuli, can contribute to stabilization.
(11) In view of the low mortality rate and superior long-term success of direct reconstructions, extraterritorial grafts are felt to be rarely indicated.
(12) The government chose to add the clause as the current law only has an “implicit extraterritorial effect” and “some of the largest communications providers” based outside of the UK have questioned whether the legislation applies to them.
(13) Hastings Law professor Ahmed Ghappour recently called that effort “possibly the broadest expansion of extraterritorial surveillance power since the FBI’s inception.” But the FBI is trying to alter those rules without raising privacy advocates’ hackles (though luckily some have caught on ).
(14) For deep lying MUs the changes in the propagation velocity were estimated indirectly by the changes in the duration of the extraterritorial MU potentials.
(15) "This is why we plan to extend the extraterritorial offences in the Female Genital Mutilation Act 2003, so that they cover habitual as well as permanent UK residents involved in offences of FGM committed abroad.
(16) The influence of the rate of firing of separate human motor units (MUs) from m. biceps brachii on the propagation velocity of the extraterritorial MU potentials was investigated.
(17) This first extraterritorial survey of Switzerland showed that every tenth Swiss aged 15 or over suffers from hay fever (incidence 9.6%).
(18) The TI report says it is surprising so few defence firms take corruption seriously since most countries must comply with international anti-corruption laws, such as the US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and the recent UK Bribery Act , which have extraterritorial reach.
(19) It also directed Pillay to publish a report on the protection and promotion of privacy "in the context of domestic and extraterritorial surveillance ... including on a mass scale".
(20) These abnormalities resemble those seen during extraterritorial circulatory insufficiency or air emboli.