Betekenis van:
converse
converse
Zelfstandig naamwoord
- kloosterzuster
- a proposition obtained by conversion
Hyperoniemen
converse
Bijvoeglijk naamwoord
- tegenovergesteld
- turned about in order or relation
Synoniemen
converse
Bijvoeglijk naamwoord
- of words so related that one reverses the relation denoted by the other
"`parental' and `filial' are converse terms"
Voorbeeldzinnen
- I hold the converse opinion.
- The converse is also true.
- I often converse with her.
- Deaf people can converse in sign language.
- It was nice to converse with her.
- I like to converse in people's native tongue
- Passengers shall not converse with the driver while the bus is in motion.
- In more pleasant places in the world, people want to live longer. It is the converse in less pleasant places.
- Good manners is the art of making those people easy with whom we converse. Whoever makes the fewest persons uneasy is the best bred in the company.
- However, the converse conclusion may not be drawn that permanent innovative capital instruments may not at all be recognised as core capital or are also covered by this limit.
- The determination of what constitutes independence is fundamentally an issue for the (supervisory) board itself to determine. The (supervisory) board may consider that, although a particular director meets all the criteria laid down at national level for assessment of the independence of directors, he cannot be considered independent owing to the specific circumstances of the person or the company, and the converse also applies.
- The (supervisory) board may consider that, although a particular director meets all the criteria laid down at national level for assessment of the independence of directors, he cannot be considered independent owing to the specific circumstances of the person or the company, and the converse also applies.
- Furthermore, the Commission interprets the ‘Sydney Declaration’ of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision of October 1998 as imposing a 15 % limit only for the recognition of certain innovative capital instruments, particularly those limited in time, as core capital. However, the converse conclusion may not be drawn that permanent innovative capital instruments may not at all be recognised as core capital or are also covered by this limit. Moreover, the usefulness of permanent innovative capital instruments as core capital above the 15 % limit is testified to by the practice of private banks as well in recent years, as was amply demonstrated by Germany.