Betekenis van:
self-help

self-help
Zelfstandig naamwoord
    • the act of helping or improving yourself without relying on anyone else

    Hyperoniemen


    Voorbeeldzinnen

    1. Self-help is the best help.
    2. What's your favorite self-help book?
    3. Five self-help books later, Sergey still had a terribly ineffective approach to management.
    4. The system is easy to learn, self explanatory and contains help-text.
    5. Machinery rings are farmers’ self-help organisations operating at local or regional level.
    6. Machinery rings are farmers’ self-help organisations operating at local or regional level. Under Article 9 of the LwFöG, they may only engage in the following activities:
    7. Germany stated in its comments that the organisation is a self-help organisation of Bavarian farmers which occupies a special position since there are no comparable organisations with which it could be in competition.
    8. KBM was already approved in 1972. Germany stated in its comments that the organisation is a self-help organisation of Bavarian farmers which occupies a special position since there are no comparable organisations with which it could be in competition.
    9. Advice and assistance may be provided so as to ensure cooperation at Community level through networking of the appropriate bodies within Member States and candidate countries and through systematic review and reporting of relevant legal and regulatory issues, to help develop methods of assessment and certification of self-regulation, to provide practical assistance to countries wishing to set up self-regulatory bodies and to expand links with self-regulatory bodies outside Europe.
    10. an industrial research investment monitoring activity to provide a self-consistent and complementary source of information to help steer public policy and to allow firms to benchmark their R & D investment strategies, inter alia, in sectors of key interest to the EU economy.
    11. Such measures could include harmonisation through cooperation between the regulatory, self-regulatory and co-regulatory bodies of the Member States, and through the exchange of best practices concerning such issues as a system of common descriptive symbols or warning messages indicating the age category and/or which aspects of the content have led to a certain age recommendation, which would help users to assess the content of audiovisual and on-line information services.
    12. develop positive measures for the benefit of minors, including initiatives to facilitate their wider access to audiovisual and on-line information services, while avoiding potentially harmful content, for instance by means of filtering systems. Such measures could include harmonisation through cooperation between the regulatory, self-regulatory and co-regulatory bodies of the Member States, and through the exchange of best practices concerning such issues as a system of common descriptive symbols or warning messages indicating the age category and/or which aspects of the content have led to a certain age recommendation, which would help users to assess the content of audiovisual and on-line information services.
    13. develop positive measures for the benefit of minors, including initiatives to facilitate their wider access to audiovisual and on-line information services, while avoiding potentially harmful content, for instance by means of filtering systems. Such measures could include harmonisation through cooperation between the regulatory, self-regulatory and co-regulatory bodies of the Member States, and through the exchange of best practices concerning such issues as a system of common descriptive symbols or warning messages indicating the age category and/or which aspects of the content have led to a certain age recommendation, which would help users to assess the content of audiovisual and on-line information services. This could take place, for instance, through the actions outlined in Annex III;