Betekenis van:
whole works
whole works
Zelfstandig naamwoord
- everything available; usually preceded by `the'
Synoniemen
- full treatment
- kit and boodle
- kit and caboodle
- whole caboodle
- whole kit
- whole kit and boodle
- whole kit and caboodle
- whole shebang
- works
Hyperoniemen
Werkwoord
Voorbeeldzinnen
- As a whole his works are neither good nor bad.
- Jed works as a cattle feeder, but he has designs on the whole ranch.
- The demand that I make of my reader is that he should devote his whole Life to reading my works.
- Even now, the typical worker's whole life is still bound up with the company he works for.
- When I first took a C course, I couldn't understand a single thing explained in class. Thank God I got a friend of mine who's a programmer to explain to me how the whole caboodle works.
- A ‘work’ means the outcome of building or civil engineering works taken as a whole that is sufficient of itself to fulfil an economic or technical function;
- ‘Work’ shall mean the outcome of building or civil engineering works taken as a whole that is sufficient of itself to fulfil an economic or technical function;
- Transport, engineering workshops, laboratories and all other installations, which form part of the whole works but cannot be classified as part of a particular sector.
- A ‘work’ means the outcome of building or civil engineering works taken as a whole which is sufficient of itself to fulfil an economic or technical function;
- Stocks in the whole works including locally integrated activities should be entered in these codes (including steel foundries) with the exception of stocks held in iron foundries.
- ‘Works contracts’ means contracts having as their object either the execution, or both the design and execution, of works related to one of the activities mentioned in Division 45 of the CPV, or a work, or the realisation, by whatever means, of a work corresponding to the requirements specified by the contracting authority/entity. A ‘work’ means the outcome of building or civil engineering works taken as a whole that is sufficient of itself to fulfil an economic or technical function;
- Nevertheless, when a set is composed of originating and non-originating products, the set as a whole shall be regarded as originating, provided that the value of the non-originating products does not exceed 15 % of the ex-works price of the set.
- The current magnitude of the GSM-R deployment activity throughout the whole of the European rail network (approximately 100000 km nowadays in 11 out of the 15 States of the former EU15) and the four- to five-year time horizon that generally underpins the conclusion of such deployment works indicates that any deployment rationale will have to confront three main concerns:
- Public contracts are contracts for pecuniary interest concluded in writing by the Agency acting as a contracting authority, in order to obtain, against payment of a price paid in whole or in part from the general budget, the supply of movable or immovable assets, the execution of works or the provision of services.
- Nevertheless, when a set is composed of originating and non-originating products, the set as a whole shall be regarded as originating, provided that the value of the non-originating products does not exceed 15 % of the ex-works price of the set.