Betekenis van:
corollary

corollary
Zelfstandig naamwoord
  • noodzakelijk gevolg
  • (logic) an inference that follows directly from the proof of another proposition

Hyperoniemen

corollary
Zelfstandig naamwoord
  • gezamenlijke begeleiders
  • (logic) an inference that follows directly from the proof of another proposition

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen

corollary
Zelfstandig naamwoord
    • a practical consequence that follows naturally
    "blind jealousy is a frequent corollary of passionate love"

    Hyperoniemen

    corollary
    Zelfstandig naamwoord
    • corollarium
    • (logic) an inference that follows directly from the proof of another proposition

    Hyperoniemen


    Voorbeeldzinnen

    1. As a corollary, shareholders would have no liability other than the loss of their shareholdings.
    2. The relevant provisions in the concession agreement constitute a necessary and efficient corollary to the compensation system.
    3. As a corollary, the subsequent parts of the analysis which draw on consumption are also confirmed in this respect.
    4. In the insolvency scenario, shareholders would be unlikely to benefit from any return. As a corollary, shareholders would have no liability other than the loss of their shareholdings.
    5. The fact that electricity interconnection is insufficient in the island is not a liberalisation problem, but rather a corollary of its geographic location.
    6. Community policy in the field of the EU external borders aims at an integrated management ensuring a uniform and high level of control and surveillance, which is a necessary corollary to the free movement of persons within the European Union and a fundamental component of an area of freedom, security and justice.
    7. According to Mr Ehlermann, the analysis put forward by the experts would have as a corollary ‘a muzzling effect on any state authority which, where it is the majority shareholder in a company, is required to inform the Commission in advance of any public declaration concerning its shares, intentions or opinions as majority shareholder within or in favour of the company it controls’.
    8. In view of this information it was difficult to imagine that the peach and nectarine crops had been spared the adverse weather conditions that had affected the entire holding and that, as a corollary, a farmer whose entire holding had been affected could have received aid for all his crops except peaches and nectarines.
    9. In other words, if the inapplicability of bankruptcy or insolvency proceedings to public entities is a corollary of the principle of the unseizability of their assets, then the obligation on the State to answer for their debts in the event of default derives from the same principle.
    10. After analysing the loan conditions granted by the banks to the LNE, even if the guarantee that is the corollary of its status as a public industrial and commercial enterprise conferred an advantage on the LNE for public sector activities, this advantage would be very small in value, close to the de minimis amount, and would not call into question the proportionality tests carried out in paragraphs 101 to 103 in respect of public service compensation.
    11. The common standards concerned are in particular Council Directive 2001/40/EC of 28 May 2001 on the mutual recognition of decisions on the expulsion of third-country nationals and its corollary, Council Decision 2004/191/EC of 23 February 2004 setting out the criteria and practical arrangements for the compensation of the financial imbalances resulting from the application of Directive 2001/40/EC on the mutual recognition of decisions on expulsion of third-country nationals, and Council Decision 2004/573/EC of 29 April 2004 on the organisation of joint flights for removals from the territory of two or more Member States, of third-country nationals who are subjects of individual removal orders.
    12. In the absence of this information the Commission still does not know why the Italian authorities used, as a point of reference, years during which, by their own admission, certain holdings producing peaches and nectarines had obtained interest subsidies on loans granted to compensate for damage caused by adverse weather conditions and representing at least 35 % of the gross production that could be marketed (as stated in recital 15, it is difficult to imagine that crops of peaches and nectarines could have been spared the bad weather that affected the whole of a holding and that, as a corollary, a farmer whose entire holding was affected could have received aid for all his crops except peaches and nectarines).