Betekenis van:
do well by

to do well by
Werkwoord
    • treat with respect and consideration
    "children should do well by their parents"

    Hyperoniemen


    Voorbeeldzinnen

    1. Establishments relying on electrical or mechanical equipment for environmental control and protection, shall have a stand-by system to maintain essential services and emergency lighting systems as well as to ensure that alarm systems themselves do not fail to operate.
    2. These principles promote the introduction of well designed systems into the market, and by taking into account both the potential benefits and associated risks they do not prevent innovation of the industry.
    3. The Commission notes that the power plants concerned by the PPAs do not exhibit any special characteristics that would make them particularly well adapted to meet security of supply objectives.
    4. Each Member State shall determine whether it will take part in the exchange of a particular category of information, as well as whether it will do so by means of regular automatic or occasional automatic exchange.
    5. These principles promote the introduction of well designed systems into the market, and by taking into account both the potential benefits and associated risks they do not prevent innovation within the industry.
    6. At present, a number of research and development programmes or activities undertaken by Member States individually at national level in the field of ICT for ageing well are not sufficiently coordinated at European level and do not allow a coherent approach at European level for research and development of innovative ICT-based products and services for ageing well.
    7. Wages and salaries do not include social contributions payable by the employer. Wages and salaries include: all gratuities, bonuses, ex gratia payments, 13th month payments, severance payments, lodging, transport, cost-of-living, and family allowances, tips, commission, attendance fees, etc. received by employees, as well as taxes, social security contributions and other amounts payable by employees and withheld at source by the employer.
    8. Wages and salaries do not include social contributions payable by the employer. Wages and salaries include: all gratuities, bonuses, ex gratia payments, ‘thirteenth month payments’, severance payments, lodging, transport, cost-of-living, and family allowances, tips, commission, attendance fees, etc. received by employees, as well as taxes, social security contributions and other amounts payable by employees and withheld at source by the employer.
    9. Since the amendments made to Directive 2005/32/EC, as well as to Directives 92/42/EEC, 96/57/EC and 2000/55/EC, by this Directive are technical in nature and concern committee procedure only, they do not need to be transposed by the Member States.
    10. Furthermore, the preamble to Decision 92/510/EEC states that ‘it is accepted by the Commission and by all Member States that these exemptions are well founded in terms of specific policies and do not give rise to distortions of competition or interfere with the working of the internal market’.
    11. If the clarifications provided by the national aviation authority of the Member State inspected do not satisfy the Agency or where no satisfactory remedial action is timely proposed or is not duly implemented by that authority, the Agency shall address a supplementary report to the national aviation authority concerned, as well as to the Commission and to the Member State concerned.
    12. The negative sale price of SNCM of EUR 158 million, the EUR 38,5 million in social measures aimed at employees and borne by CGMF, as well as the related and concurrent recapitalisation of SNCM by CGMF for the sum of EUR 8,75 million do not constitute State aid within the meaning of Article 87(1) of the EC Treaty.
    13. Furthermore, the preamble to Decision 92/510/EEC states that ‘it is accepted by the Commission and by all Member States that these exemptions are well founded in terms of specific policies and do not give rise to distortions of competition or interfere with the working of the internal market’. The same wording is used in Decisions 93/697/EC and 96/273/EC.
    14. On this basis the Commission can conclude that the public authorities do not have a well founded expectation of a financial return on the investment in question and although it is their intention to make the airport more attractive to users and therefore more profitable, they are not guided by prospects of profitability in the longer term [49].
    15. As regards the costs of tunnelling for the years 2002 to 2005 (point 8) as well as the estimated costs of tunnelling for the years 2006 to 2007 (point 9), the Commission considers that these costs constitute normal operating expenses and do no qualify as investments in tangible assets as defined by Regulation (EC) No 70/2001.