Betekenis van:
eased

eased
Bijvoeglijk naamwoord
  • verlicht; van een druk bevrijd
  • (of pain or sorrow) made easier to bear

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen

Werkwoord


Voorbeeldzinnen

  1. She was eased of her duties.
  2. In 1959, Cold War tensions eased a little.
  3. His joke eased the tension in the room.
  4. We set out when the rain had eased.
  5. Labour shortages remain a problem although they are eased by increased immigration.
  6. The bilateral Agreements referred to in Article 13 may provide for border crossing to be eased, whereby Member States:
  7. However, where border crossing is eased under the local border traffic regime for border residents, and this entails less systematic control, border crossing should, as a matter of course, be eased for any person enjoying the Community right of free movement residing in the border area concerned.
  8. The Community should lay down criteria and conditions to be complied with when the crossing of an external land border under the local border traffic regime is being eased for border residents.
  9. Data for substances already notified in accordance with Directive 67/548/EEC should be eased into the system and should be upgraded when the next tonnage quantity threshold is reached.
  10. NMS and the other European fluorite producers suffered severely from the adverse market conditions of the 1990s, which were triggered by dumping from China and eased only after 2000.
  11. In addition, given the area-wide nature of the shocks, the significant risks attached to a stronger contraction of economic activity and the rapidly falling inflation, macroeconomic policies have been eased.
  12. NMS and the other European fluorite producers suffered severely from the adverse market conditions of the 1990s, which were triggered by dumping from China and eased only after 2000. Whereas it was known that NMS received public funds, this competitor claims not to have been aware of the magnitude of the aid, which, in its view, was unreasonably high.
  13. Effective and coherent use of radio spectrum is essential for the development of electronic communications services and can help the European Community to stimulate growth, competitiveness and employment; access to spectrum must be eased to improve efficiency, promote innovation as well as greater flexibility for users and more choice for consumers, while taking into account general interest objectives [2].
  14. As confirmed by the Council in its conclusions of 3 December 2004, effective and coherent use of radio spectrum is essential for the development of electronic communications services and contributes to stimulating growth, competitiveness and employment; access to spectrum must be eased to improve efficiency and promote innovation as well as greater flexibility for users and more choice for consumers, while taking account of general interest objectives.