Betekenis van:
in the altogether

in the altogether
Bijvoeglijk naamwoord
  • bladderig
  • (used informally) completely unclothed

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen


Voorbeeldzinnen

  1. The children were swimming in the altogether.
  2. Beauty is altogether in the eye of the beholder.
  3. The cultural treasures of the past, believed to be dead, are being made to speak, in the course of which it turns out that they propose things altogether different than what had been thought.
  4. It still is true that men can start small enterprises, trusting to native shrewdness and ability to keep abreast of competitors; but area after area has been preempted altogether by the great corporations, and even in the fields which still have no great concerns, the small man starts with a handicap.
  5. Their market share altogether in the IP was 14,2 %.
  6. In conclusion, the study can be dismissed altogether.
  7. Altogether, between 1999 and the IP, the fall in unit sales prices amounted to 8 %.
  8. Imports from several other third countries altogether accounted for 8,9 % market share in the IP.
  9. In the proposed regional aid map for the period 2007-2013, Umbria will lose the status of assisted region altogether.
  10. Altogether, the company indicated that it had paid interest amounting to EUR 1132788,35, which it paid in tranches.
  11. The level of aid is also raised due to the increase in the quantities supplied at the preferential price. The degressivity element is eliminated altogether.
  12. The Commission considers that the mechanisms described above will altogether ensure that the State aid contained in Measure A will be reduced to the minimum necessary.
  13. The comments by these AMDs mentioned in the Decision make sense only if exports were, from Automobile Peugeot SA’s point of view, to remain altogether exceptional.
  14. Risk premium: It is argued that the 1,5 % risk premium in Decision 2000/392/EC is unwarranted and should be dropped altogether.
  15. The Commission does not, however, consider this difference to be sufficient in itself to rule out altogether all forms of substitutability.