Betekenis van:
life line

life line
Zelfstandig naamwoord
  • levenslijn
  • a crease on the palm; its length is said by palmists to indicate how long you will live

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen

life line
Zelfstandig naamwoord
  • reddingslijn, levenslijn
  • a crease on the palm; its length is said by palmists to indicate how long you will live

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen


Voorbeeldzinnen

  1. What I looked up to in Shota was not his 'strength'. It was his heroic courage to put his life on the line to carry out his convictions.
  2. This shopping district is the only high street in the local area; it stocks the whole line-up from products for daily life to school study equipment.
  3. Fixed assets shall be depreciated, in accordance with their expected operating life, using the straight-line method applied to the historic costs of the assets being depreciated.
  4. As concerns this submission, it was noted that depreciation based on the acquisition value and residual economical life of capital assets appears to be in line with accounting practices in the mining industry.
  5. In line with the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, respect for family life should be a primary consideration of Member States when implementing this Directive.
  6. In line with the European strategy on life sciences and biotechnology [5], this will help increase the competitiveness of European agriculture and biotechnology, seed and food companies, in particular high-tech SMEs, while improving social welfare and well-being.
  7. Straight-line depreciation/amortisation: depreciation/amortisation over a given period is determined by dividing the cost of the asset, less its estimated residual value, by the estimated useful life of the asset pro rata temporis.
  8. Acceptance of a ship as seagoing will normally require the ship to be certified as such under the International Load Line or the Safety of Life at Sea Convention (hereinafter the ‘SOLAS Convention’) [20].
  9. Every ship shall carry at least the radio life-saving appliances, radar transponders, personal life-saving appliances, survival craft and rescue boats, distress flares, line-throwing appliances specified in the following table and relative notes, on the basis of the ship's class.
  10. .1 Every ship shall carry at least the radio life-saving appliances, radar transponders, personal life-saving appliances, survival craft and rescue boats, distress flares, line-throwing appliances specified in the following table and relative notes, on the basis of the ship’s class.
  11. Active fund management clearly produces a better return than the passive (parametric) management provided for in the Agreement (for example, the yield on the benchmark proposed by […], which has an average life of five years, is in line with the return under the Agreement, which has an average life that is much longer).
  12. 2 Communication, survival craft and rescue boats, personal life-saving appliances (R 6 + 7 + 18 + 21 + 22) NEW AND EXISTING CLASS B, C AND D SHIPS: .1 Every ship shall carry at least the radio life-saving appliances, radar transponders, personal life-saving appliances, survival craft and rescue boats, distress flares, line-throwing appliances specified in the following table and relative notes, on the basis of the ship’s class.
  13. Where the costs include depreciation of capital investments with a life of more than one year and a price of more than EUR 500, these depreciation costs shall be considered eligible provided they relate exclusively to the national programme and the eligibility period of the concerned programme phase provided that: For investment in construction and infrastructure these costs are depreciated over 10 years using the straight line method, and for other equipment including informatics equipment 5 years straight line method.
  14. In particular, they contend that class I life assurance policies are products that can be considered comparable to postal current accounts, and that the average return from the management of these products (e.g. Posta Più) was 4,68 % over the period 2002-2006, which is in line with the average rate under the agreement of 4,55 %.
  15. Spot settlement date: the date on which a spot transaction in a financial instrument is settled in accordance with prevailing market conventions for that financial instrument. Straight-line depreciation/amortisation: depreciation/amortisation over a given period is determined by dividing the cost of the asset, less its estimated residual value, by the estimated useful life of the asset pro rata temporis.