Betekenis van:
mutilation

mutilation
Zelfstandig naamwoord
  • verwonding
  • an injury that causes disfigurement or that deprives you of a limb or other important body part

Hyperoniemen

Hyponiemen


Voorbeeldzinnen

  1. Mutilation
  2. Mutilation of notes and coins for artistic purposes
  3. Member States should not encourage mutilation of euro banknotes or coins for artistic purposes but should tolerate it.
  4. Birds housed in a poor quality environment that does not permit them to forage, exercise or interact with conspecifics will experience chronic distress that may be indicated by stereotypic behaviour, for example self-mutilation, feather pecking, and pacing.
  5. the rights of women as proclaimed in the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women and its Optional Protocols, including measures to combat female genital mutilation, forced marriages, crimes of honour, trafficking, and any other form of violence against women;
  6. Birds housed in a poor quality environment that does not permit them to forage, exercise or interact with conspecifics will experience chronic distress that may be indicated by stereotypic behaviour, for example self-mutilation, feather pecking, and pacing. Such behaviour may be indicative of serious welfare problems and should lead to an immediate review of housing, husbandry and care.
  7. Violence against women takes many forms ranging from domestic violence, which is prevalent at all levels of society, to harmful traditional practices associated with the exercise of physical violence against women, such as genital mutilation and honour-related crimes, which constitute a particular form of violence against women.
  8. The Commission has been called upon by the European Parliament to draw up and implement action programmes to combat such violence, inter alia, in its Resolutions of 19 May 2000 on the communication from the Commission to the Council and the European Parliament: ‘For further actions in the fight against trafficking in women’ [5]; of 20 September 2001 on female genital mutilation [6]; of 17 January 2006 on strategies to prevent the trafficking of women and children who are vulnerable to sexual exploitation [7]; and of 2 February 2006 on the current situation in combating violence against women and any future action [8].