Betekenis van:
subjection

subjection
Zelfstandig naamwoord
  • het volgen v.d. wil v.e. ander; eigenschap onderdanig te zijn
  • forced submission to control by others

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen

Hyponiemen

subjection
Zelfstandig naamwoord
  • het doen wat een ander wil; onderwerping
  • the act of conquering

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen


Voorbeeldzinnen

  1. Among human beings, the subjection of women is much more complete at a certain level of civilisation than it is among savages. And the subjection is always reinforced by morality.
  2. (A complex combination of hydrocarbons obtained by the subjection of a petroleum fraction to several of the following steps: filtration, centrifugation, atmospheric distillation, vacuum distillation, acidification, neutralisation and clay treatment.
  3. [A complex combination of hydrocarbons obtained by the subjection of a petroleum fraction to several of the following steps: filtration, centrifugation, atmospheric distillation, vacuum distillation, acidification, neutralization and clay treatment.
  4. (A complex combination of hydrocarbons obtained by the subjection of a petroleum fraction to several of the following steps: filtration, centrifugation, atmospheric distillation, vacuum distillation, acidification, neutralisation and clay treatment. It consists predominantly of hydrocarbons having carbon numbers predominantly in the range of C10 through C20.)
  5. The exceptional business tax scheme was introduced by a law of 1990 (i.e. after the entry into force of the Treaty) precisely to prevent the creation of FT as a public operator from implying its subjection to the ordinary rules of taxation.
  6. Although Article 18 of Law No 90-568 laid down the principle of the subjection of La Poste and FT to ordinary duties and taxes, it provided that this application of the ordinary rules had to be effected ‘subject to the provisions of Articles 19, 20 and 21 of this Law’.
  7. The immediate subjection of FT to the ordinary rules of taxation would have involved, inter alia, the payment of local taxes (benefiting local authorities and not the general budget of the State, such as, for example, business tax) — which might have led to a reduction in FT's contribution to the national budget (in so far as a new form of participation in the operating results was not immediately introduced).