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Undertaking may refer to: Task (project management), in general; The services provided by an undertaker, mortician, or a funeral director; Company, in business, in particular in European Union law, the term is used interchangeably, i.e. a business entity; Undertaking (driving), overtaking another vehicle using a lane nearer the curb-side
Flag Off or 'Flagged Off means official start or beginning of an event or undertaking. In this a piece of cloth, usually rectangular in size, and of distinctive color and design, is used as a symbol, standard, signal, or emblem and waved.
The 2005 legislation placed the use of so-called "supergrasses" onto a statutory footing.Assisting offenders have been used in some notable cases with mixed results. In 2007 Rhys Jones was shot dead in Liverpool as part of a gang related incident.
Breach of undertaking Breach of a duty imposed upon a solicitor by rules of court The use of insulting or threatening language in the magistrates' courts or against a magistrate is in breach of section 99 of the Magistrates Ordinance (Cap 227) which states the magistrate can 'summarily sentence the offender to a fine at level 3 and to ...
The good behaviour bond is formed by the offender "giving an undertaking", as similarly referred to in Victorian legislation. [19] In the case of a released offender, Section 59(b) explicates the conditions of the undertaking described in 7(f), stating "that the offender must be of good behaviour during the period of adjournment". [19]
In NSW, the court may sentence the offender on a bond or recognisance with a condition followed by supervision by PPS. A 'recognisance' or 'bond' is an undertaking by the defendant to maintain socially responsible behaviour for the certain duration which the court exclusively attaches to the bonds and recognisances.
where a person acts contrary to a disqualification order, undertaking or automatic disqualification without the leave of the court, he is guilty of an offence, and is subject on indictment to a sentence of up to 2 years in prison and/or a fine, or on summary conviction to a sentence of 6 months and/or a fine at the statutory maximum.(s. 13)
The literal translation is "[He] favors (or "has favored") [our] undertakings", from Latin annuo ("I approve, I favor"), and coeptum ("commencement, undertaking"). Because of its context as a caption above the Eye of Providence , the standard translations are "Providence favors our undertakings" and "Providence has favored our undertakings."