Search Results for: MONETA

intangible

intangible, adj. Not capable of being touched; impalpable; INCORPOREAL. intangible, n. Something that lacks a physical form; an abstraction, such as responsibility; esp., an asset that is not corporeal, such as intellectual property. general intangible. Any intangible personal property other than goods, accounts, chattel paper, documents, instruments, investment property, rights to proceeds of written letters […]

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per diem

per diem, adj. Based on or calculated by the day (per diem interest). per diem (p[schwa]r dI-[schwa]m ordee-[schwa]m), adv. [Latin] By the day; for each day (reimbursed per diem). Cf. IN DIEM. per diem, n. 1. A monetary daily allowance, usu. to cover expenses. 2. A daily fee.

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economy

economy. 1. The management or administration of the wealth and resources of a community (such as a city, state, or country). 2. The sociopolitical organization of a community’s wealth and resources. 3. Restrained, thrifty, or sparing use of resources; efficiency. balanced economy. An economy in which the monetary values of imports and exports are equal.

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经济货币联盟(EMU) (欧盟)

经济货币联盟(EMU) (欧盟) 英语:Economic & Monetary Union (EMU) (EU) 法语:Union Economique et Monétaire (UEM) 德语:Wirtschafts- und Währungsunion (WWU) 意大利语:Unione economica e monetaria (UEM) 西班牙语:Unión Económica y Monetaria (UEM)

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innocent infringement

The act of violating an intellectual-property right without knowledge or awareness that the act constitutes infringement. • An innocent infringer may, in limited circumstances, escape liability for some or all of the damages. In the copyright context, damages may be limited if (1) the infringer was misled by the lack of a copyright notice on

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cahoots

cahoots (k[schwa]-hoots).Slang. Partnership, esp. in an illegal act; collusion (the lawyer was in cahoots with her client). CAIRNS’S ACT Cairns’s Act (kairn-z[schwa]z). Hist. An 1858 statute that expanded the relief available in England’s chancery courts to include monetary damages in addition to injunctive relief. • Cairns’s Act was superseded by the Judicature Acts of 1873–1875.

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equitable remedy

A remedy, usu. a nonmonetary one such as an injunction or specific performance, obtained when available legal remedies, usu. monetary damages, cannot adequately redress the injury. • Historically, an equitable remedy was available only from a court of equity. — Also termed equitable relief. See IRREPARABLE-INJURY RULE. [Cases: Injunction 17; Specific Performance 1. C.J.S. Injunctions

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