Definition, Bedeutung, Synonyme & Anagramme | Englisch Wort TANGIBLE
TANGIBLE
Definitionen von TANGIBLE
- mit dem Tastsinn zu fühlen: anfassbar, greifbar, fühlbar, spürbar
- [1a] auch figurativ: vom Verstand erfassbar: merklich, greifbar, fühlbar, spürbar
- eindeutig bewertbar: materiell
- klar erkennbar: handfest, deutlich, eindeutig, klar
Anzahl der Buchstaben
8
Ist Palindrom
Nein
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Beispiele für die Verwendung von TANGIBLE in einem Satz
- Although the word "product" has broad connotations, product liability as an area of law is traditionally limited to products in the form of tangible personal property.
- The word technology can also mean the products resulting from such efforts, including both tangible tools such as utensils or machines, and intangible ones such as software.
- Property damage (sometimes called damage to property), is the damage or destruction of real or tangible personal property, caused by negligence, willful destruction, or an act of nature.
- Artifact (software development), one of many kinds of tangible by-products produced during the development of software.
- Prospero dies after confronting this stranger, whose "costume" proves to contain nothing tangible inside it; the guests also die in turn.
- In some variants of the myth, the city or parts thereof reappear on certain days or can be seen from a boat, making the warning conveyed by the myth more tangible for the audience.
- The dialectal separation of Upper German into East Upper German (Bavarian) and West Upper German (Alemannic) became more tangible in the Middle High German period, from about the 12th century.
- Stone's organizational activities for the cause of women's rights yielded tangible gains in the difficult political environment of the 19th century.
- Kardec claimed that spiritism combines scientific, philosophical, and religious aspects of the tangible universe and what he described as the universe beyond transcendence.
- Unlike theurgy, which focuses on invoking divine powers, thaumaturgy is more concerned with utilizing occult principles to achieve specific outcomes, often in a tangible and observable manner.
- Whereas the executive producer focuses more on budgeting and predicting the views of the higher authorities in the wider company; trying to ground the showrunner's vision to tangible limits.
- The third element is the idea genesis, which is described as evolutionary and iterative process progressing from birth to maturation of the opportunity into a tangible idea.
- The conditions of employment are altered only if the harassment culminates in a tangible employment action or is sufficiently severe or pervasive.
- In a traditional cash transaction, fractional pricing imposes tangible costs on the vendor (printing fractional prices), the cashier (producing awkward change) and the customer (stowing the change).
- Where adopted, transfer pricing rules allow tax authorities to adjust prices for most cross-border intragroup transactions, including transfers of tangible or intangible property, services, and loans.
- The objectives of experimental mathematics are "to generate understanding and insight; to generate and confirm or confront conjectures; and generally to make mathematics more tangible, lively and fun for both the professional researcher and the novice".
- Depreciation is thus the decrease in the value of assets and the method used to reallocate, or "write down" the cost of a tangible asset (such as equipment) over its useful life span.
- Every year, MEDEF International organises a number of delegations of French business leaders with tangible projects to targeted countries, especially developing countries.
- Urasoe City hosts seventy-two designated or registered tangible cultural properties and monuments, at the national, prefectural or municipal level, including forty-four items of Ryūkyū lacquerware.
- In the Eiffel Tower the interpenetration of tangible objects and space is accompanied by the intense movement of geometric planes that are more dynamic than the static equilibrium of Cubist forms.
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