| due date |
The date held on the computer for when an open Purchase Order or Works Order is due into Stock.
Ãâó: www.bpic.co.uk/jargon.htm
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|---|---|
| due process |
Procedural safeguards that protect a child's (and their parents') rights. Amazingly, many people act as if this is a new or technical term that they never heard before -- the term comes from our US Constitution (see the Bill of Rights, Articles V and XIV) and the concept traces back to the Magna Carta. In special education law, both IDEA and Section 504 describe the procedural safeguards; each state may also give additional (but not fewer) safeguards. ...
Ãâó: www.ourspecialkids.org/definitions.html
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| due date |
The date on which the term of a mortgage expires.
Ãâó: www.realestatemanitoba.com/glossary.htm
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| due process |
The procedure or process required for a given judgment to be fair. Fairness here is specified in terms of the process rather than the outcome. For example, although it is desirable that those and only those who are guilty of a crime be punished for it, infallibility of judgment by the law courts cannot be guaranteed. The feasible goal is to try to ensure everyone a fair trial. ...
Ãâó: www.unmc.edu/ethics/words.html
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| due process |
The application of law so as to ensure that an individual
Ãâó: www.annikeris.com/glossary_d.html
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| DUE | (Spain |
|---|---|
| DUE | a dance for two people (usually a ballerina and a danseur noble) |
| DUE | a musical composition for two performers |
| DUE | a pair who associate with one another |
| DUE | two performers or singers who perform together |
| DUE | two items of the same kind |
| DUE | a musical composition for two performers |
| DUE | two performers or singers who perform together |
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