prospective damage - traduction vers néerlandais
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prospective damage - traduction vers néerlandais

TERM IN BRITISH POLITICS
Prospective Parliamentary candidate; Prospective Parliamentary Candidate; Prospective parliamentary candidates; Parliamentary candidate; Parliamentary spokesperson; Westminster candidate; Prospective candidate; Prospective party candidate

prospective damage      
voorziene schade (schade die van tevoren te bepalen was)
property damage         
NATURAL OR INTENTIONAL DAMAGE OR DESTRUCTION OF PUBLIC OR PRIVATE PROPERTY
Criminal damage; Destruction of property; Property destruction; Property loss; Malicious damage; Damage to property
schade aan eigendom (schade aan bezit)
irreversible damage         
  • Shrier in an interview in 2020
2020 NONFICTION BOOK BY ABIGAIL SHRIER
Irreversible Damage: The Transgender Craze Seducing Our Daughters; Abigail Krauser Shrier; Abigail Shrier; Irreversable damage
onherroepelijke schade

Définition

property damage
n. injury to real or personal property through another's negligence, willful destruction or by some act of nature. In lawsuits for damages caused by negligence or a willful act, property damage is distinguished from personal injury. Property damage may include harm to an automobile, a fence, a tree, a home or any other possession. The amount of recovery for property damage may be established by evidence of replacement value, cost of repairs, loss of use until repaired or replaced or, in the case of heirlooms or very personal items (e.g. wedding pictures), by subjective testimony as to sentimental value. See also: damages property

Wikipédia

Prospective parliamentary candidate

Prospective parliamentary candidate (PPC), in British politics, is a candidate selected by political parties to fight individual Westminster constituencies in advance of a general election. The term originally came into use because of the strict limits on the amount of expenses incurred by an election candidate, regardless of whether the election had been formally called. The candidates were termed "prospective" because referring to them simply as a candidate would arguably trigger the moment when money spent to promote them would need to be included in their declaration of expenses after the election.

In 2004, however, the law was changed so that the trigger for election expenses being accountable was to be the calling of an election and not the announcing of a candidacy. Some political parties had already started to use terms such as "parliamentary spokesperson", believing that some voters were confused by the unusual word "prospective"; however, the older form of words continues to be widely used, despite these changes in the law.