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The net was wide, definitions inexact.
Luxury improvements are ineligible, though the program has wide definitions of "repairs" and "modernization".
But the provision had wide definitions of the term investment and allowed corporations to use repatriated profits to shore up their domestic finances, pay legal bills and even bankroll advertising.
"The wide definitions are the problem," said Elad Cahana, a lawyer for HaMoked: The Center for the Defense of the Individual, one of 10 groups appealing for a delay on the change in the order.
The wide definitions these philosophers adopt contain the word "violence", which is itself morally loaded.
Moreover, grounds upon which bills may be excluded such as "public safety" and "peace", have been described as "nebulous" with potentially wide definitions that are open to abuse by the government in power.
Similar(52)
The survey uses a wide definition of who is a Jew, a much-debated topic.
At the Donmar we have a wide definition of what qualifies as a Christmas show – last year we did Coriolanus.
For these reasons, the Bill adopts the UK- wide definition of permissible donors set out in PPERA.
The Afro-Latin Jazz Orchestra brought together some of New York's greatest Latin musicians and created a canon in Mr. O'Farrill's wide definition of Latin jazz.
And, according to the Financial Times, Wall Street's stockmarket capitalisation has now been eclipsed by Europe (admittedly taking a rather wide definition of Europe, which includes Russia).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com