Aspect. From the date hereof to the Closing Date, except to the extent Frontier and Esenjay shall otherwise consent, Aspect shall operate the business of Aspect as it relates to the Aspect Assets substantially as presently operated and only in the ordinary course. In addition, Aspect shall promptly notify Frontier and Esenjay of (i) the receipt by Aspect of any notice or claim, written or oral, of default or breach by Aspect, or of any modification, termination or cancellation, or threat of termination or cancellation, of any material agreement relative to the Aspect Assets; (ii) any loss of, damage to, or disposition of any of the Aspect Assets; and (iii) after receipt of notice thereof by Aspect, give notice to Frontier and Esenjay of any claim or litigation, threatened or instituted, against Aspect and relating to the Aspect Assets.
Aspect. With respect to the Aspect Assets, Aspect agrees to retain and to release and hold the other parties harmless from all claims, costs, expenses, liabilities and obligations attributable to the period of time prior to the Effective Date or, in the case of Post Effective Date Costs, from the period of time prior to January 1, 1998.
Aspect. The ArQule integrated analytical LIMS software that tracks all of the information regarding the ArQule specific analytical process. CGN – Computer Generated Notebooks are three ring binders that have a computer-generated identifier that tracks loose-leaf information associated with a particular array synthesis. Chemistry Workgroup – The group of Pfizer and ArQule scientists that meet biweekly to discuss the progress of the development and production and prepare and manage the quarterly development and production plans. Culling – The process of removing the compounds of a library that do not conform to the acceptance criteria.
Aspect s payment of rent and performance of the covenants contained in this Sublease, ASPECT will have quiet enjoyment of the Premises, subject to the Prime Lease and all covenants, conditions, restrictions, encumbrances of record against the Premises or the Building.
Aspect. There is also a set of common aspectual categories that are widely attested in many Bantu languages: perfective, imperfective, progressive, habitual, persistive, and anterior (Nurse 2008:24). All of these aspects seem to appear in Tshiluba, although they do not all appear in the same slot in the verb phrase. In addition, one other aspect marker marks the completive aspect. There are two aspects that are marked as a prefix to the auxiliary. This slot sits between the first agreement prefix and the tense auxiliary. The first aspect is persistive, which is marked by the pre-auxiliary morpheme ʧi-, as exemplified in the second clauses of (11) and (12) below. This aspect has a similar mean- ing to ‘still’ in English, as in, ‘He still works here.’ The chart that follows divides the verb into morphemes, where the dotted vertical lines represent morpheme boundaries and solid vertical lines represent word boundaries.
Aspect. Major aspects—perfective, imperfective, and perfect—are indicated through a combination of the type of verb stem and the form and placement of pronomi- nal agreement clitics, as shown in examples (1.10) - (1.18). Besides the major aspects, lesser aspects are formed by adding the durative enclitic =ik or ces- sative suffix –it. It is used with the imperfective stem for present continuous aspect: (1.29) m-ono=ik 1sG.NNoM-mother=duR food do.3sG.ipfv ‘My mother is making food.’ (1.30) malɯm-χejl=ik teacher-pl.NoM=duR Acc=2pl.NNoM watch.ipfv=3pl.ipfv ‘The teachers are waiting for you(pl).’ It is used with the perfective stem for past habitual aspect, which involve iterative events that have occurred in the past: