LANGUAGE AND COMMUNICATION. Indicator Met/Not Yet Notes
LANGUAGE AND COMMUNICATION. 9.1 The CONTRACTOR shall keep daily records of all significant events related to the Services. These records shall be submitted weekly to the COMPANY. Any event that endangers or may endanger the proper and timely execution of the Services, such event shall immediately be reported to the COMPANY, with full supporting information to mitigate any delay to the Services to the fullest extent possible.
9.2 All communication with respect to the Services shall be in writing and in the English language, unless agreed otherwise.
9.3 All correspondence between the COMPANY and the CONTRACTOR must bear a reference to both the Agreement Title as follows:
LANGUAGE AND COMMUNICATION. 9.1 The CONSULTANT shall keep daily records of all significant events related to the Services. These records shall be submitted weekly to the COMPANY. Any event that endangers or may endanger the proper and timely execution of the Services, such event shall immediately be reported to the COMPANY, with full supporting information to mitigate any delay to the Services to the fullest extent possible.
9.2 All communication with respect to the Services shall be in writing and in the English language, unless agreed otherwise.
9.3 All correspondence between the COMPANY and the CONSULTANT must bear a reference to both the Agreement Title as follows:
LANGUAGE AND COMMUNICATION. These Terms are in English and all communications with you will be in English. You may communicate with the Bank using the following e-mail address: xxx.xxxxxxx@xxxxxxxx.xxx.
LANGUAGE AND COMMUNICATION. 26.1 The Agreement and all documentation and communications required thereunder shall be in the English language.
26.2 All communications pertinent to this Agreement shall be made or confirmed in writing, including telex, or facsimile.
LANGUAGE AND COMMUNICATION. English is the official language of this agreement and of all further communication between FLOWTECH and LICENSEE. All notices, notifications and other communications required under this agreement shall be in writing and shall be deemed to have been received when personally delivered or when deposited in the mail, sent registered mail, postage prepaid. The parties undertake to inform each other of any change of address.
LANGUAGE AND COMMUNICATION. 9.1 The CONSULTANT shall keep daily records of all significant events related to the Services. These records shall be submitted weekly to the COMPANY. Any event that endangers or may endanger the proper and timely execution of the Services, such event shall immediately be reported to the COMPANY, with full supporting information to mitigate any delay to the Services to the fullest extent possible.
9.2 All communication with respect to the Services shall be in writing and in the English language, unless agreed otherwise.
9.3 All correspondence between the COMPANY and the CONSULTANT must bear a reference to both the Agreement Title as follows: All correspondences must be sent to the address of the Parties as per details set forth in this Agreement.
9.4 Every Professional shall have a good command of the English language at the level appropriate for proper completion of the assignment under the Services, unless agreed otherwise.
9.5 During the performance of the Services, the COMPANY shall be represented by the persons named in the Appendix IV (COMPANY and CONSULTANT Representatives) or his/her appointed replacement. All correspondence, contacts and communication shall be through the said COMPANY representative(s).
9.6 During the performance of the Services, the CONSULTANT shall be represented by the persons named in the Appendix IV (Company and CONSULTANT Representatives) or his/her appointed replacement. All correspondence, contacts and communication shall be through the said CONSULTANT representative(s).
9.7 The CONSULTANT shall obtain the COMPANY’s written permission prior to disclosing – by way of press release or otherwise – to any third party or the general public any information from the COMPANY or information relating to the Services and/or the Agreement, including insofar as necessary for the information of potential Subcontractors(s), or the obtaining of any necessary licenses or permits. Prior to disclosing information to third parties, the CONSULTANT shall first obtain confidentiality obligations from any such third parties, which shall require such third parties to be bound by obligations no less stringent than the confidentiality obligations imposed on the CONSULTANT by virtue of the Agreement and/or the separate confidentiality agreement entered between the Parties hereto.
LANGUAGE AND COMMUNICATION. English is the official language of this AGREEMENT and of all further communication between the LICENSOR and the LICENSEE. All notices, notifications and other communications required under this AGREEMENT shall be in writing and shall be deemed to have been received when personally delivered or when deposited in the mail, sent registered mail, postage prepaid, addressed as set forth in annex 6 of this AGREEMENT. The parties undertake to inform each other of any change of address.
LANGUAGE AND COMMUNICATION. 30.1 The Agreement and all documentation and communications required thereunder shall be in the English language. All Documentation shall be provided in English but Partner shall have the right to make one or more translations all or part of the same, provided that for the purpose of this Agreement, the English version shall prevail.
30.2 All communications pertinent to this Agreement shall be made or confirmed in the English language in writing, including facsimile.
LANGUAGE AND COMMUNICATION. This thought experiment, exploring the autopoietic qualities of performers, notations, and techniques, is largely superficial if they are viewed in isolation. After all, it is little more than a slightly non- traditional way of defining a simple, organic unity, with an emphasis on homeostasis and the preservation of relations rather than on a formal structure. Heretofore, the choice of one or another of these theoretical lenses is purely a matter of taste or a hermeneutic sleight-of-hand. However, Xxxxxxxx’x and Xxxxxx’x autopoiesis begins to take on especial significance precisely at this point, where autopoietic unities come into contact with one another. Autopoiesis is a description of how an entity creates its environment and existence through the preservation of its own internal relations as it responds and adapts to the environmental stimuli that surround and interact with it. Autopoiesis is by definition not a static set of structural relations, but a processual way of responding and interacting, and Xxxxxxxx and Xxxxxx demonstrate how this leads also to a redefinition of language and communication. For Xxxxxxxx and Xxxxxx, there is no information as such. Language is not a vessel of content, nor is it a medium by which information is transmitted. In an autopoietic sense, language and communication are no different than any other stimulus from the environment. As a natural extension of that, they also see the role of cognition in ordering, processing, and parsing a linguistic stimulus as no different from the way in which any other environmental stimulus is processed. Linguistic interactions orient the listener within his cognitive domain, but do not specify the course of his ensuing conduct. The basic function of language as a system of orienting behavior is not the transmission of information or the description of an independent universe about which we can talk, but the creation of a consensual domain of behavior between linguistically interacting systems through the development of a cooperative domain of interactions. (Xxxxxxxx and Xxxxxx, 1972, p. 50) Language is essentially orientational, according to Xxxxxxxx and Xxxxxx. One utterance directs the attention of another, who responds, and if this succession of interactions builds a mutual intelligibility, then they have built a “cooperative domain of interactions.” Language as orientational rather than informational draws its impetus from the role information plays as part of a fluid system of mu...