Taken as a Whole definition
Taken as a Whole when used in connection with the Group Companies means (a) all of the Group Companies, other than Madhouse, taken together as a single unit without regard to any one or more Group Companies, such that the separate existence of each Group Company (other than Madhouse) shall be disregarded, and (b) Madhouse and each of its direct and indirect subsidiaries, taken together as a single unit without regard to any one or more of Madhouse or any of its subsidiaries, such that the separate existence of Madhouse and each of its subsidiaries shall be disregarded.
Taken as a Whole means a reference to a Corporation on a consolidated basis taken together with its Subsidiaries;
Taken as a Whole with respect to any person and its subsidiaries, means taken as a whole to the extent of such person's interest in each of such subsidiaries.
Examples of Taken as a Whole in a sentence
After giving effect to the transactions contemplated by this Agreement and the other Loan Documents, Borrower, Taken as a Whole, and Guarantor will not be insolvent.
Borrower, Taken as a Whole, and Guarantor are not insolvent (as such term is defined in Section 5.20(b) of the Loan Agreement).
More Definitions of Taken as a Whole
Taken as a Whole means the Borrower collectively as a group, or this Agreement and the other Loan Documents, collectively as a group.
Taken as a Whole means, when used in connection with the AiPharma Companies, all of the AiPharma Companies being considered collectively on a consolidated basis, with the separate existence of each AiPharma Company being disregarded.
Taken as a Whole means considered as a single unit which is logically and structurally identifiable as a whole by or because of the sameness or commonality in its subject, or its theme, or its plot and plot development, or its story, or its message, or its ideas, or its thoughts, or its depiction, or its portrayal, provided: bound volumes, including but not limited to magazines or other periodicals, which contain miscellaneous articles, stories, poems, or other writings, illustrations, and photographic depictions, with each piece or portrayal standing on its own merit and having no content interdependence with other pieces bound together to make a single volume, may not be considered as a whole unless there is such interdependence of, between, or among the separate pieces that to remove any one of them materially would change the type, as opposed to the quality, of the volume as a magazine, periodical, or other publication or communicative medium; otherwise, each separate piece or pictorial or combination of them shall be separately taken as a whole."