Examples of using Has defined in English and their translations into Dutch
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Colloquial
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Official
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Ecclesiastic
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Medicine
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Financial
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Computer
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Ecclesiastic
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Official/political
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Programming
This is the first time the Commission has defined its policy concerning state aid for fallen stock.
which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has defined as a major health concern.
If a reliable national or international authority has defined a disease as endemic to the destination or point of departure.
It is also what has defined the life of the ecclesiastical leader of Scientology, David Miscavige.
just as Judaism has defined itself in opposition to Christianity.
that browses the web to pull out specific information the user has defined.
it's no wonder it has defined every family that's owned it.
In order to achieve this fair and easy access, the directive 2001/14/EC has defined the basic requirements to be fulfilled by the Network Statements.
For example, it is proposing to apply several of the general policy goals the Union has defined in its new Innovation10 and Industrial policy11 in the field of SSL.
When we're not on a case that has defined who we are.
Since 1984, the Union has defined the scale and guidelines of its research drive within'framework programmes',
Oldani has always promoted what he has defined“Cucina Pop”(“Pop Cuisine”), i.e.
Фэp the Simferopol hillock has defined all my further цшчэi" Alexander Fersman- an opener of the richest minerals across all Soviet Union wrote about the youth.
It's just the Health Department has defined leprosy as a reportable disease.
Kepler has defined that orbits of planets are elliptic
The panel has defined the objective to be achieved as the dissociation(decoupling)
Our vision of"creating a smarter logistics world" has defined our company's philosophy since its foundation.
That is also true for each of the priority objectives that the Commission has defined.
People intend to abolish what God has defined normal, by making the deviant to become ordinary.
In a XIX-th century the elite of both Russian capitals has defined regularity and refinement of local rest.