brill definition

brill means the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal decision in Nova Scotia (Attorney General) v. Brill, 2010 NSCA 69;
brill style means that when more than one rule matches the same region of the document, they are all fired. The result of this is that a segment of text could be allocated more than one entity type, and that no proiority ordering is necessary.

Examples of brill in a sentence

  • Together, these enforcement efforts have established what some scholars call ‘the common law of privacy’ in the United States.” Julie Brill, Commissioner, Fed.

  • Mountain Creek Resort, Inc., 213 N.J. 573, 577 (2013) (citing Brill v.

  • The coefficient estimates for the full time period (1980 to 2003) and the four subperiods defined by Brill and Hassett are reported.

  • Brill and Hassett find a rate of around 30%, which has been falling over time.

  • Spectre G, Brill A, Gural A, Shenkman B, Touretsky N, Mosseri E et al.

  • Manfred Nowak, Introduction to the International Human Rights Regime (Boston: Brill 2003) 248.

  • This commitment has been reiterated at a meeting of Federal Trade Commission Commissioner Julie Brill with EU Data protection Authorities (Article 29 Working Party) in Brussels on 17 April 2013.

  • Assuming fairly common values for a model without depreciation of 75% for labor’s share of income and a factor substitution elasticity of 1, the tax rate would be 75%—far above the rates of around 30% reported by Brill and Hassett.

  • See Com- missioner Julie Brill, Privacy, Consumer Protection, and Competition, speech given at 12th Annual Loyola Anti- trust Colloquium (Apr.

  • Red Cedar River from confluence with Brill River to Chippewa River, excluding Rice Lake, Tainter Lake and Lake Menomin.

Related to brill

  • CORA means the Colorado Open Records Act, §§24-72-200.1 et. seq., C.R.S.

  • PETE means polyethylene terephthalate, labeled by the SPI code #1.