Anticipation definition

Anticipation means anticipating (antecipação), factoring, discounting or otherwise accelerating or bringing forward the scheduled payment of any receivables (including doing so through discounting or the payment of finance costs in connection therewith).
Anticipation means the intentional or unintentional payment of obligations prior to the due date which results in a monetary adjustment in amounts payable to Supplier.
Anticipation means anticipating (antecipação), factoring, discounting or otherwise accelerating or bringing forward the scheduled payment of any receivables (including doing so through discounting or the payment of finance costs in connection therewith), and “Anticipated” has a corresponding meaning.

Examples of Anticipation in a sentence

  • The Superintendent or designee shall prepare all documents and notices necessary for the Board, at its discretion, to: (1) issue State Aid Anticipation Certificates, tax anticipation warrants, working cash fund bonds, bonds, notes, and other evidence of indebtedness, or (2) establish a line of credit with a bank or other financial institution.

  • Pre-Issuance Grant Anticipation Revenue Vehicle (GARVEE) Bond Repayment The State of Washington Department of Transportation will request funds for the repayment of GARVEE Bonds issued and paid by the Bond Retirement Interest Agency.

  • The Company agrees that in the case of a ------------- Termination without Cause of the Executive in Anticipation of a Change in Control, the Executive will not be required to seek other employment or to attempt in any way to reduce any amounts payable to the Executive by the Company pursuant to this Agreement.

  • Anticipation may be taken upon the mutual consent of the parties.

  • Pre-Issuance Grant Anticipation Revenue Vehicle (GARVEE) Bond Repayment The State of Arizona Department of Transportation will request funds for the repayment of GARVEE bonds issued.


More Definitions of Anticipation

Anticipation in patent usage means that the claimed device is not new; that it previously existed. See In re Spada, 911 F.2d 705, 708 (Fed. Cir. 1990) (“[T]he refer- ence must describe the applicant’s claimed invention sufficiently to have placed a person of ordinary skill in the field of the invention in possession of it.”); In re Donohue, 766 F.2d 531, 533 (Fed. Cir. 1985) (“It is well settled that prior art under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) must sufficiently de- scribe the claimed invention to have placed the public in possession of it.”). Neither Gnaga nor Hoshino describes the same device as claimed in the ’118 Patent.
Anticipation means the prior invention or disclosure of a claimed invention by another person or the inventor’s own disclosure of the claimed invention by publication, sale or offer to sell if that prior invention or disclosure predates the date of the patent application filing;
Anticipation in patent terms means that the claimed invention is not new; that is, the invention as claimed was already known. Anticipation is a question of fact, and a
Anticipation in patent law means that the claimed subject matter is not new; that is, that it was already known. To “anticipate” in patent law requires that a single reference contains all of the elements and limita- tions of the claim at issue, explicitly or inherently. If the single reference is not enabled with respect to the subject matter under examination, “anticipation” cannot be found; it is not permissible to go outside the single refer- ence in order to find “anticipation,” unlike the protocols by which references are combined to show “obviousness.”
Anticipation in the patent sense means that the subject matter was previously known. A precatory suggestion of general procedures that may or may not succeed in producing the novel product, a product that has not previously been produced, does not convert the suggested product into a previously existing product. The witnesses were in agreement that at the time the Mullan application was filed neither Mullan nor anyone else
Anticipation in patent usage means that the claimed invention was previously known and described in a printed publication, explicitly or inherently. Anticipation is established by documentary evidence, and requires that every claim element and limitation is set forth in a single prior art reference, in the same form and order as in the claim. See
Anticipation in patent terms means that the claimed invention is not new; that is, the invention as claimed was already known.” Ericsson Inc. v. Intellectual Ventures I, LLC, 890 F.3d