Examples of Brazilian Company in a sentence
Guaranteed Hours contracts are typically appropriate where work is not evenly spread over most weeks or months of the period; where there are weeks or months where no work is offered; where the total hours to be offered cannot be reasonably predicted - only the minimum total number of hours; and, the minimum number of total hours offered will vary from one guaranteed hours period to the next.
The Brazilian Company warehouse was also under the command of [056].281 One detainee interviewed by the Commission was transferred from the agricultural warehouse to the second detention centre at the beginning of August 2011.
The Brazilian companies that develop R&D projects in line with the technological competences and action guidelines of the Brazilian Company for Industrial Research and Development (Embrapii) may also get support from the aforementioned institution to develop their projects jointly with Embrapii units.
Brazilian Company of Agricultural and Live Stock Research – EMBRAPA linked to the Ministry of Agriculture; Agriculture and Live Stock Research Center for the Semi-Arid Tropic – CPATSA; Program of Support to Small Rural Producer – PAPP; SUDENE; Petrolina, PE.
Brazilian Company Law provides for a special kind of committee, a fiscal council, a non-mandatory body, whose main function is to monitor the activities of management, examine the financial statements each fiscal year and provide a formal report to shareholders.
This was an abandoned warehouse which had belonged to a Brazilian Company.
Currently, the Amazonian Region presents important scientific institutions installed over there, such as Brazilian Company of Agricultural and Cattle Breeding Research (Embrapa) Western Amazonia and Eastern Amazonia, National Institute of Amazonian Research (INPA), Emílio Goeldi Paraense Museum (MPEG), Institute of Researches in Tropical Pathologies (IPEPATRO), Foundation of Tropical Medicine of Amazonas (FMT/AM), Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (FIOCRUZ), among others.
Under the Brazilian Company Law, there was no requirement for controlling shareholder to buy non-voting shares in the case of a takeover.
The minimum mandatory dividend provided for in our By-Laws is 25% of our net income, based on the balance obtained from the deductions and additions provided for in article 202, sections II and III, of the Brazilian Company Law.
Management’s report on business has been prepared in accordance with CVM Guidance No. 15 of December 28, 1987, and contains the minimum information required by the Brazilian Company Law.