Examples of Disposable in a sentence
Disposable endotracheal tubes, a minimum of two (2) each, sterile packaged, in sizes 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 millimeters inside diameter.
Disposable retired pay is defined by the USFSPA as gross retired pay minus authorized deductions.
Disposable parts should be disposed of properly in an environmentally compliant manner.
Disposable items shall be kept in a closed container in the isolation area until thrown away.
Disposable items, such as sample tubing, gloves, protective overalls (e.g., Tyvek®), paper towels, etc., will be placed in plastic bags after use and deposited in trash receptacles for disposal.
More Definitions of Disposable
Disposable means items designed to be used once or a limited number of times and then discarded, whether the item is non-recyclable, Recyclable or Compostable.
Disposable means the proprietary disposable cryoablation probe and accessories, developed, manufactured and sold by Supplier, the specifications of which are set forth in Exhibit A hereto.
Disposable means disposable probes, tips or other devices for calibration, cross-contamination prevention, or other purposes as agreed to by the p which when used with the Instrument measure bilirubin levels. Initial product specifications for the Disposable are set forth on Exhibit A. Final product specifications for the Disposable shall be mutually agreed upon by the parties prior to commercial introduction.
Disposable means designed to be discarded after a single or limited number of uses, not manufactured for long-term multiple reuse, and/or is not reusable as defined herein.
Disposable means designed for single-use then discarded, and not designed or manufactured to be washed and sanitized or to be used repeatedly over an extended period of time.
Disposable means any product other than equipment and related parts, software, peripherals and accessories, to include base solutions, pharmaceuticals, drug delivery systems, and IV access systems that is manufactured or sold by Baxter.
Disposable income means ‘the total income of a household (after tax and other deductions) available for spending or saving’.35 The incomes are ‘equivalised’ by giving different weightings to each member of the household (eg the first adult has a weighting of 1.0, other adult members have a weighting of 0.5 and children aged under 14 have a weighting of 0.3).36