insufficient definition

insufficient. , in relation to a sample, means, subject to section 3(5), insufficient in quantity or quality for the purpose of enabling information to be produced by the means of analysis used or to be used in relation to the sample for the forensic testing of it;
insufficient means, in relation to a sample, subject to subsection (3), insufficient in quantity or quality for the purpose of generating a DNA profile. 25
insufficient means that the committee believes that the research proposal is of insufficient level and/or it is unlikely that the prospective doctoral candidate will complete his doctoral programme within the remaining period. The committee will mention specific targets for improvement that can be achieved in a period of three months.

More Definitions of insufficient

insufficient in relation to a sample, means insufficient in respect of quantity for the purpose of obtaining a DNA profile by means of forensic DNA analysis;
insufficient means the info provided is vague, ambiguous, or nonresponsive
insufficient means that the minimum affirmative action requirement (at least two persons of color out of the five total Board seats for the region) cannot be met (or, at a minimum, partially met) without electing one (or one additional, if one person of color has already been elected) person of color candidate from the same state as the two candidates already elected to the first two seats.
insufficient means, as it relates to the Source Materials, a determination made in the judgment of the verifier that the Source Materials are not sufficient to build, compile, assemble, translate, bind and load source code for the applicable Software Deliverables or Software Project Works into executable Software, and to maintain and support such Software.
insufficient means. We think that an order
insufficient it means it does not provide sufficient evidence by itself. For example, even though
insufficient. : means that there is suggestive evidence but that it is too scanty or imbalanced to make a more definitive judgement. This level of evidence exists when there are only a few studies that are generally consistent but which only suggest a possible relation. More well-designed research is needed at this level of scientific evidence.