Open-graded aggregate definition

Open-graded aggregate means aggregate containing little or no mineral filler or in which the void spaces in the compacted aggregate are large.

Related to Open-graded aggregate

  • Required Aggregation Group means: (i) each qualified plan of the Employer in which at least one Key Employee participates at any time during the Determination Period; and (ii) any other qualified plan of the Employer which enables a plan described in clause (i) to meet the requirements of Code Section 401(a)(4) or of Code Section 410.

  • Downgraded Lender means a Revolving Lender that fails to be an Approved Lender in accordance with the terms of such definition.

  • Downgraded Facility “Equipment Notes”, “Fee Letter”, “Final Legal Distribution Date”, “Indenture”, “Interest Payment Date”, “Investment Earnings”, “Liquidity Facility”, “Loan Trustee”, “Long-Term Rating”, “Non-Extended Facility”, “Operative Agreements”, “Participation Agreements”, “Performing Equipment Note”, “Person”, “Pool Balance”, “Rating Agencies”, “Regular Distribution Date”, “Replacement Liquidity Facility”, “Responsible Officer”, “Series A Equipment Notes”, “Scheduled Payment”, “Short-Term Rating”, “Special Payment”, “Stated Interest Rate”, “Subordination Agent”, “Taxes”, “Threshold Rating”, “Trust Agreement”, “Trustee”, “Underwriters”, “Underwriting Agreement” and “United States”.

  • publicly traded company means any company whose principal class of shares is listed on a recognised stock exchange provided its listed shares can be readily purchased or sold by the public. Shares can be purchased or sold “by the public” if the purchase or sale of shares is not implicitly or explicitly restricted to a limited group of investors;

  • Exchange-Traded Product or “ETP” means a security traded on an exchange that: (i) tracks an underlying security, index or financial instrument; or (ii) uses a benchmark index but whose manager(s) may change sector allocations, market-time trades, or deviate from the index. The term “ETP” includes, among other things, exchange-traded funds (“ETFs”), exchange-traded notes (“ETNs”) and exchange-traded commodities (“ETCs”).