Subsequent Correspondence definition

Subsequent Correspondence means any correspondence relating to the Funds and/or the Activities that the Province sends to the Recipient subsequent to the Approval Letter.
Subsequent Correspondence means any correspondence from the Minister or Ministry to the Recipient, subsequent to the Approval Letter, in which the Minister or Ministry requires additional terms and conditions under s. 4.5(b) or s. 4.11.
Subsequent Correspondence means any correspondence relating to the Funds, the Program, the Project, the Budget, and/or the Reports that the Province sends to the Recipient after submission of the Application Form by the Applicant.

Examples of Subsequent Correspondence in a sentence

  • The critical difference is that LE has the complementizer with an uninterpreted T in subordinate interrogatives as well, forcing inversion in CP-over-CP structures, i.e. complements to the ask/wonder verbs.

  • Subsequent Correspondence in December On December 10, 2013, we sent Mr. Reilly an email thanking him for arranging the interviews earlier that month and asking when it would be most convenient to conduct additional interviews.

  • Subsequent Correspondence in December On December 17, Apple’s outside counsel sent us a copy of a letter the company had written to the Plaintiffs, addressing, among other things, the scope of our responsibilities.

  • These additional terms and conditions will be contained in the Approval Letter or Subsequent Correspondence that the Province will send to the Applicant for signature.

  • Subsequent Correspondence Serial Pages………………Architectural Drawings Serial Pages……………………..6.

  • Plaintiff’s Subsequent Correspondence with ASPA Plaintiff’s subsequent correspondence with members and representatives of ASPA after the April 16, 2012 meeting also suggests that she was not terminated.

  • Subsequent Correspondence Upon receipt of the cash to close on March 16, 2006, we contacted Mr. Abbi via facsimile immediately to notify him of the error and the outstanding balance.

Related to Subsequent Correspondence

  • Correspondence means written and electronic communication exchanged between two or more parties;

  • Class Representatives means Xxxx X. Xxxxx, Xxxxxx X. Xxxxxx, Xxxxxxx X. Xxxxxx, Xxxxxxxx X. Xxxxx, Xxxxxx X. Xxxxxx, Xxxxxxx X. Xxxxxx, Xxxxxxx X. Xxxxxxx, and Xxxx Xxxxx.

  • Company Material Contracts has the meaning set forth in Section 3.18(a).

  • Class Representative means the named Plaintiff in the operative complaint in the Action seeking Court approval to serve as a Class Representative.

  • Material Contracts has the meaning set forth in Section 3.09(a).

  • Student Personal Information means information collected through a school service that personally identifies an individual student or other information collected and maintained about an individual student that is linked to information that identifies an individual student, as identified by Washington Compact Provision 28A.604.010. For purposes of this DPA, Student Personal Information is referred to as Student Data.

  • Environmental Reports means each and every “Phase I Environmental Site Assessment” (and, if applicable, “Phase II Environment Site Assessment”) as referred to in the ASTM Standards on Environmental Site Assessments for Commercial Real Estate, E 1527-2000 and an asbestos survey, with respect to each Mortgaged Property, prepared by one or more Environmental Auditors and delivered to Lender and any amendments or supplements thereto delivered to Lender.

  • Environmental Management Plan or “EMP” means the environmental management plan for the Project, including any update thereto, incorporated in the IEE;

  • Material Information means information for which there is a substantial likelihood that a reasonable investor would consider it important in making investment decisions, or information that is reasonably certain to have a substantial effect on the price of a company’s securities. Examples of material information include information regarding dividend changes, earnings estimates, changes in previously released earnings estimates, significant merger or acquisition proposals or agreements, major litigation, liquidity problems, and extraordinary management developments.