Part Time - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: part time Page 1 of about 90 results (0.004 seconds)part time
Occupying less than the entire time appropriate to an activity as a part time job Opposed to full time...
Part-time course of study
Part-time course of study, see, Osmania University v. A.V. Ramanna, 1992 Supp (1) SCC 535: AIR 1991 SC 2127....
Joules law
The law that the rate at which heat is produced in any part of an electric circuit is measured by the product of the square of the current times the resistance of that part of the circuit If the current i is constant for an interval of time t the energy H in heat units equals i2Rt R being resistance...
part timer
Somone who works part time a part time employee Contrasted with full timer...
full time
spending or requiring all of the time normally given to an activity as full time students a full time job Opposite of part time...
Teacher
Teacher, includes a physical director, P.S. Ramamohan Rao v. Andhra Pradesh Agricultural University, 1977 Supreme Today 93: 1997 (8) SCC 350.Means a Principal, Professor, Assistant Professor, Reader, Lecturer or any other person holding a teaching post either on whole-time or part-time basis and appointed or recognised as such by the University for the purposes of imparting instruc-tion and conducting research in the University. [Bengal Engineering and Science University, Shibpur Act, 2004, s. 2(18)]Means the Professors, Readers and Lecturers appointed or recognised by the University. [University of Allahabad Act, 2005, s. 3(4)]Teacher, the Physical Director gives his guidance or teaching to the students only in the evenings after the regular classes are over. It may also be that the University has not prescribed in writing any theoretical and practical classes for the students so far as physical education is concerned. But as pointed by us earlier, among various duties of the Physical...
Half-timer
Half-timer. A child, who, by the operation of the Factory and Education Acts, was employed for less than the full time in a factory or workshop, in order that he might attend some 'recognized efficient school.' It is now illegal to employ a child in a factory under the age up to which his parents are obliged to cause him to receive education (English) Education Act, 1918, s. 14; (English) Education Act, 1921, ss. 170 (13), 42, 46; (English) Children and Young Persons Act, 1933 (22 & 23 Geo. 5, c. 12), s. 46.In England, a child excused from full time attend-ance at school under the factory and Workshops Act, 1908 so that the child could work part-time in a factory or workshop, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 718....
Day
Day [fr. dies, Lat.; tag, Germ.], in its largest sense the time of a whole apparent revolution of the sun round the earth, but , in its popular acceptation, that part of the twenty-four hours when it is light, or the space of time between the rising and the setting of the sun. by the Roman Calendar the day commenced at midnight; and most European nations reckon in the same manner.In the space of a day all the twenty-four hours are usually reckoned. Therefore, in general, if I am bound to pay money on any certain day, I discharge the obligation if I pay it before twelve o'clock at night; after which the following day commences.If anything is to be done within a certain time, of, from, or after the doing or occurrence of something else, the day on which the first act or occurrence takes place is to be excluded from the computation, Williams v. Burgess, (1840) 12 A&E 635. In certain legislative and justiciary acts, e.g., the proceedings of the House of Lords as recorded in the Journals of...
Dog days
A period of from four to six weeks in the summer variously placed by almanac makers between the early part of July and the early part of September canicular days so called in reference to the rising in ancient times of the Dog Star Sirius with the sun Popularly the sultry close part of the summer metaphorically a period of inactivity...
Working journalist
Working journalist, an ex-employee would be a 'working journalist'. It is clear that the definitions of a 'newspaper employee' and a 'working journalist' have to be construed in the light of and subject to the context requiring otherwise, Bennett Coleman and Co. (P) Ltd. v. Punya Priya Das Gupta, AIR 1970 SC 426: (1969) 2 SCC 1: (1970) 1 SCR 181. [Working Journalists and other Newspaper Employees (Conditions of Service and Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 1955, s. 2(f)]Working journalist, means a person whose principal avocation is that of a journalist and who is employed as such in, or in relation to, any newspaper establishment, and includes an editor, a leader-writer, news editor, sub-editor, feature-writer, copy tester, reporter, correspondent, cartoonist, news-photographers and proof reader. An editor is expressly included in this definition, Management of Rashtradoot v. Rajasthan Working Journalist Union, (1971) 3 SCC 96. [Working Journalists and other Newspaper Employees (Conditio...
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