Seasonable - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: seasonableSeasonable
Occurring in good time in due season or in proper time for the purpose suitable to the season opportune timely as a seasonable supply of rain...
off season
of or relating to a season of less than maximum demand as off season hotel rates are lower...
Season
One of the divisions of the year marked by alterations in the length of day and night or by distinct conditions of temperature moisture etc caused mainly by the relative position of the earth with respect to the sun In the north temperate zone four seasons namely spring summer autumn and winter are generally recognized Some parts of the world have three seasons the dry the rainy and the cold other parts have but two the dry and the rainy...
Seasoner
One who or that which seasons or gives a relish a seasoning...
Crushing season
Crushing season, the 'crushing season must be deemed to have ended on the date on which the crushing operations in the factory came to an end and not on the date on which the manufacturing processes in the factory came to an end, L.H. Sugar Factories and Oil Mills (P.) Ltd. v. Workmen, AIR 1967 SC 161 (162). (Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, Sch. III, Item 4)...
seasonable
seasonable : occurring within the time agreed to by parties to a commercial transaction or within a reasonable time [ notice of the rejection of goods] sea·son·ably [-blē] adv ...
Seasonal
Of or pertaining to the seasons...
Seasoning
The act or process by which anything is seasoned...
Close Season
Close Season. namely, that part of the year during which the killing or taking of game is forbidden, varies in different cases, Halsbury's Laws of England, Vol. 2, para 290, p. 126. See GAME....
Salary or wages
Salary or wages, means all remuneration (other than remuneration in respect of over-time work) capable of being expressed in terms of money, which would, if the terms of employment, express or implied, were fulfilled, be payable to an employee in respect of his employment or of work done in such employment and includes dearness allowance (that is to say, all cash payments, by whatever name called, paid to an employee on account of a rise in the cost of living), but does not include--(i) any other allowance which the employee is for the time being entitled to;(ii) the value of any house accommodation or of supply of light, water, medical attendance or other amenity or of any service or of any concessional supply of foodgrains or other articles.(iii) any travelling concession;(iv) any bonus (including incentive, production and attendance bonus);(v) any contribution paid or payable by the employer to any pension fund or provident fund or for the benefit of the employee under any law for t...
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