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"nonperformance" Definitions
  1. neglect or failure to perform

20 Sentences With "nonperformance"

How to use nonperformance in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "nonperformance" and check conjugation/comparative form for "nonperformance". Mastering all the usages of "nonperformance" from sentence examples published by news publications.

That's not massive for a pickup, but the nonperformance Colorado and ZR2 aren't really intended for customers who will be hauling horse trailers.
In high school, I had a large problem with authority — parents or teachers threatening me with consequences didn't motivate me, it only guaranteed my nonperformance.
Otherwise, Europe might be willing to write off "significant nonperformance" by Iran as a response to U.S. pressure, thus excusing a significant expansion of Iran's nuclear program.
So I think- Do you think launching that cable channel is the thing that sort of ultimately sunk ... the nonperformance of that is what sunk it for Disney?
"If it comes to a major violation, or what in the terms of the nuclear deal is called significant nonperformance, then Iran has other options available, including withdrawing from the deal," he said.
First, Washington should seek a public commitment from the E3 and the EU that in the event of "significant nonperformance" by Iran — the JCPOA's term for major violations — Europe would restore UN sanctions on Tehran.
But Jonathan Cohen, the acting American ambassador, reminded fellow delegates that resolution 20151 "provides a mechanism for the Council to address significant nonperformance by Iran of its nuclear commitments," an apparent allusion to the snapback provision.
"If it comes to a major violation, or what in the terms of the nuclear deal is called significant nonperformance, then Iran has other options available, including withdrawing from the deal," Mohammad Javad Zarif told the foreign policy journal The National Interest in a Monday interview. Sen.
A penal bond is a written instrument executed between an obligor and an obligee designed to secure the performance of a legal obligation through the in terrorem effect of the threat of a penalty for nonperformance.
The Miller Act addresses two concerns that would otherwise exist in the performance of federal government construction projects: #Performance Bonds: The contractor's abandonment or other nonperformance of a government job may cause critical delays and added expense in the government procurement process. The bonding process helps weed out irresponsible contractors who may be unable to obtain bonds, and the bond itself will defray the government's cost of substitute performance in the event of default. The subrogration right of the bond surety against the contractor, i.e., the right of the surety to sue the contractor and any principals who may have guaranteed the bond, is a deterrent to nonperformance.
Edith G. Henderson, "Relief from Bonds in the English Chancery: Mid-Sixteenth Century," 18 Am. J. Legal Hist. 298, 300 (1974). A simple bond can properly be considered a penal bond if it calls for the payment of a sum that is punitive in relation to the damages that would be caused by nonperformance. Historically, the most significant type of penal bond was the penal bond with conditional defeasance.
Anez threatened to move his club to Jersey City, New Jersey. After the season, the franchise went bankrupt, unable to pay off $2 million worth of debt. The International League took it over, then awarded it in December 1976 to Massachusetts businessman Marvin Adelson, who renamed the team the New England Red Sox—and explored transferring it to Worcester. But after less than two months, in January 1977, the league revoked Adelson's franchise, alleging "nonperformance of terms and conditions".
The California Army National Guard was formed with the passing of the Militia Act of 1903, also known as the Dick Act. Prior to that time, the California Army Guard originated from the state militia established by the Constitution of California in 1849. On April 4, 1850, the first California Legislature in San Jose adopted enabling legislation formally establishing a militia of volunteer or independent companies. The law required every free, white, able-bodied male citizen of the State to perform military duty or to pay a $2 fee for nonperformance of this duty.
Hann was eliminated from the second round at the Grand Prix tournament, and was booed by spectators for smashing the cue ball into the pack of in the final three frames of his match against O'Sullivan. He earned an official reprimand of £750 for "unprofessional behaviour" for nonperformance. Hann broke a bone in his foot in a parachute jump before the 2000 UK Championship, and was required to play shoeless in a tournament, where he lasted until the quarter- finals. He also reached the quarter-finals of the Thailand Masters before losing to John Parrott.
Except as provided in this subparagraph, officers and employees of the state or its departments and agencies shall not be subject to suit or liability, and no judgment shall be entered against them, for the performance or nonperformance of their official functions. The provisions of this subparagraph shall not be waived. (e) Except as specifically provided in this Paragraph, sovereign immunity extends to the state and all of its departments and agencies. The sovereign immunity of the state and its departments and agencies can only be waived by an Act of the General Assembly which specifically provides that sovereign immunity is thereby waived and the extent of such waiver.
Experiments support that religious people think about their god in anthropomorphic terms even if this contradicts the more complex theological doctrines of their religion. Pierre Lienard and Pascal Boyer suggest that humans evolved a "hazard-precaution system" which allowed them to detect potential threats in the environment and to attempt to respond appropriately. Several features of ritual behaviors, often a major feature of religion, are held to trigger this system. These include the occasion for the ritual (often the prevention or elimination of danger or evil), the harm believed to result from nonperformance of the ritual, and the detailed prescriptions for proper performance of the ritual.
If the delegatee fails to perform satisfactorily, the obligee may elect to treat this failure as a breach of the original contract by the delegator or may assert himself as a third party beneficiary of the contract between the delegator and the delegatee, and can claim all remedies due to a third party beneficiary. If the delegation is without consideration, the delegator remains liable for nonperformance, while the delegatee will not be liable to anyone for anything. Unlike an assignment, a delegation is virtually always for consideration, and never donative - few people are going to accept the charitable offer to perform a task contracted to someone else.
" Lou Lumeneck at the New York Post gave it 1.5 stars: "It turns the fabled music festival, a key cultural moment of the late 20th century, into an exceedingly lame, heavily clichéd, thumb-sucking bore. There are two main problems with Taking Woodstock. One is the central nonperformance by the stand-up comedian Demetri Martin, who is pretty much an emotional black hole as Elliot ... the movie doesn't make much of an issue of the character's gayness—which is utterly untrue to the period, 1969, even in enlightened circles." Melissa Anderson in The Village Voice wrote: "Ang Lee’s facile Taking Woodstock proves that the decade is still prone to the laziest, wide- eyed oversimplifications ... little music from the concert itself is heard.
An attendee of Williams' shortened November 16, 2012 performance at the Oracle Arena in Oakland filed a class action lawsuit days after the event, seeking compensation for himself and "all others who paid money for a show and got nothing but Katt Williams' nonperformance." On December 2, 2012, he was arrested in Seattle after he allegedly got into a dispute at a bar in South Lake Union. Williams' arrest came after his no-show November 29, 2012 for the first night of a planned two-night engagement at the Paramount Theatre. Five days later, Williams was arrested in Dunnigan, California on a bench warrant arising from a November 25, 2012, incident in Sacramento during which he allegedly drove a three-wheeled motorbike on a sidewalk and refused to stop for police.
" Hubbard later clarified that "(T)his group is the most downstat [unproductive] and one gets assigned to it by being a freeloader, invisible on post, loafing and really goofing up on one's job."Hubbard, "Mud Box Brigade", Flag Order 1701 of 5 January 1969 Religious scholar J. Gordon Melton, however, suggested that "Hubbard understood it in terms of making retribution to the people who had been harmed by the nonperformance or incorrect performance of one's assigned tasks."RPF - A Sociological Study, by J. Gordon Melton In 1969, Hubbard replaced the Mud Box Brigade with the Rehabilitation Unit, again intended for those removed or disciplined "as ineffective or trouble." Following an evaluation, the individual was to receive a set of "specific recommendations which if followed will rehabilitate the individual as a highly effective and worthwhile Sea Org member.

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