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ring-fence
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ring-fence
ˈring-fence, n. [ring n.1] a. A fence completely enclosing an estate, farm, or piece of ground.1769 Bp. Wilton Inclosure Act 15 The out-fence or ring⁓fence. 1778 W. H. Marshall Minutes Agric. 8 Jan. 1776, A thousand acres..lying on a level, within a ring-fence. 1822 Scott Peveril xi, I may indeed ha...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Ringfencing
Arising from the 2008 financial crisis, the largest banks in the United Kingdom are required by the Financial Services (Banking Reform) Act 2013 to ring-fence
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Several generations will be denied their rightful inheritance with Govt ...
4 days agoPatterson said, "I called for several changes to be enshrined in the law, rather than in any production sharing agreement which could be adjusted at any time by the minister. Enshrining same in the law governing all petroleum activities provides a safeguard for future generations irrespective of the party in Government."
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ring-wall
ˈring-wall Also ringwall, ring wall. [f. ring n.1] 1. a. A wall completely surrounding or encircling a certain area. Also fig. (Cf. ring-fence.)1850 Carlyle Latter-d. Pamph. ii. 6 An immense circuit of buildings; cut out, girt with a high ring-wall, from the lanes and streets of the quarter. 1858 ― ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Steve Bundred
In 2010, he called Tory plans to ring-fence NHS and schools funding "insane". He left the role in 2010 and became chair of NHS regulator Monitor.
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Zvue
By lowering the ring-fence, and executing its acquisition strategy the site quickly grew and became of largest in the United States by virtue of 32,000,000
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enmesh
enmesh, emmesh, immesh, v. (ɛnˈmɛʃ, ɛˈmɛʃ, ɪˈmɛʃ) Also 7 enmash. [f. en-1 + mesh.] 1. trans. To surround with meshes; to catch or entangle in, or as in, a net. Also of the net, and fig.α 1604 Shakes. Oth. ii. iii. 367 The Net that shall en-mash them all. a 1669 Le Blanc in Spurgeon Treas. Dav. Ps. c...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Bathoen I
Bathoen I, being mandated by their people, travelled to London, made public speeches in support of their causes, and finally convinced Queen Victoria to ring-fence
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Ron Sandler
Included within R&R was the creation of Equitas, the reinsurance vehicle designed to ring-fence the Lloyd's market from earlier liabilities.
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Boskenna
In 1881 the estate was ″about 1300 acres of land, pretty much in a ring-fence″.
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Martin Cullen
Local representatives in the Shannon area have claimed that Minister Cullen ignored calls to ring-fence slots for Shannon airport.
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B48 Flashcards | Quizlet
Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like come about study how those norms came about and how they're put to use today, fallout shelter, ring-fence businesses that straddle both sides of the cold war, such as TikTok should be ring-fenced, sold or spun off, not be forced to close. and more.
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Bartholomew Nnaji
However, for political reasons, the government reneged on the terms of the Agreement by failing to offer the ring-fence to the project developers during
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Separation of investment and retail banking
This can take the form of a two-tier structure in which a company is banned from doing both activities, or enforcing a legal ring-fence between two divisions In the Eurozone the Liikanen report of 2012 recommended a similar ring-fence between the two activities.
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Independent Commission on Banking
Its headline recommendation was that British banks should 'ring-fence' their retail banking divisions from their investment banking arms to safeguard against
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