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err, the ISO 639-1 alpha-2 code for the extinct Erre language; err, a particular constructor in tagged union data structures; Estrogen related receptor and particular members of the orphan nuclear receptor family: ERRα; ERRβ; ERRγ; European Romantic Review, a scholarly peer-review journal devoted to the interdisciplinary study of nineteenth ...
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Barricade tape across a door in Japan. Barricade tape is brightly colored tape (often incorporating a two-tone pattern of alternating yellow-black or red-white stripes or the words "Caution" or "Danger" in prominent lettering) that is used to warn or catch the attention of passersby of an area or situation containing a possible hazard.
Sep. 2—If you don't live near the former Pease Air Force Base on the Seacoast or the Saint-Gobain plastics plant in Merrimack, it's tempting to ignore the news headlines about PFAS contamination ...
The concept "precautionary principle" is generally considered to have arisen in English from a translation of the German term Vorsorgeprinzip in the 1970s in response to forest degradation and sea pollution, where German lawmakers adopted clean air act banning use of certain substances suspected in causing the environmental damage even though evidence of their impact was inconclusive at that ...
3.328 "If a sign is not necessary then it is meaningless. That is the meaning of Occam's Razor." (If everything in the symbolism works as though a sign had meaning, then it has meaning.) 4.04 "In the proposition, there must be exactly as many things distinguishable as there are in the state of affairs, which it represents.
Illusory promises are so named because they merely hold the illusion of contract. For example, a promise of the form, "I will give you ten dollars if I feel like it," is purely illusory and will not be enforced as a contract. It is a general principle of contract law that courts should err on the side of enforcing contracts. [1]
Caution may refer to: Prudence; A precautionary statement, describing a potential hazard; A police caution, an alternative to prosecution for a criminal offence in some countries such as the United Kingdom and Australia; A statement read by a police officer to a suspect to inform them of their rights, in particular to silence. See e.g.: