What's the difference between renumerate and stipulate?

Renumerate


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To recount.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) In order to describe the health problems of women in the context of their activities both inside and outside the home, a descriptive study was carried out using a four-part questionnaire (sociodemographic characteristics, domestic activities, renumerated activities, and the Cornell Medical Index) to identify similarities and differences among nurses, teachers, secretaries, and housewives living in Guadalajara, Mexico, in 1989.
  • (2) More and more workers and employees leave their working places and renumerated employment for good from the age of 50 onwards - by way of acknowledged incapacity to continue work due to health reasons, unemployment, forced retirement after production plants have closed down and early retirement schemes.
  • (3) In a situation, in which renumerated employment is no longer available, they pass through a rather long period of re-orientation towards a meaningful life.
  • (4) In order to find out the change in renumeration payed by the insurance company, 47 were seen at an follow up.
  • (5) The world of retail is evolving rapidly … and Tesco is changing to make the most of the opportunities this presents,” wrote Stuart Chambers, chair of the renumeration committee.
  • (6) Depending on the insurance system there are different approaches to renumerate the health costs.
  • (7) The shortage in Health care sources is manifested mainly in retardation of material and technical base of health service altogether with low levelled renumeration of health workers consequential in psychologic, social and political problems.
  • (8) Suggestions for creating prerequisite conditions for the development of the discipline under conditions of reconstruction of our society comprise the establishment of chairs of general medicine at medical faculties, adherence to principles of training of general practitioners after completion of medical studies till they obtain the qualification, of general practitioners, training in the branch to obtain the basic qualification, increasing the number of staff in the department, adherence to the principle of availability of health care, respecting of actual conditions, material equipment and provision of apparatuses in work places, problems of improving health care and assessment of work capacity, prevention and dispensarization, comprehensive therapy and free choice of doctors and renumeration of the work of doctors.
  • (9) If priority dispatch is removed, then renewables must be given a fall-back option of access and renumeration in the balancing markets to help stabilise the system, or clear levels of compensation in the event that curtailment is necessary,” Joy said.
  • (10) To meet this obligation necessary strategies are 1) increase public support, not only by increasing the health share of the general budget, but by other sources such as social security and community financing, 2) require 5-10 years of social service for all medical school graduates, 3) ensure that renumeration for doctors in public service is adequate to support a decent standard of living, 4) continue to train community health workers, but ensure physicians are qualified to supervise them, and, 5) health services and health manpower should be guided by principles of social justice, not by those of commercial market dynamics.

Stipulate


Definition:

  • (a.) Furnished with stipules; as, a stipulate leaf.
  • (v. i.) To make an agreement or covenant with any person or company to do or forbear anything; to bargain; to contract; to settle terms; as, certain princes stipulated to assist each other in resisting the armies of France.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) In the controlled wound care group, only three ulcers in three patients achieved complete healing; the remaining 24 ulcers in 20 patients failed to achieve even 50% healing in the stipulated 3-month period.
  • (2) Under the stipulation, cultivators must grow the drug indoors in a secure facility.
  • (3) An increase amount of proinsulin-like component in the blood serum stipulates possibly a more prolonged period of starvation before the occurrence of hypoglycemia, and a less pronounced picture of hypoglycemia in such patients in comparison with the patients whose tumours were capable of splitting HA similarly to the normal islands of Langerhans.
  • (4) Despite the stipulation, though, only 55% of trust-funded research papers are open access.
  • (5) Significantly, the one thing that is making him worry is the Globe's stipulation that no English should be used – something that takes little account of how in India language itself has become globalised, along with so much else.
  • (6) The attendant reflux gastritis is stipulated by reflux of the intestinal contents into the gastric lumen.
  • (7) Comparisons with the previous results of the author obtained in other mammal orders, demonstrated quantative changebility--plasticity of corresponding truncal auditory, optical and vesitbular formations in response to ecologically stipulated changes of leading afferentation in different mammals.
  • (8) The main one being that governments actually stick to their targets which they stipulated in terms of implementing policy to move towards a two degree limit in global warming by 2050,” said Wilkins.
  • (9) (2) The tendency to seclude on admission suggests failure to follow the legal stipulation that less restrictive measures be employed first.
  • (10) The procedure to be adopted by the second veterinary-surgeon inspector, however, has not been stipulated.
  • (11) This phenomenon is probably stipulated by the increase of the transcription activity and formation of 45-pre rRNA, life of RNA.
  • (12) We have earlier proposed a molecular mechanism for the translocation of hydrophilic proteins across membranes that accounts for the experimental facts and meets the restrictions that we stipulate for such a mechanism.
  • (13) In the theory of psychopathology (e.g., implicit in DSM-III), general descriptors of the person (i.e., demographic and cultural) play a comparatively minor role in the stipulation of the manifestations of psychiatric illness.
  • (14) The current rules governing eurozone bailouts stipulate that a government has to request help and that the money may only be channelled via governments – increasing the national debt burden.
  • (15) The Law stipulates that each manager of an establishment with 50 or more workers is requested to appoint an OHP from among qualified physicians.
  • (16) In the UK, the law stipulates that people should use only "reasonable force" as appropriate to the situation, and to prevent a dangerous situation from escalating.
  • (17) A rental contract can stipulate that tenants ask a landlord before switching energy supplier, but it can't refuse permission to switch.
  • (18) The curative effects were up to the standards stipulated by the National Federation of Disabled Persons.
  • (19) Let us stipulate at the start that whether or not to build the pipeline is a decision with profound physical consequences.
  • (20) Buchanan said reserve margins for generation capacity were set to fall from 14% to just 5% within three years, though he played down the threat of power cuts to consumers: households are less likely to be affected by capacity shortages than energy-intensive businesses, many of which have contracts that stipulate their supply can be cut at times of peak demand to free up generating capacity elsewhere.

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