resolutive


Also found in: Legal.

resolutive

(rɪˈzɒljʊtɪv)
adj
1. capable of dissolving; causing disintegration
2. (Law) law denoting a condition the fulfilment of which terminates a contract or other legal obligation
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
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One may think that education In entrepreneurship creates capabilities among young population for opportunity recognition and resolutive behaviour.
Their contribution can be dialogical towards questioning contexts and combining resolutive professional practices, enabling action-reflectionaction (9).
Furthermore, the increase in the number of SLH professionals in Primary Health Care appears to be connected to the Ministry of Health's 2008 creation of NASFs, whose main objective is to support the consolidation of Primary Health Care in Brazil, expanding the supply of health professionals within the network of services and promoting resolutive and comprehensive health activities [7].
This resolutive mediator is recognized as a relevant activator of PPAR family and has been found in macrophages of atherosclerotic lesions [38].
Bronchoscopy with flexible and rigid instruments is diagnostic and resolutive [2, 3].
The detection depth D of the TEM method is related to transmitting magnetic torque, all-time apparent resistivity, and the minimum resolutive voltage.
Mainly the NASF practice requires professionals capable of developing actions of interdisciplinary, intersectoral, ethical, resolutive, longitudinal, welcoming, bonding and accountability activities.
Andrei Radulescu tries to make a comparative study on the basis of which he indicates similarities regarding the institution of the family (organization, the rights of the father over his children, the power of a man over his wife, the situation of the husband's wealth, adoption, disinheritance, etc.); the regime of the property (ownership, usufruct, easements); obligations and contracts (mutual agreement, transfer by delivery, agreement by shaking hands, earnest money, resolutive clause, emphyteusis); serfdom (colonate); successions (oral testament, equality between heirs of blood); trial proceedings (summoning, avoidance of judgment in absentia).