premises

listen to the pronunciation of premises
الإنجليزية - التركية
{i} mülk
{i} (bir kuruma/kişiye ait) bina/arazi
yerleşke
arsa
şirket binası
bir kuruma ait iş yeri
dükkanın odaları ve arazisi
(Ticaret) bina ve ayrıntıları
(Kanun) müştemilat
bina ve eklentileri
öncüller
içindeki malzemeler
taşınmaz
bina ve müştemilatı
{i} yer
açıkla
{i} ana maddeler
{i} çevre
emlak/öncüller
{i} taşınmaz mülk
{i} arazi
terim
emlak
tesis
premise
{i} öncül

Tartışmanın öncülü ile aynı fikirde değilim. - I don't agree with the premise of your argument.

Kitabın ana fikri yanlış bir öncüle dayanıyordu. - The main idea of the book relied on a false premise.

premises cabling
(Bilgisayar,Teknik) yerleşke içi kablolar
premises distribution
(Bilgisayar,Teknik) yerleşke içi dağıtım
premises wiring
yerleşke kabloları
premises wiring
(Bilgisayar) yerleşke içi kablolar
premises cabling
yerleske ici kablolar
premises distribution
yerleske ici dagitim
premises wiring
yerleske kablolari
production premises
Üretim Tesisleri
premise
önermenin nedeni olarak göstermek
premise
terim
premise
(isim) öncül
premise
kaziye
premise
sayıltı
premise
(Matematik) mukaddem
premise
dayanak çekidi
premise
i., man. öncül; terim
premise
önceden açıklamak
premise
bir önerme veya tartışmanın nedeni olarak ileri sürmek
premise
mukaddeme
industrial premises
endüstriyel tesislerde
library premises
kütüphane binaları
on premises of
binanın üzerinde
on the premises of
in tesislerinde
on-premises
-Tesis
business premises
iş çevreleri
business premises
(Mukavele) iş merkezi
fact premises
(Ticaret) olay öncüleri
on the premises
yerinde
premise
açıkla
premise
tanıtma veya açıklama yoluyle önceden belirtmek
premise
aksiyom
premise
belit
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
plural form of premise
The subject of a conveyance or deed
land, and all the built structures on it, especially when considered as a single place
the place in which a company does business: an office, shop, workshop, factory, warehouse, etc
In an argument, the propositions or reasoning you give for accepting the conclusion of an argument
{n} antecedent matter, houses
land and buildings together considered as a place of business; "bread is baked on the premises
The particular location of property or a portion thereof as designated in a policy
Generally, a piece of land with a building or buildings upon it
land and the buildings on it, or a building or part of a building In the Guide this term is often used as a broad term covering the various types of rental premises, from farms and houses to single condominium and apartment units
land, and all the built structures on it, especially when considered as a single place of business
Shall mean land or building or part thereof in respect of which separate meter or metering arrangements have been made by the Board/licensee for supply of electricity
A tract of land including its buildings forming the subject of conveyance
- The particular location of property or a portion thereof as designated in a policy
{i} property; site, area; grounds, lands; office or building with the grounds belonging to it
Building including the land immediately surrounding it and belonging to it
Statements offered as reasons to support a conclusion are premises Logicians generally pay more attention to the reasoning, that is, the relationship between premises and conclusion They rely on scientists to determine the accuracy of the premises
The subject property, such as the property which is deeded or the unit that is leased
Telephony term for the space occupied by a customer or authorized/joint user in a building(s) on continuous or contiguous property (except railroad rights of way, etc ) not separated by a public road or highway
The parcel of land, lot or lots, on which the development, improvement, or service is planned (As stated in Section 1-2 of the Rules and Regulations )
the statements contained in an argument, excluding the conclusion
The problems of medieval nomenclature make consistency in the form of names very difficult to achieve The schematic approach to normalization of medieval nomenclature in this database depends on two premises: that the the inputter has competency in medieval materials and his/her judgment is trustworthy; that the goal is to input material with the greatest possible dispatch and with the least possible research/authority-check time Implicitly, we thus expect that end-users of the database will perform multiple searches for a given author, under multiple forms of a name
Location and/or building insured
The particular location of property or a portion thereof as designated in a policy (G)
(Lieux assurés or Locaux assurés) Building, etc including the land immediately surrounding and belonging to it
logic, plural of premise
The particular location of a property or a portion thereof as designated in a policy
The building insured or containing the insured property Depending on policy conditions, it may also include an adjacent area
The words of conveyance in a deed; e g , "do hereby grant and convey "
In commercial real estate, the description of the leasehold and the specific square footage for which the parties enter into a lease
A defined portion of land and the improvements thereon as usually described in a deed, deed of trust, or mortgage
A descriptive term for the land, building or parts thereof involved in a particular transaction
land and buildings together considered as a place of business; "bread is baked on the premises"
A defined portion of land and the improvements thereon as usually described in a deed, deed of trust or mortgage
major premises
plural form of major premise
minor premises
plural form of minor premise
premise
A piece of real estate; a building and its adjuncts (in this sense, used most often in the plural form)

trespass on another’s premises.

premise
To state or assume something as a proposition to an argument
premise
Either of the first two propositions of a syllogism, from which the conclusion is deduced
premise
To make a premise
premise
a judgment as a conclusion
premise
Refers to a statement or assertion that forms the basis for an approach or position
premise
A proposition on which an argument is based on or from which a conclusion is drawn
premise
{v} to lay down premises, to preface
Premise
premiss
business premises
location where a business is located, area where a business operates
demised premises
The part of a property which is leased to a tenant
demised premises
Premises, or parts of real estate, in which an interest or estate has been transferred temporarily, such as an interest in real property conveyed in a lease
demised premises
The portion of the entire property which is leased to a particular tenant
keep the premises clean
do not litter (often written on a sign in a public place meant to prevent littering)
kept the premises clean
maintained cleanliness, made sure that the place was always clean and tidy
premise
The physical location where a utility service is located (for example, where the meter is installed or trash is picked up) See the explanation of Separate Customer Account # and Premise # for more information
premise
The premises of a business or an institution are all the buildings and land that it occupies in one place. There is a kitchen on the premises The business moved to premises in Brompton Road
premise
take something as preexisting and given set forth beforehand, often as an explanation; "He premised these remarks so that his readers might understand
premise
{i} proposition, basic assumption, presupposition, fundamental presumption
premise
a statement that is assumed to be true and from which a conclusion can be drawn; "on the assumption that he has been injured we can infer that he will not to play"
premise
A statement whose truth is used to infer that of others; see argument Also see MacE
premise
{f} assume, hypothesize, theorize, presume, postulate
premise
it is the rule (often time unstated) that governs a thesis and its rationale A premise, thesis, and rationale make up a syllogism Here is an example: premise - all birds have feathers; rationale: (because) the sparrow has feathers; thesis (therefore) the sparrow is a bird
premise
To make a premise; to set forth something as a premise
premise
A proposition that is offered in support of the truth of another proposition (the conclusion) in an argument
premise
Either of the first two propositions of a syllogism, from which the conclusion is drawn
premise
A premise is something that you suppose is true and that you use as a basis for developing an idea. The premise is that schools will work harder to improve if they must compete = assumption
premise
A supporting claim in an argument
premise
To send before the time, or beforehand; hence, to cause to be before something else; to employ previously
premise
To set forth beforehand, or as introductory to the main subject; to offer previously, as something to explain or aid in understanding what follows; especially, to lay down premises or first propositions, on which rest the subsequent reasonings
premise
Matters previously stated or set forth; esp., that part in the beginning of a deed, the office of which is to express the grantor and grantee, and the land or thing granted or conveyed, and all that precedes the habendum; the thing demised or granted
premise
Matters previously stated or set forth; esp
premise
is used to control the continuity of the piece This is a "What If" statement Premise Driven-the presentation (the "patter, " plot, staging, and technical handling) is developed from a premise
premise
set forth beforehand, often as an explanation; "He premised these remarks so that his readers might understand"
premise
A proposition upon which an argument is based or from which a conclusion is drawn A starting point of reasoning For example, one might say, in commenting on someone's reasoning, "You seem to be reasoning from the premise that everyone is selfish in everything they do Do you hold this belief?
premise
that part in the beginning of a deed, the office of which is to express the grantor and grantee, and the land or thing granted or conveyed, and all that precedes the habendum; the thing demised or granted
premise
take something as preexisting and given
premise
a statement in an argument that serves to provide evidence for the truth of a claim
premise
The spelling premiss is also used in British English for meaning 2
premise
the central concept from which a series of jokes or a routine is written
premise
basis; principle
premise
A proposition antecedently supposed or proved; something previously stated or assumed as the basis of further argument; a condition; a supposition
premise
A piece of real estate; a building and its adjuncts; as, to lease premises; to trespass on another's premises
premise
furnish with a preface or introduction; "She always precedes her lectures with a joke"; "He prefaced his lecture with a critical remark about the institution"
premises
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