(Tıp, İlaç) Fluid retention (edema) Ödem: Dokularda patolojik olarak aşırı miktarda sıvı tutulumu. Water from the blood commonly leaks into body tissues. Usually, this fluid iş drained out of the body tissues via the lymphatic system - a network of tubes throughout the body whose function iş to remove waste and other extraneous material - and returns to the bloodstream. When fluid iş not removed by the lympth system, it iş retained in the body tissues where it causes swelling (oedema)
(Askeri) EKONOMİK MAKSATLA ALIKONMUŞ STOK: Uzun vadeli ikmal durumundaki bir madde miktarından, ilerdeki bir barış devresi dağıtım veya tüketim için, tedarik yolu ile yapılacak bütünlemeden daha ekonomik olacağı düşüncesiyle, alıkonması kararlaştırılmış kısım. Ancak; ekonomik maksatla alıkonmuş stok mahiyetindeki bir maddeden herhangi bir kısım, muhtemel durum ihtiyacı stok "contingency retention stock" olarak alıkonmaz. Bak. "reserve supplies"
This relates to monies withheld by lenders until certain mortgage conditions are met This will normally relate to repairs or improvements to the property that the lender is insisting on
(1) A visual quality objective which in general means human activities are not evident to the casual forest visitor (2) The amount of precipitation on a drainage area that does not escape as runoff It is the difference between total precipitation and total runoff
Usually used in reinsurance, this is the amount of liability retained by an insurer, and not ceded to a reinsurer
The circulation function of acquiring and keeping paid subscriptions through renewal marketing promotions and billing efforts
The prevention of direct discharge of storm runoff into receiving waters; included as examples are systems which discharge through percolation, exfiltration, and evaporation processes and which generally have residence times less than 3 days
The part of an insurance premium that the insurer keeps to repay it for its expenses and risk and to provide it with a profit
The amount of risk retained by an insurance company and not reinsured Also used in reference to the portion of premium that is used by the insurance company for administration costs
The net amount of risk which the ceding company or the reinsurer keeps for its own account or that of specified others
The amount of time, in days, that inactive backed up or archived files are retained in the storage pool before they are deleted The following copy group attributes define retention: retain extra versions, retain only version, retain version
The number of units allocated to an underwriting syndicate member less the units held back by the syndicate manager for facilitating institutional sales and for allocation to nonmember firms
(1) In reinsurance, the amount of a reinsured risk which the ceding company retains (2) See retention charge
The portion of the premium which is used by the insurance company for administrative costs
1 The result when members remain on a health plan from one year to the next 2 The percentage of a premium that a health plan keeps for internal costs or profit
The net amount of risk retained by an insurance company for its own account or that of specified others, and not reinsured
The amount of liability assumed by the insurance company and not re-insured Insurance companies typically earmark and hold a portion of insurance premiums as a hedge against planned or unexpected expenses Some examples for uses of "retention" are: claim payment services, contract and booklet preparation, actuarial services, charge for broker commissions and consultant fees, risk charge, profit for the carrier, and reserve against unusual large claim occurrences
Retention is the process of holding back, or retaining During the excretion of fluids from the body by the kidneys, electrolytes and other substances dissolved in urine are excreted, while retention of water occurs, producing a more concentrated urine
{i} act of keeping possession; maintenance, act of holding; memory, capacity to remember
That part of the insurance on a risk retained or not reinsured, the balance of which is reinsured
The amount of time, in days, that inactive backed-up or archived files are kept in the storage pool before they are deleted Copy group attributes and default retention grace periods for the domain define retention
The amount of risk the ceding company keeps for its own account or the account of others
Insurance carrier's provision in experience rating for taxes, cost for the assumption of risk, benefit plan administration, maintaining reserves, other expenses and contributions to the return on equity of the insurance company
The portion of the premium which is used by the insurance company for administrative costs (H)
That which contains something, as a tablet; a &?;&?;&?;&?; of preserving impressions
The retention of something is the keeping of it. They supported the retention of a strong central government
The portion of the insurance premium which is allocated for expenses, administration, commissions, risk charges and profit
That percentage of a syndicate member's underwriting participation which is retained for his own, retail sales, the balance of the underwriting commitment being set aside for the pot
the power of retaining and recalling past experience; "he had a good memory when he was younger"
The right of withholding a debt, or of retaining property until a debt due to the person claiming the right be duly paid; a lien
A withholding tax, also called a retention tax, is a government requirement for the payer of an item of income to withhold or deduct tax from the payment, and pay that tax to the government
The amount of time a voicemail message will be stored Retention times vary according to the parameters set in the paging terminal and the voicemail package selected by the customer (see MiniMail, PageMail, PageMail Plus)
the elasped time from the point of injection of the sample to the measurement of the maximum signal detected by the detector for a particular component
The average length of time water resides in a lake, ranging from several days in small impoundments to many years in large seepage lakes Retention time is important in determining the impact of nutrient inputs Long retention times result in recycling and greater nutrient retention in most lakes Calculate retention time by dividing the volume of water passing through the lake per year by the lake volume
(Tıp, İlaç) A failure to excrete excess fluid from the body. Causes may include renal, cardiovascular, or metabolic disorders. In uncomplicated cases the condition can sometimes be corrected with diuretics and a low-salt diet
The process of building a relationship with your customer by learning as much as you can about them through surveys, demographics and psychographics By utilizing this information, you can tailor your message to your customer accordingly, using direct mail, newsletters, telemarketing etc
The philosophy of treating customers so well that they lack any reason to go anywhere else The philosophy of building your business on the basis of repeat sales, past customers, and word-of-mouth recommendations
() From Middle English retencioun, from Latin retentiō, from retentus, the perfect passive participle of retineō (“retain”) (from re- (“back, again”) + teneō (“hold, keep”)).