clearance
101clearance — n 1. clearing, opening, aperture, passage; space, hole, gap; separation, interspace, interval; slit, split, break, crack. 2. leeway, margin, allowance; headroom, headway, elbowroom, room to spare, Naut. berth …
102clearance — clear·ance …
103clearance — clear•ance [[t]ˈklɪər əns[/t]] n. 1) the act of clearing 2) the distance between two objects; an amount of clear space 3) a formal authorization permitting access to classified information, documents, etc 4) Also called clear′ance sale . the… …
104clearance — In maritime law, the right of a ship to leave port. The act of clearing or leaving port. The certificate issued by the collector of a port evidencing the power of the ship to leave port. In contract for exhibition of motion pictures, the interval …
105clearance — In maritime law, the right of a ship to leave port. The act of clearing or leaving port. The certificate issued by the collector of a port evidencing the power of the ship to leave port. In contract for exhibition of motion pictures, the interval …
106clearance — A certificate which evidences the right of the vessel to depart the port on a voyage, operating as a permission to sail; the act of departing from a port. 48 Am J1st Ship § 19; the space permitted by the physical circumstances for a movement, as… …
107renal clearance — clearance …
108urea clearance — clearance of urea from the blood, by either renal clearance or hemodialysis; the efficiency, or fractional urea clearance, of one hemodialysis session is expressed by the formula Kt/V (q.v.). See also urea kinetic modeling, under modeling …
109clearance capacity — An estimate expressed in terms of measurement or weight tons per day of the cargo that may be transported inland from a beach or port over the available means of inland communication, including roads, railroads, and inland waterways. The estimate …
110Clearance (schottische Geschichte) — Highland Clearances (dt. etwa Räumung des Hochlandes) bezeichnet die Vertreibung der ansässigen Bevölkerung im schottischen Hochland zugunsten der flächendeckenden Einführung der Schafzucht, beginnend im späten 18. Jahrhundert bis etwa 1884. Sie… …