carry out a contract
1carry out — phr verb Carry out is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑staff, ↑volunteer Carry out is used with these nouns as the object: ↑abortion, ↑act, ↑action, ↑alteration, ↑ambush, ↑analysis, ↑appraisal, ↑assassination, ↑ …
2contract for services — A contract that is used for appointing a genuinely self employed individual such as a consultant (or a profession or business run by that individual) to carry out services for another party where the relationship between the parties is not that… …
3contract term — the period the awarding authority engages the project company to carry out the project, comprising the construction period and the operating period. Practical Law Dictionary. Glossary of UK, US and international legal terms. www.practicallaw.com …
4Contract — law …
5contract — I n. 1) to conclude, sign; negotiate; ratify a contract 2) to carry out, execute a contract 3) to draw up, write a contract 4) to assign (after bidding), let; award a contract 5) to abrogate, cancel, repudiate a contract 6) to breach, break,… …
6contract — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 written agreement ADJECTIVE ▪ long term, permanent ▪ guaranteed (esp. AmE) ▪ casual (BrE), fixed term (BrE), short term …
7carry — [c]/ˈkæri / (say karee) verb (carried, carrying) –verb (t) 1. to convey from one place to another in a vehicle, ship, pocket, hand, etc. 2. to transmit or transfer in any manner; take or bring: the wind carries sounds; she carries her audience… …
8contract for service — A contract undertaken by a self employed individual. The distinction between a contract for service (self employed) and a service contract (employee) is fundamental in establishing the tax position. With a contract for service the person may hire …
9contract for service — A contract undertaken by a self employed individual. The distinction between a contract for service (self employed) and a service contract (employee) is fundamental in establishing the tax position. With a contract for service the person may hire …
10Privity of contract — Contract law Part o …