Words used in scientific contexts often have a very different meaning from their everyday meaning.
To determine the liability of these products you must consider whether they fall within the normal and everyday meaning of food - see paragraph 2.3.
The words began to come more easily-and little by little they lost their everyday meanings.
The everyday meaning of the word "resilience" extends to anything that bounces back.
In trust law, "appointment" often has its everyday meaning.
This new approach also avoids ambiguous terms such as disorder and chaos, which have multiple everyday meanings.
The judge should use the plain everyday ordinary meaning of the words, even if this produces an unjust or undesirable outcome.
The following table describes the everyday meaning of these terms.
They have different meanings to the people using them than their everyday meaning.
For its everyday meaning, a visual likeness of a person, see portrait, or specifically: