09:35 Jan 4, 2008 |
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Norwegian to English translations [PRO] Bus/Financial - Law: Contract(s) | |||||||
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Summary of answers provided | ||||
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4 +1 | letter of offer |
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5 | letter of intent, Letter of Tender/Bid Letter |
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4 | letter of intent |
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4 | Letter of Tender |
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letter of intent Explanation: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letter_of_intent |
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letter of offer Explanation: To play safe, as I am unsure what force a tilbud has in *Norwegian* law. i tilbudsbrev er oppgitt spesifiserte satser = rates are 'quoted' therein whilst, in the *UK*, offers break down into binding quotations vs. non-binding estimates. Blangsted's letter of intent sounds pre-contractual to me, 'comfort letters' drifting into the realms of letters of guarantee given by a bank and found nowadays, by the UK courts - contrary to the airy-fairy comfort label - to be binding contracts. Example sentence(s):
Reference: http://www.dhs.vic.gov.au/ahs/archive/procure/tender.pdf |
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Letter of Tender Explanation: I agree with your term. A letter of tender could be an unconditional offer, or a proposal. setting the conditions of a contract. I believe this is accurate for both British and American English. |
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letter of intent, Letter of Tender/Bid Letter Explanation: I know, old post, but I can clarify. Within the procurement process, the correct term is "Bid Letter" or "Letter of Tender" (note that this are usually capitalised as they are separate files/documents in the bid package) Within commercial agreements and contract law, letter of intent when a purchaser proposes a price/offer to the seller. |
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