TRADUguide

TRADUguide - Your Guide to Translators and Translation Agencies

For translators

Find a job  |   Conges terminology center  |   Agencies list  |   Feedback forum
Register as a freelance translator or an agency  |   My profile  |   My status
Become a featured member  |   Renew your featured membership

For job posters

Post a translation job to ask for quotes
Browse the translators directory
My account / My job postings

Home   |   This is how TRADUguide works   |   Contacts / Imprint

 

TRADUguide.com auf Deutsch

Conges terminology question

<<Previous question

All questions

Next question>>

246 months ago

Andrea Servi (a guest user) asked this question:

Language pair:

German > English

Subject:

Law / Certificates

Level of diffculty:

Easy / medium

Word or term in question:

hinaus in Anspruch nehmen

Context:

Will der Kunde die Agentur ueb

Keywords:

-

 

 

Important If you feel that you can answer the above terminology question, you are invited to enter your answer.

(Login required)

(Asker only)

Answers on this question

246 months ago

Prabir Mudaliar  See my profile wrote:

Consider/Take up externally

My comment:

Refers to a requirement outside/beyond the scope of terms of a contract or agreement.

Click here to comment on this answer (login required)

(Asker only)

246 months ago

Prabir Mudaliar  See my profile wrote:

byond the extent determined in this contract

Click here to comment on this answer (login required)

(Asker only)

246 months ago

Prabir Mudaliar  See my profile wrote:

should the customer wish to GO BEYOND THE FIXED TERMS OF THIS AGREEMENT

Click here to comment on this answer (login required)

(Asker only)

246 months ago

www.buero-garisch.de  See my profile wrote:

use (the agency's services) beyond...

My comment:

the scope specified in this contract

Click here to comment on this answer (login required)

(Asker only)

246 months ago

Silver Fern Translations  See my profile wrote:

If the client wishes to use the the agency's services over and above those stipulated in this agreement...

Click here to comment on this answer (login required)

Comments by other colleagues on this answer:

246 months ago

  See profile wrote:

Yes (except for the second 'the', of course).

(Asker only)