0 protection against possible damage or loss, especially a promise of payment, or the money paid if there is such damage or loss --
1 protection against possible damage or loss, esp. a promise of payment, or the money paid if there is such damage or loss --
2 protection against possible damage or loss, or the money paid if there is damage or loss: --
professional indemnity insurance
Creditors must give an indemnity to cover the costs of a potential claim.
provide/offer (an) indemnity This insurance provides indemnity against legal costs and damages.
indemnity for/against sth The policy provides an indemnity for loss of or damage to third-party property.
3 protection against having legal responsibility for something: --
indemnity against sth The doctors were given an indemnity against prosecution for performing abortions.
4 a sum of money that is paid to someone for a loss, especially by one country to another country --
The strategy of culling reservoir livestock populations may not transfer well to low-income countries because of the costs this can impose on ranchers in the absence of government indemnities.
A live project programme, backed up by a project office which can be insured for professional indemnity, would limit risk and give back-up to both tutors and students.
This means that the only way to purchase insurance for indemnity in one state is to sell insurance for the other's indemnity in the other state.
It also looks at wound infection, and professional indemnity, accountability and training.
Any professional indemnity cover will then come into effect, to provide representation and advice as well a compensation if necessary.
In a competitive health insurance market, premiums that make optimal indemnity contracts viable must therefore be risk-based again.
The indemnity is fixed in a way as to make the final health status identical across illnesses.
The least offensive form of insurance was indemnity, where a third party merely gave direct cash payments to the insured.