0 a statement in an agreement, saying that a particular thing must happen before another can:
[ + that ] He was released from prison with/on the proviso that he doesn't leave the country.
1 a part of a legal document that states that something must happen or be done:
The provisos set out in a lease cover a range of matters which a tenant should understand before signing it.
contain/include/carry a proviso Recent legislation includes a proviso that the country's private creditors agree to reduce their claims in order to make the debt burden more sustainable.
with/on the proviso that We are currently offering a new investment fund whose return tracks the FTSE 100, with the proviso that it can only fall by 5% a quarter.
2 something that must be done before something else happens or is agreed:
He hoped that no changes would be made to the old customary estates and tendered a proviso to that effect.
With these provisos heeded, camp can undoubtedly prove inspirational in its survivalist hints.
A typing context here is a list of assumptions x : pairing identifiers with types, with the proviso that no identifier appears twice.
Apart from the above provisos, the "two visual systems" view fits well with the position we develop in this paper.
In effect his poetry is an ongoing archive of the thing, with the proviso that language and the self are also things.
With these provisos, geometric reasoning is completely rigorous.
The only proviso is that you must realize that it has got the wrong title.
This quota restriction was only lifted in 1960, but the proviso to obtain a licence to export ramin remained.