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Beef Law in Germany

The Law on the Delegation of Supervision of Beef Labelling was introduced by the State in 1999 as part of the measures against mad cow disease. But the dpa news agency reported on Monday that the law was removed from the books last week because European Union regulations had changed. The Law on the Transfer of Beef Labelling Oversight Tasks – a 63-letter word describing a “law delegating the oversight of beef labelling” – was removed from the German lexicon due to the repeal of the law by a regional parliament. The word, referring to the “law on the transfer of control of beef labelling”, was repealed by a regional parliament after the EU repealed a recommendation to carry out BSE tests on healthy cattle. Act respecting the transfer of tasks for the identification of cattle and the supervision of beef labelling (listen to·info); RkReüaüg; Literally, the Law on the Delegation of Delegation Obligations for The Identification of Cattle and The Labelling of Beef was a law of the Federal State of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania of 1999, which was repealed in 2013. [1] It dealt with the control of beef labelling. [2] Professor Anatol Stefanowitsch, a linguist at the Freie Universität Berlin, told the German news agency dpa that the beef labelling law was the longest word “authentic” in the German language. It is the official short title of the act; Its full name is the Law on the Delegation of Tasks for the Supervision of Bovine Identification and Beef Labelling, in accordance with the Act on the Transfer of Supervisory Obligations of Bovine Identification and Beef Labelling. Most German laws have a short title consisting of a compound noun.

Germany`s longest word – Beef Labelling Monitoring Task Transfer Act – a 63-letter title of a law regulating beef testing – has officially ceased to exist. German is famous for its compound names, which often become so cumbersome that they have to be reduced to abbreviations. The beef labelling law, introduced in 1999 to protect consumers from BSE, has often been transcribed as “RkReÜAÜG”, but everyday words are also shortened to initials, so that trucks – trucks – become trucks. But it may not be such a big loss: because the word was used so rarely, it was not in dictionaries. The longest German word in the country`s official documents is the 39-letter legal expenses insurance company, an insurance company that provides legal protection. (English actually breaks this record, with the 45-letter Pneumonoultramickroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis.) Not only do people work closely together, but above all they live together, in very cramped conditions where there is no way to maintain social distancing. And now, let`s say goodbye to the Beef Labelling Oversight Task Transfer Act by listening to how it was pronounced: Bohl said subcontractors often make extra money by renting cheap buildings — such as old barracks or offices — to large numbers of workers. With 80 letters, the longest word ever written in German is Donaudampfschifffahrtselektrizitätenhauptbetriebswerkbauunterbeamtengesellschaft. “We were like modern slaves,” he said. “You can`t get sick, if you get sick, there was a very good chance that you would lose your job.” By Florence Schulz | EURACTIV.de | Current practice shows that the existing risk classification of food businesses means that “clean” businesses are inspected as often as visible businesses, the ministry writes. People who are learning German often find that they need to take a deep breath before embarking on the epic task of saying some of the compound names of the famous brobdingnag language of brobdingnag.

Why bother inventing new words, does German thought seem to disappear when you can just stick those that already exist together? Speed limits? It`s a speed limit – which you`ll likely pass before you get a chance to explore it. Do you want to thwart hackers? Try setting your password to glove snowball throwers or a colloquial term for coward. “That`s why we want to increase the monitoring pressure in problem farms through additional controls,” Klöckner said. “There were houses where you could even find 20 people,” Alex said. “It takes an asymptomatic person in a home to transmit the virus to everyone. You couldn`t isolate yourself alone in a full house. Although it depends on the subcontractor, Bohl was concerned that some would not be paid if they could not work during the pandemic. Despite the sporting and financial crisis of Bundesliga club Schalke, the club rejected an offer of help from former supervisory board chairman Clemens Tönnies. No other person divides the club as much as the 64-year-old. The German meat industry has been under fire for years because of its low labour standards and workers` rights. Coronavirus accumulations in slaughterhouses now offer the government the opportunity to intervene. EURACTIV Germany reports.

Germany produced less meat last year, while demand for vegan products skyrocketed. But schnitzel and sausages still far outperform plant-based alternatives on store shelves. With 9,333 of its more than 16,000 employees employed under this type of contract, the fact that Tönnies apparently wanted to circumvent the new law with the help of the new subsidiaries has sparked much public criticism. Strictly speaking, it consists of two words because a hyphen at the end of a word is used to indicate that the word ends in the same way as the next. Therefore, the two words would be Cattle Labelling Surveillance Task Transfer Act and Beef Labelling Monitoring Task Transfer Act. Cool and dry conditions in slaughterhouses should contribute to the spread of the coronavirus “The coronavirus outbreaks did not surprise us at all,” said Jonas Bohl of the German Gastronomy Society. “The surprise was rather that it took them a while to show up. The law has been repeatedly delayed due to differences of opinion between the parliamentary parties of the conservative CDU/CSU bloc and the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD). It must now be submitted to Parliament for approval in mid-December and will enter into force in early 2021. While German slaughterhouse workers have also worked during the pandemic, migrant workers are often isolated from the German community and institutions around them, and often do not have access to information in their own language, Chemnitz said.

The reason given for the 15 new subsidiaries was that these companies would allow Tönnies to implement direct recruitment at the various locations more quickly. “[Working] conditions make people sick and have been for a long time. Corona is just a magnifying glass that shows things that people already knew but had turned a blind eye to,” Bohl said. The new law aims to eliminate abusive working conditions in the meat industry that have helped hundreds of workers at German meat factories become infected with COVID-19. However, Dpa reports that such words have been used so rarely that they are not included in the dictionary. There, the longest honor word falls on auto liability insurance: auto liability insurance. Gero Hocker, the FDP`s spokesman in the Bundestag, however, praised the agricultural policy: “With current capabilities, it is expressly right to focus more on black sheep than to get bogged down in street checks. A number of meat factories across the country have temporarily closed after hundreds of workers tested positive for Covid-19 in recent weeks.