A condition that must be met is a requirement.
Targets that simply must be met.
To determine if speech is considered obscene, it must meet the Miller Test, which includes three standards: (1) The speech must appeal to the prurient interest, meaning it must provoke lustful thoughts; (2) It must depict or describe sexual conduct in a patently offensive way, as defined by community standards; and (3) It must lack serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value. If all three criteria are met, the speech may be deemed obscene and thus not protected under the First Amendment.
Correct grammar is "She met with John and me" because singular, "She met with me" makes more sense then "She met with I"
The predicate is the verb which describes the action. In other words what did Lucy and Neil (the subjects) do? They MET Morey, right? So what they did was: MET. Your answer is MET.
No, the word "met" is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb to meet.
And condition
"The coefficient of the x^2 term must be positive" is a condition that does not have to be met.
An OR condition.
An AND condition.
Elections.
The kinematic equation can be used to calculate an object's motion when it moves with constant acceleration. The condition that must be met for it to be applicable is that the acceleration of the object remains constant throughout its motion.
A series of conditions must be met to affect an output condition.
The light bulb must be properly connected to a power source and the switch must be turned on. If these conditions are met and the bulb is not burnt out, it should turn on when electricity flows through it.
The event E must be well defined.
That one may factor under the radical.
The phase sequence must be the same
For a rigid body to be in equilibrium, two conditions must be met: the sum of all external forces acting on the body must be zero, and the sum of all external torques acting on the body must also be zero.