The full sentence is as below:
This Agreement shall be governed by the laws of the People's Republic of China without regard to its conflict of laws principles, as if wholly performed therein.
I think 'therein' refers to 'in China', and 'as if wholly performed therein' means 'as if the agreement is wholly performed in China by both parties'. Am I right?
Added: Yes, you are. The document is valid ANYWHERE just the same as if the signatories were in China.
Thank you!
rapt
of Disaffect, Alienated in feeling; not wholly loyal.
"The old American purposes are still wholly relevant" (John F. Kennedy).Meaning still completely relevant- or still completely of importance.
wholly entirely totally absolutely completely
Wholly, as in "I am wholly committed to this cause."
A few defintions for deaf are: partially or wholly lacking or deprived of the sense of hearing; unable to hear.
adverb. The budget measures were wholly inadequate. I am wholly yours.
The homophone for "holy" is "wholly."
I'm not really sure about the thology bit: But that to pursue policies, which might just might have been seen as beneficial to his own people, (the Germans) was wholly detrimental to the world as a whole, and was finally wholly detrimental to Germany, can only be seen as wholly immoral. And this statement makes no mention of the genocide perpetrated therein, which is compared only with the slave trade in its horror in the history of mankind. And no: I don't think I'd even like to enter into the conversation because Hitler would say he was right to do as he did. Plainly he was not.
Wholly Communion was created in 1965.
Wholly Smoke was created in 1938.
'Shall Not' and 'Will Not' have two wholly different meaning. Won't and Shan't are the constricted abbreviations of the words. Shalln't is bad english and simply wrong. As to Won't, that's not the same meaning.