socorro
relief ; succour [succor, -USA] ; help ; aid ; mayday.
The report concluded that the problems of rural populations 'do not differ greatly from those of the urban population though the difficulties in obtaining help and relief can be exacerbated by isolation'.
The Government has vowed to provide 'all possible succour' to the people affected by the cyclone that has left a trail of death and devastation.
The entry is first located with the help of searching.
Indexing may be conducted entirely without the aid of a computer, or may rely to varying extents upon the facilities for the manipulation and ordering of data offered by the computer.
It appears they sent out a mayday without his knowledge and when he found out he tried to disable the alarm system.
llamada de socorro [Deformación de la palabra francesa m'aider (ayudarme)]
distress call
mayday call
mayday
The security firm, famous for its eagle-eyed officers, responded to a distress call from a teenager who was attacked while his parents were out.
The final mayday call by a hero British pilot who died after ditching his passenger plane into the sea was released today.
It appears they sent out a mayday without his knowledge and when he found out he tried to disable the alarm system.
señal de socorro [Deformación de la palabra francesa m'aider (ayudarme)]
mayday call
mayday
The final mayday call by a hero British pilot who died after ditching his passenger plane into the sea was released today.
It appears they sent out a mayday without his knowledge and when he found out he tried to disable the alarm system.
sociedad de socorros mutuos
friendly society
provident society
mutual benefit society
The origins of this institution - part trade union, part friendly society, and part social club - are obscure, but chapels were well established by the mid sixteenth century in the larger continental shops.
Wilson thought that most of these objectives were unattainable by provident societies, since they were governed by people of various religious denominations.
Most mutual benefit societies formed to provide financial assistance for members who were unable to work because of illness, funeral and burial expenses, pensions for widows and orphans, and low-interest loans.