См. также: inclusive of VAT, incapacity for work, incur losses, including
An incomplete set of documents may be filed only when accompanied by the proper bond. (law.cornell.edu)
A term sheet is a bullet-point document outlining the material terms and conditions of a business agreement. After a term sheet has been "executed", it guides legal counsel in the preparation of a proposed "final agreement". It then guides, but is not necessarily binding, as the signatories negotiate, usually with legal counsel, the final terms of their agreement.
Term sheets are very similar to "letters of intent" (LOI) in that they are both preliminary, mostly non-binding documents meant to record two or more parties' intentions to enter into a future agreement based on specified (but incomplete or preliminary) terms. The difference between the two is slight and mostly a matter of style: an LOI is typically written in letter form and focuses on the parties' intentions; a term sheet skips most of the formalities and lists deal terms in bullet-point or similar format. There is an implication that an LOI only refers to the final form. A term sheet may be a proposal, not an agreed-to document. (Wikipedia)
defective performance. Complete or incomplete (partial) performance that does not fully satisfy the requirements of a contract. (BusinessDictionary)
The Latin term et cetera ("and the rest") is usually written as two words in Canadian English. However, the one-word spelling etcetera is also correct. The abbreviation for this term is etc. (Note that the c comes last; the misspelling ect. is a common error.)
Because it has become part of the English language, this term is not placed in italics, whether it is written in full or abbreviated.
Et cetera and its more common abbreviation, etc., are used to show that a list of at least two items is incomplete. The list may include either things or people:
Karen tries not to eat chips, chocolate, et cetera, even though she loves junk food.
Bart had read many bestselling Canadian authors: Michael Ondaatje, Margaret Laurence, Wayson Choy, etc. (TERMIUM Plus)
• incomplete
