Any person suffering physical and/or psychological damage that leads to death, injury, or material loss.
A person killed, admitted to hospital, or injured requiring medical attention as a result of a road crash. Excludes injured persons who do not require medical attention.
Any person who is lost to the organization by reason of having been declared dead, wounded, injured, diseased, interned, captured, retained, missing, missing in action, beleaguered, besieged, or detained.
a person killed or injured by an event.23
someone injured or killed or captured or missing in a military engagement
someone injured or killed in an accident
an accident that causes someone to die
a person who is the victim of an accident, injury, or trauma In medicine, a trauma patient has suffered serious and life-threatening physical injury resulting in secondary complications such as shock, respiratory failure and death
a sudden, unexpected and unusual event, such as a hurricane, wild fire, or tornado resulting in the partial or complete destruction of property
A military person lost through death, wounds, injury, sickness, internment, capture, or missing in action.
A person fatally injured, or who sustains injuries and is recorded as a personal injury in a collision/incident.
The complete or partial destruction of property resulting from an identifiable event of a sudden, unexpected, or unusual nature.
Refers to a loss, particularly the loss of a ship.
Loss or liability arising from an accident or mishap, excluding certain losses or liabilities which, by law or custom, are considered as falling exclusively within the scope of protection provided by fire or marine insurance. Casualty includes, but is not limited to, losses or liability covered by employees' liability, workers' compensation, public liability, automobile liability, plate glass, burglary, and theft insurance.
An accident that could not have been predicted or avoided, such as a ship sinking in a storm at sea. Also used to mean the loss of life in such an accident.
A loss of property due to fire, storm shipwreck or other casualty, which is allowable as a deduction in computing taxable income.
The damage, destruction, or loss of property resulting from an identifiable event that is sudden, unexpected, or unusual. A sudden event is one that is swift, not gradual or progressive. An unexpected event is one that is ordinarily unanticipated and unintended. An unusual event is one that is not a day-to-day occurrence and that is not typical of the activity in which you were engaged. A casualty occurs when property is damaged as a result of a disaster such as a storm, fire, car accident, or similar event.
Liability or loss resulting from an accident.
n. A fatal or serious accident or disaster.
Accident; event due to sudden, unexpected or unusual cause, event not to be foreseen or guarded against; misfortune or mishap.
One injured or killed in an accident.
A casualty occurs when property is damaged as a result of a disaster such as a hurricane, fire, car accident or similar event. Generally, you may deduct a casualty loss only in the tax year in which the loss occurred. However, if you have a casualty loss from a disaster that occurred in an area declared by the President or the Governor as a disaster area, the loss may be claimed for the year in which the disaster occurred, or the year immediately before the loss.
Any person who is lost to the organization by reasons of having been declared dead, missing, captured, interned, wounded, injured, or seriously ill.
Section of the General Insurance business comprising the following classes of insurance -- Liability, Burglary, Glass, Accident and Sickness, Fidelity and Surety, Boiler and Machinery, etc.
A soldier who was wounded, killed, or missing in action.
a person injured, killed or missing; someone who is not fit and able to fight (in the case of a soldier)
An accident occurrence or event or the person to whom it happens; the general term applied to insurance coverages for an accident occurrence or event.
A casualty is a person who is the victim of an accident, injury, or trauma. The word casualties is most often used by the media to describe deaths and injuries resulting from wars or disasters. Among the general public, casualties is sometimes misunderstood to be the same thing as fatalities (deaths), but non-fatal injuries are also casualties.