Minimal =
a. Smallest in amount or degree.
b. Small in amount or degree.
c. Only barely adequate.
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/minimal

P.S. While I am grateful (as a native English speaker) that English is currently the "lingua franca" for communication here and in many other settings, it really has its weaknesses for that role -- words that sound similar but have opposite meanings, multiple words that mean almost the same thing, too many exceptions to too many rules, etc., etc.  Consider that "flammable" and "inflammable" mean the same thing, but "coherent" and "incoherent" mean the opposite.  Esperanto anyone?  :-)

On Thu, Nov 27, 2014 at 7:05 AM, Avri Doria <avri@acm.org> wrote:

On 27-Nov-14 15:17, Seun Ojedeji wrote:
>
> I think that this should have nothing but staff, a minimal staff of one or
> two
>
I presume you intend to say MAXIMUM

Well I could have said "at maximum,"
but i meant that it was a minimal Contract Co. staff with a small number of employees doing the administrative tasks.  I don't really want to posit a maximum number, despite thinking it ought to be minimal.

avri


_______________________________________________
CWG-Stewardship mailing list
CWG-Stewardship@icann.org
https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cwg-stewardship




--

Gregory S. Shatan ï Abelman Frayne & Schwab

666 Third Avenue ï New York, NY 10017-5621

Direct  212-885-9253 Main 212-949-9022

Fax  212-949-9190 | Cell 917-816-6428

gsshatan@lawabel.com

ICANN-related: gregshatanipc@gmail.com 

www.lawabel.com