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1 derivative
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2 derivative
På dansk kaldet et afledt aktiv. En betegnelse for et finansielt instrument, hvis værdi afhænger af værdien på et underliggende aktiv. Som eksempel på afledte instrumenter kan nævnes options og futures. -
3 derivative
På dansk kaldet et afledt aktiv. En betegnelse for et finansielt instrument, hvis værdi afhænger af værdien på et underliggende aktiv. Som eksempel på afledte instrumenter kan nævnes options og futures. -
4 derive
1. verb( with from)1) (to come or develop from: The word `derives' is derived from an old French word.) komme fra; stamme fra2) (to draw or take from (a source or origin): We derive comfort from his presence.) udvinde; få•- derivative 2. noun(a word, substance etc formed from another word, substance etc: `Reader' is a derivative of `read'.) afledning; derivativ* * *1. verb( with from)1) (to come or develop from: The word `derives' is derived from an old French word.) komme fra; stamme fra2) (to draw or take from (a source or origin): We derive comfort from his presence.) udvinde; få•- derivative 2. noun(a word, substance etc formed from another word, substance etc: `Reader' is a derivative of `read'.) afledning; derivativ
См. также в других словарях:
derivative — de·riv·a·tive 1 /də ri və tiv/ n: a contract or security that derives its value from that of an underlying asset (as another security) or from the value of a rate (as of interest or currency exchange) or index of asset value (as a stock index) ◇… … Law dictionary
Derivative — De*riv a*tive, a. [L. derivativus: cf. F. d[ e]rivatif.] Obtained by derivation; derived; not radical, original, or fundamental; originating, deduced, or formed from something else; secondary; as, a derivative conveyance; a derivative word. [1913 … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Derivative — De*riv a*tive, n. 1. That which is derived; anything obtained or deduced from another. [1913 Webster] 2. (Gram.) A word formed from another word, by a prefix or suffix, an internal modification, or some other change; a word which takes its origin … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
derivative — [adj] borrowed, transmitted from source acquired, ancestral, caused, cognate, coming from, connate, copied, evolved, hereditary, imitative, inferential, inferred, not original, obtained, plagiaristic, plagiarized, procured, rehashed, secondary,… … New thesaurus
derivative — ► ADJECTIVE 1) chiefly derogatory imitative of the work of another artist, writer, etc. 2) (of a financial product) having a value deriving from an underlying variable asset. ► NOUN 1) something which is derived from another source. 2) a… … English terms dictionary
derivative — [də riv′ə tiv] adj. [ME derivatif < LL derivativus < L derivatus, pp. of derivare: see DERIVE] 1. derived 2. using or taken from other sources; not original 3. of derivation n. 1. something derived 2 … English World dictionary
derivative — early 15c. (adj.); mid 15c. (n.), from M.Fr. dérivatif (15c.), from L.L. derivativus, from pp. stem of L. derivare (see DERIVE (Cf. derive)). Mathematical sense is from 1670s … Etymology dictionary
Derivative — This article is an overview of the term as used in calculus. For a less technical overview of the subject, see Differential calculus. For other uses, see Derivative (disambiguation) … Wikipedia
derivative — Coming from another; taken from something preceding; secondary. That which has not its origin in itself, but owes its existence to something foregoing. Anything obtained or deduced from another @ derivative action A suit by a shareholder to… … Black's law dictionary
derivative — Coming from another; taken from something preceding; secondary. That which has not its origin in itself, but owes its existence to something foregoing. Anything obtained or deduced from another @ derivative action A suit by a shareholder to… … Black's law dictionary
derivative — derivatively, adv. derivativeness, n. /di riv euh tiv/, adj. 1. derived. 2. not original; secondary. n. 3. something derived. 4. Also called derived form. Gram. a form that has undergone derivation from anoth … Universalium