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1 deduct
طَرَحَ \ banish: to put sth. out of one’s mind: She could not banish her grief for her dead child. deduct: to take away (sth., usu. money) from sth. else, usu. a larger amount of money; subtract: Money will be deducted from your weekly pay, if you come late to work. discard: to throw sth. away as unwanted: Don’t discard that box, it may be useful. pitch: to throw with a sudden sharp movement: My horse pitched me off its back. scrap: to make no more use of (sth. that is worn out or no longer suitable): We’ve scrapped our holiday because it would cost too much. subtract: to take away (an amount in numbers): If you subtract 2 from 7, you leave 5. throw away: free oneself of sth. wnwanted (by putting it in a waste-paper basket, etc.): We throw away empty cigarette packets. \ See Also تخلص من (تَخَلَّصَ مِن)، أَلْقَى جانِبًا، أَنْقَصَ، خصم (خَصَمَ)، نبذ (نَبَذَ) -
2 deduct
اِقْتَطَعَ \ clip: to cut short, cut neatly: She clipped the photograph out of the newspaper. deduct: to take away (sth., usu. money) from sth. else, usu. a larger amount of money; subtract: Money will be deducted from your weekly pay, if you come late to work. -
3 deduct
أَنْقَصَ \ decrease: to make or become less. deduct: to take away (sth., usu. money) from sth. else, usu. a larger amount of money; subtract: Money will be deducted from your weekly pay, if you come late to work. reduce: to make less: Reduce speed when you come to a bend in the road. I bought that at a reduced price, lose weight on purpose: No sugar, thank you. I’m trying to reduce (my weight). \ See Also خفض (خَفَّضَ)، نقص (نَقَصَ) -
4 deduct
خَصَمَ \ deduct: to take away (sth., usu. money) from sth. else, usu. a larger amount of money; subtract: Money will be deducted from your weekly pay, if you come late to work. -
5 deduct
[dɪ'dʌkt]Engineering: ddt -
6 deduct
[dɪˈdakt] verbto subtract; to take away:يَحْسِم، يَخْصُمThey deducted the expenses from his salary.
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7 discount, deduct, rebate
حَسَمَ \ discount, deduct, rebate. \ See Also خصم (خَصَم) -
8 fratrække
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9 odečíst
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10 отсчитайте
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11 zakidati
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12 вычесть
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13 вычитать
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14 slevit
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15 išskaitymas
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16 išskaityti
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17 засчитать
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18 производить вычет
Banks. Exchanges. Accounting. (Russian-English) > производить вычет
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19 производить удержание
Banks. Exchanges. Accounting. (Russian-English) > производить удержание
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20 вычитать
См. также в других словарях:
deduct — de‧duct [dɪˈdʌkt] verb [transitive] 1. to take away an amount from a total: • Brazil has about 48 million bags of coffee available for sale; from this, deduct about eight million bags for domestic use. 2. ACCOUNTING to take away an amount from an … Financial and business terms
Deduct — De*duct , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Deducted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Deducting}.] [L. deductus, p. p. of deducere to deduct. See {Deduce}.] 1. To lead forth or out. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] A people deducted out of the city of Philippos. Udall. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
deduct — deduct, subtract mean to take away one quantity from another. Deduct usually is used in reference to amounts (as of costs, payments, or credits) while subtract is used in reference to numbers or to figures obtained by a computation or calculation … New Dictionary of Synonyms
deduct — de·duct vt: to take away (an amount) from a total; specif: to take as a deduction must be capitalized...rather than immediately deduct ed D. Q. Posin compare amortize Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 … Law dictionary
deduct — (v.) early 15c., from L. deductus, pp. of deducere lead down, bring away; see DEDUCE (Cf. deduce), with which it formerly was interchangeable. Technically, deduct refers to taking away portions or amounts; subtract to taking away numbers. Related … Etymology dictionary
deduct — [v] take away or out; reduce abstract, allow, bate, cut back, decrease by, diminish, discount, dock, draw back, knock off, lessen, rebate, reduce, remove, roll back, subtract, take, take from, take off, withdraw, write off; concepts 236,247 Ant.… … New thesaurus
deduct — ► VERB ▪ subtract or take away from a total. ORIGIN Latin deducere to take or lead away … English terms dictionary
deduct — [dē dukt′, didukt′] vt. [ME deducten < L deductus, pp. of deducere: see DEDUCE] to take away or subtract (a quantity) … English World dictionary
deduct — 01. Because she has to travel all over the place for her work , she can [deduct] her car as a business expense. 02. If you hand your assignment in late, I will [deduct] 5% for each day it is overdue. 03. The profits are lower than they appear… … Grammatical examples in English
deduct — UK [dɪˈdʌkt] / US verb [transitive] Word forms deduct : present tense I/you/we/they deduct he/she/it deducts present participle deducting past tense deducted past participle deducted to take an amount or number from a total deduct something from… … English dictionary
deduct — v. (D; tr.) to deduct from (to deduct a tax from one s wages) * * * [dɪ dʌkt] (D;tr.) to deductfrom (to deducta tax from one s wages) … Combinatory dictionary