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1 ♦ profit
♦ profit /ˈprɒfɪt/n. [uc]1 profitto; beneficio; frutto; giovamento: to turn st. to profit, mettere qc. a profitto; trarre vantaggio da qc.2 (econ., fin., rag.) profitto; guadagno; utile; ricavo: pre-tax profits, utili ante imposte (o al lordo della tassazione); taxable profits, guadagni soggetti a tassazione; net profit, utile netto; gross profit, utile lordo; net profit, profitto netto; healthy profit, profitto consistente; at a profit, vantaggiosamente; ricavando un utile: We sold our farm at a profit, abbiamo guadagnato sulla vendita del podere; to make (o to turn) a profit, ricavare un utile, fare un guadagno; to yield profits, dare profitti; essere redditizio; to reap the profits of, raccogliere i frutti di● profit and loss account, conto profitti e perdite; conto economico □ profit-bearing = profit-making ► sotto (agg.) □ profit forecast, previsione degli utili □ profit graph, diagramma di redditività; profittogramma □ profit-making, (agg.) proficuo; lucrativo; ( di un'azienda) in attivo; (sost.) realizzo di profitti □ profit margin, (econ.) margine di profitto; (rag.) redditività netta delle vendite □ (econ.) profit push, spinta dei profitti □ profit seeking, ricerca del profitto □ profit-sharer, compartecipe agli utili; cointeressato □ profit-sharing, compartecipazione agli utili; interessenza, cointeressenza □ profit squeeze, riduzione degli utili □ ( Borsa) profit-taking, presa di beneficio; vendita di realizzo □ (fisc.) profit tax, imposta sui profitti (spec. di Borsa) □ non-profit (o not-for-profit), che non ha fini (o senza scopo) di lucro; non lucrativo; non profit; ONLUS.(to) profit /ˈprɒfɪt/A v. i.profittare (di); approfittare (di); trarre profitto (da): Many companies profited from slavery during the 18th century, nel Settecento molte aziende trassero profitto dalla schiavitù; We hope to profit from the recent economic recovery, speriamo di approfittare della ripresa economica recenteB v. t.giovare a (q.); esser di profitto a (q.); servire: What can it profit us?, di che profitto può esserci?; a che può giovarci? -
2 economic
[ˌiːkə'nɒmɪk, ˌek-]1) [crisis, policy, sanction, cost, management] economico2) (profitable) [proposition, business] redditizio, rimunerativo* * *[i:kə'nomik]1) (of or concerned with (an) economy: the country's economic future.) economico2) (likely to bring a profit: an economic rent.) redditizio* * *[ˌiːkə'nɒmɪk, ˌek-]1) [crisis, policy, sanction, cost, management] economico2) (profitable) [proposition, business] redditizio, rimunerativo -
3 squeeze
I [skwiːz]1)to give sb. a squeeze — dare una stretta a qcn. (in segno di affetto), abbracciare qcn
3) econ. stretta f., restrizione f.to put the squeeze on — colloq. fare pressione su [ debtors]
4) colloq.II [skwiːz]we can all get in the car but it will be a (tight) squeeze — in macchina ci stiamo tutti, ma staremo un po' schiacciati
1) (press) spremere [lemon, tube]; comprimere, schiacciare [bottle, bag, parcel]; stringere [arm, hand]; premere [ trigger]; schiacciare [ spot]to squeeze toothpaste onto sth. — mettere del dentifricio su qcs
2) fig. (get)to squeeze the truth out of sb. — strappare la verità a qcn
3) (fit)to squeeze behind, under sth. — infilarsi dietro, sotto qcs
4) econ. restringere [profit, margins]; schiacciare [ small business]•* * *[skwi:z] 1. verb1) (to press (something) together or from all sides tightly: He squeezed her hand affectionately; He squeezed the clay into a ball.) stringere; spremere2) (to force (eg oneself) eg into or through a narrow space: The dog squeezed himself / his body into the hole; We were all squeezed into the back seat of the car.) infilarsi; schiacciare3) (to force something, eg liquid, out of something by pressing: She squeezed the oranges (into a jug); We might be able to squeeze some more money/information out of him.) spremere2. noun1) (an act of squeezing: He gave his sister an affectionate squeeze.) stretta, abbraccio2) (a condition of being squeezed: We all got into the car, but it was a squeeze.) calca, ressa3) (a few drops produced by squeezing.) (poche gocce), schizzo4) (a time of financial restriction: an economic squeeze.) crisi; compressione•- squeezer- squeeze up* * *squeeze /skwi:z/n.1 [uc] compressione ( anche fis.); schiacciamento; pigiata; pressione ( anche fig.): (fam.) to put the squeeze on sb., fare (o esercitare) forti pressioni su q.3 stretta; abbraccio4 [cu] spremuta; strizzata; poche gocce, schizzo: with a squeeze of lemon, con uno schizzo di limone9 (econ., fin.) severe restrizioni; giro di vite (fig.); stretta; crisi: a squeeze on imports, severe restrizioni alle importazioni; the recent credit squeeze, la recente stretta creditizia; the everlasting housing squeeze, l'eterna crisi degli alloggi● (fam.) squeeze-box, fisarmonica □ (fin., USA) squeeze-out, fusione per eliminare gli azionisti di minoranza □ squeeze roller, (fotogr.) rullo asciugatore; (ind. tess.) cilindro spremitore □ a close (o narrow) squeeze, un brutto rischio; l'essersi salvato a stento □ to be in a tight squeeze, essere pigiati come le sardine; (fig.) essere in un grosso guaio, essere alle strette.♦ (to) squeeze /skwi:z/A v. t.1 spremere ( anche fig.); stringere; comprimere; premere; pigiare; strizzare; (fig.) estorcere, spillare: to squeeze oranges, spremere arance; to squeeze money out of sb., spremere denaro da q.; to squeeze sb. 's hand, stringere vigorosamente la mano a q.; to squeeze the trigger, premere il grilletto; to squeeze a wet cloth, strizzare un panno bagnato2 far passare a forza; infilare: I squeezed my hand through the bars, ho infilato la mano tra le sbarre3 comprimere; schiacciare; pigiare: They squeezed their guests into a small room, hanno stipato i loro ospiti in una stanzetta; He was squeezed to death in the crowd, è morto schiacciato dalla folla4 forzare; mettere alle strette; esercitare (o fare) pressioni su: to squeeze the government, esercitare pressioni sul governoB v. i.1 essere compressibile; lasciarsi spremere3 (econ.) esercitare una pressione economica● ( rugby) to squeeze the ball over the goal line (o over the line), schiacciare la palla in meta □ to squeeze into a room, pigiarsi per entrare in una stanza □ to squeeze ( out) a tear, spremere una lacrimuccia □ to squeeze one's way through the demonstrators, farsi avanti a spinte fra i dimostranti □ ( Borsa) squeezed bear, ribassista messo alle strette (o con le spalle al muro).* * *I [skwiːz]1)to give sb. a squeeze — dare una stretta a qcn. (in segno di affetto), abbracciare qcn
3) econ. stretta f., restrizione f.to put the squeeze on — colloq. fare pressione su [ debtors]
4) colloq.II [skwiːz]we can all get in the car but it will be a (tight) squeeze — in macchina ci stiamo tutti, ma staremo un po' schiacciati
1) (press) spremere [lemon, tube]; comprimere, schiacciare [bottle, bag, parcel]; stringere [arm, hand]; premere [ trigger]; schiacciare [ spot]to squeeze toothpaste onto sth. — mettere del dentifricio su qcs
2) fig. (get)to squeeze the truth out of sb. — strappare la verità a qcn
3) (fit)to squeeze behind, under sth. — infilarsi dietro, sotto qcs
4) econ. restringere [profit, margins]; schiacciare [ small business]•
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