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1 excess
[ik'ses] 1. noun1) (the (act of) going beyond normal or suitable limits: He ate well, but not to excess.) pretiravanje2) (an abnormally large amount: He had consumed an excess of alcohol.) preveč3) (an amount by which something is greater than something else: He found he had paid an excess of $5.00 over what was actually on the bill.) presežek2. adjective(extra; additional (to the amount needed, allowed or usual): He had to pay extra for his excess baggage on the aircraft.) presežen- excessively
- excessiveness
- in excess of* * *I [iksés]nounprekoračenje, preobilnost, presežek; plural izgredi, nasilna dejanja; mathematics ostanekin excess of — več kot, prek česaexcess luggage — prtljaga, ki presega dopustno težoII [iksés]transitive verb & intransitive verbzahtevati doplačilo; plačati doplačilo -
2 fare
[feə]1) (the price of a journey on a train, bus, ship etc: He hadn't enough money for his bus fare.) voznina2) (a paying passenger in a hired vehicle, especially in a taxi: The taxi-driver was asked by the police where her last fare got out.) potnik* * *I [fwə]intransitive verbuspevati; hraniti se, jesti in piti; počutiti se; archaic potovati, peljati se, iticolloquially how fares it? — kako ti (vam) gre?poetically fare thee well — mnogo uspehapoetically to fare forth — kreniti na potII [fʌ/ə]nounprevoznina, voznina; jed, hrana; potnik; ulov (ribiške barke)any more fares? — še kdo brez vozovnice? -
3 income
['iŋkəm](money received by a person as wages etc: He cannot support his family on his income.) dohodek- income-tax return* * *[ínkəm]nounprihod; economy dohodekearned income — dohodek od dela, zaslužekunearned income — renta, dohodek od kapitalaBritish English small incomes relief — davčna olajšava zaradi nizkega dohodkaAmerican income statement — obračun dobička in izgube -
4 profit
['profit] 1. noun1) (money which is gained in business etc, eg from selling something for more than one paid for it: I made a profit of $8,000 on my house; He sold it at a huge profit.) dobiček2) (advantage; benefit: A great deal of profit can be had from travelling abroad.) korist2. verb((with from or by) to gain profit(s) from: The business profited from its exports; He profited by his opponent's mistakes.) imeti dobiček- profitably* * *I [prɔfit]nouneconomy dobiček, korist; (često plural) dohodek, skupiček, čisti dohodek; juridically donos (od zemlje); korist, prednostsmall profits quick returns — majhen, a takojšen dobičekto turn s.th. to profit — obrniti kaj sebi v pridII [prɔfit]1.intransitive verbimeti dobiček, narediti dobiček (by, from s čim); biti koristen;2.transitive verbkoristiti komu (čemu), izkoriščati kaj
См. также в других словарях:
excess — ► NOUN 1) an amount that is more than necessary, permitted, or desirable. 2) lack of moderation, especially in eating or drinking. 3) (excesses) outrageous or immoderate behaviour. 4) Brit. a part of an insurance claim to be paid by the insured.… … English terms dictionary
EXCESS — (Roget s Thesaurus II) Index excess noun excess (2), surplus, wordiness adjective excessive, extravagant, heavy, profuse, superfluous, wordy verb … English dictionary for students
excess fare — noun Payment for distance travelled beyond, or in a higher class than, that allowed by the ticket • • • Main Entry: ↑excess * * * excess fare UK US noun [countable] [singular excess fare plural … Useful english dictionary
excess — noun a) The state of surpassing or going beyond limits; the being of a measure beyond sufficiency, necessity, or duty; that which exceeds what is usual or proper; immoderateness; superfluity; superabundance; … Wiktionary
excess capacity — ➔ capacity * * * excess capacity UK US noun [U] ► ECONOMICS, COMMERCE the ability to hold or deal with a larger number of people or things than is needed at the present time: »The airline has shifted some of its excess capacity from Asian to… … Financial and business terms
excess demand — ➔ demand * * * excess demand UK US noun [U] ► ECONOMICS a situation in which customers want more of a product or service than is available: excess demand for sth »When there is excess demand for housing, house prices rise quickly … Financial and business terms
excess fare — ➔ fare * * * excess fare UK US noun [C] ► an amount of money a passenger has to pay if they do not have the correct ticket: »If you have a season ticket but are riding out of your zone, you will be charged an excess fare … Financial and business terms
excess baggage — Ⅰ. excess baggage ► bags, cases, etc. that weigh more than the weight you are allowed to take onto a plane, or the extra money you have to pay for it to be taken: »On the return trip we were charged $80 excess baggage. Main Entry: ↑baggage Ⅱ.… … Financial and business terms
excess — noun 1. /əkˈsɛs / (say uhk ses), /ˈɛk / (say ek ) the fact of exceeding something else in amount or degree. 2. /əkˈsɛs / (say uhk ses), /ˈɛk / (say ek ) the amount or degree by which one thing exceeds another. 3. /əkˈsɛs / (say uhk ses), /ˈɛk /… …
excess-loss reinsurance — noun : reinsurance by a company agreeing to bear any loss in excess of a stipulated amount often with some maximum limitation compare excess insurance, excess reinsurance … Useful english dictionary
excess luggage — or excess baggage noun Luggage above the weight allowed free • • • Main Entry: ↑excess … Useful english dictionary