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income+generated

  • 21 сформированный доход

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > сформированный доход

  • 22 einbringen

    (unreg., trennb., hat -ge-)
    I v/t
    1. (Geld) bring in; (Gewinn, Zinsen etc.) auch yield; netto: net; (Preis) fetch; jemandem etw. einbringen (Ruf, Ruhm etc.) earn s.o. s.th.; es bringt mir... ein it gets me...; es hat mir viel / nur Ärger eingebracht it caused me a lot of / nothing but trouble; das bringt nichts ein it doesn’t pay, it isn’t worth it ( oder the candle); ( Kosten) wieder einbringen recover (costs)
    2. (mitbringen) (Kapital, Ideen etc.) contribute (in + Akk to); etw. in die Ehe einbringen bring s.th. into ( oder contribute s.th. to) a marriage
    3. (Antrag etc.) introduce; eine Gesetzesvorlage einbringen introduce a bill; eine Klage einbringen JUR. file an action
    4. (Ernte, Heu etc.) bring in, harvest; (Schiff) bring in ( in den Hafen to port)
    5. (Verlust, Zeit) make up (for)
    6. DRUCK. (Zeile) get ( oder take) in
    7. Amtsspr. (Entflohene) capture, catch
    II v/refl: sich in eine oder einer Beziehung, Diskussion etc. einbringen make a contribution (to); sich voll einbringen put a lot of time (and energy) into it
    * * *
    (Ernte) to harvest; to take in; to get in;
    (Geld) to fetch; to earn;
    (Nutzen) to yield; to bring in
    * * *
    ein|brin|gen
    vt sep
    1) (PARL) Gesetz to introduce
    2) (= Ertrag bringen) Geld, Nutzen to bring in; Ruhm to bring; Zinsen to earn

    jdm etw éínbringen — to bring/earn sb sth

    das bringt nichts ein (fig)it's not worth it

    3)

    etw in die Ehe éínbringen — to bring sth into the marriage

    etw in die Firma éínbringen — to put sth into the firm

    4) (= hineinbringen, - schaffen) to put in (
    in +acc -to); Schiff to bring in ( in +acc -to); Ernte to bring or gather in
    5) (TYP) Zeilen to take in
    6)

    éínbringen — to play a part in sth

    éínbringen — to get sb involved in sth

    sie brachte ihre Kenntnisse in die Diskussion einshe brought her knowledge to bear in the discussion

    * * *
    2) (to propose or put forward: He introduced a bill in Parliament for the abolition of income tax.) introduce
    * * *
    ein|brin·gen
    I. vt
    [jdm] etw \einbringen to bring [sb] sth
    Zinsen \einbringen to earn [or yield] interest
    2. (einfließen lassen)
    etw [in etw akk] \einbringen to bring sth in[to sth], to bring sth to bear in sth
    Kapital in ein Unternehmen \einbringen to contribute capital to a company
    seine Erfahrung \einbringen to bring one's experience to bear in sth
    etw \einbringen Ernte to bring [or gather] in sth
    etw [in etw dat] \einbringen to introduce [or propose] sth [in sth]
    einen Antrag \einbringen to table a motion
    Zeit \einbringen to catch [or make] up [on] time
    II. vr
    sich akk \einbringen to contribute
    * * *
    1.
    unregelmäßiges transitives Verb
    1) bring or gather in < harvest>
    2) (verschaffen) yield < profit> bring in <interest, money>; bring <fame, honour>

    das bringt nichts einit isn't worth it

    3) (Parl.): (vorlegen) introduce < bill>
    4) (in eine Gemeinschaft, Gesellschaft usw.) invest <capital, money>
    2.
    * * *
    einbringen (irr, trennb, hat -ge-)
    A. v/t
    1. (Geld) bring in; (Gewinn, Zinsen etc) auch yield; netto: net; (Preis) fetch;
    jemandem etwas einbringen (Ruf, Ruhm etc) earn sb sth;
    es bringt mir … ein it gets me …;
    es hat mir viel/nur Ärger eingebracht it caused me a lot of/nothing but trouble;
    das bringt nichts ein it doesn’t pay, it isn’t worth it ( oder the candle);
    (Kosten) wieder einbringen recover (costs)
    2. (mitbringen) (Kapital, Ideen etc) contribute (
    in +akk to);
    etwas in die Ehe einbringen bring sth into ( oder contribute sth to) a marriage;
    von den Benutzern eingebracht Inhalte auf Website etc: user-generated
    3. (Antrag etc) introduce;
    eine Klage einbringen JUR file an action
    4. (Ernte, Heu etc) bring in, harvest; (Schiff) bring in (
    in den Hafen to port)
    5. (Verlust, Zeit) make up (for)
    6. TYPO (Zeile) get ( oder take) in
    7. ADMIN (Entflohene) capture, catch
    B. v/r:
    sich in eine oder einer Beziehung, Diskussion etc
    einbringen make a contribution (to);
    sich voll einbringen put a lot of time (and energy) into it
    * * *
    1.
    unregelmäßiges transitives Verb
    1) bring or gather in < harvest>
    2) (verschaffen) yield < profit> bring in <interest, money>; bring <fame, honour>
    3) (Parl.): (vorlegen) introduce < bill>
    4) (in eine Gemeinschaft, Gesellschaft usw.) invest <capital, money>
    2.
    * * *
    (Gesetzesvorlage) v.
    to introduce v. (Thema, Frage) v.
    to introduce v. v.
    to bring in v.
    to fetch v.
    to yield v.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > einbringen

  • 23 dohodak od proizvodnje

    • production generated income

    Serbian-English dictionary > dohodak od proizvodnje

  • 24 balance sheet

    Fin
    a financial report stating the total assets, liabilities, and owners’ equity of an organization at a given date, usually the last day of the accounting period. The debit side of the balance sheet states assets, while the credit side states liabilities and equity, and the two sides must be equal, or balance.
    EXAMPLE
    Assets include cash in hand and cash anticipated (receivables), inventories of supplies and materials, properties, facilities, equipment, and whatever else the company uses to conduct business. Assets also need to reflect depreciation in the value of equipment such as machinery that has a limited expected useful life.
         Liabilities include pending payments to suppliers and creditors, outstanding current and long-term debts, taxes, interest payments, and other unpaid expenses that the company has incurred.
         Subtracting the value of aggregate liabilities from the value of aggregate assets reveals the value of owners’ equity. Ideally, it should be positive. Owners’ equity consists of capital invested by owners over the years and profits (net income) or internally generated capital, which is referred to as “retained earnings”; these are funds to be used in future operations.
         As an example:

    The ultimate business dictionary > balance sheet

  • 25 effective tax rate

    Fin
    the average tax rate applicable to a given transaction, whether it is income from work undertaken, the sale of an asset, or a gift, taking into account personal allowances and scales of tax. It is the amount of money generated by the transaction divided by the additional tax payable because of it.

    The ultimate business dictionary > effective tax rate

  • 26 trading, profit and loss account

    Fin
    an account which shows the gross profit or loss generated by an entity for a period ( trading account), and after adding other income and deducting various expenses shows the profit or loss of the business (the profit and loss account). Some small entities combine the two accounts.

    The ultimate business dictionary > trading, profit and loss account

  • 27 Bain, Alexander

    [br]
    b. October 1810 Watten, Scotland
    d. 2 January 1877 Kirkintilloch, Scotland
    [br]
    Scottish inventor and entrepreneur who laid the foundations of electrical horology and designed an electromagnetic means of transmitting images (facsimile).
    [br]
    Alexander Bain was born into a crofting family in a remote part of Scotland. He was apprenticed to a watchmaker in Wick and during that time he was strongly influenced by a lecture on "Heat, sound and electricity" that he heard in nearby Thurso. This lecture induced him to take up a position in Clerkenwell in London, working as a journeyman clockmaker, where he was able to further his knowledge of electricity by attending lectures at the Adelaide Gallery and the Polytechnic Institution. His thoughts naturally turned to the application of electricity to clockmaking, and despite a bitter dispute with Charles Wheatstone over priority he was granted the first British patent for an electric clock. This patent, taken out on 11 January 1841, described a mechanism for an electric clock, in which an oscillating component of the clock operated a mechanical switch that initiated an electromagnetic pulse to maintain the regular, periodic motion. This principle was used in his master clock, produced in 1845. On 12 December of the same year, he patented a means of using electricity to control the operation of steam railway engines via a steam-valve. His earliest patent was particularly far-sighted and anticipated most of the developments in electrical horology that occurred during the nineteenth century. He proposed the use of electricity not only to drive clocks but also to distribute time over a distance by correcting the hands of mechanical clocks, synchronizing pendulums and using slave dials (here he was anticipated by Steinheil). However, he was less successful in putting these ideas into practice, and his electric clocks proved to be unreliable. Early electric clocks had two weaknesses: the battery; and the switching mechanism that fed the current to the electromagnets. Bain's earth battery, patented in 1843, overcame the first defect by providing a reasonably constant current to drive his clocks, but unlike Hipp he failed to produce a reliable switch.
    The application of Bain's numerous patents for electric telegraphy was more successful, and he derived most of his income from these. They included a patent of 12 December 1843 for a form of fax machine, a chemical telegraph that could be used for the transmission of text and of images (facsimile). At the receiver, signals were passed through a moving band of paper impregnated with a solution of ammonium nitrate and potassium ferrocyanide. For text, Morse code signals were used, and because the system could respond to signals faster than those generated by hand, perforated paper tape was used to transmit the messages; in a trial between Paris and Lille, 282 words were transmitted in less than one minute. In 1865 the Abbé Caselli, a French engineer, introduced a commercial fax service between Paris and Lyons, based on Bain's device. Bain also used the idea of perforated tape to operate musical wind instruments automatically. Bain squandered a great deal of money on litigation, initially with Wheatstone and then with Morse in the USA. Although his inventions were acknowledged, Bain appears to have received no honours, but when towards the end of his life he fell upon hard times, influential persons in 1873 secured for him a Civil List Pension of £80 per annum and the Royal Society gave him £150.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1841, British patent no. 8,783; 1843, British patent no. 9,745; 1845, British patent no.
    10,838; 1847, British patent no. 11,584; 1852, British patent no. 14,146 (all for electric clocks).
    1852, A Short History of the Electric Clocks with Explanation of Their Principles and
    Mechanism and Instruction for Their Management and Regulation, London; reprinted 1973, introd. W.Hackmann, London: Turner \& Devereux (as the title implies, this pamphlet was probably intended for the purchasers of his clocks).
    Further Reading
    The best account of Bain's life and work is in papers by C.A.Aked in Antiquarian Horology: "Electricity, magnetism and clocks" (1971) 7: 398–415; "Alexander Bain, the father of electrical horology" (1974) 9:51–63; "An early electric turret clock" (1975) 7:428–42. These papers were reprinted together (1976) in A Conspectus of Electrical Timekeeping, Monograph No. 12, Antiquarian Horological Society: Tilehurst.
    J.Finlaison, 1834, An Account of Some Remarkable Applications of the Electric Fluid to the Useful Arts by Alexander Bain, London (a contemporary account between Wheatstone and Bain over the invention of the electric clock).
    J.Munro, 1891, Heroes of the Telegraph, Religious Tract Society.
    J.Malster \& M.J.Bowden, 1976, "Facsimile. A Review", Radio \&Electronic Engineer 46:55.
    D.J.Weaver, 1982, Electrical Clocks and Watches, Newnes.
    T.Hunkin, 1993, "Just give me the fax", New Scientist (13 February):33–7 (provides details of Bain's and later fax devices).
    DV / KF

    Biographical history of technology > Bain, Alexander

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