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1 автолавка (a truck that drives to business and sells food outside the truck)
General subject: roach coachУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > автолавка (a truck that drives to business and sells food outside the truck)
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2 BUSINESS
• Business before pleasure - Делу - время, потехе - час (Д), Кончил дело, гуляй смело (K)• Business comes before pleasure - Кончил дело, гуляй смело (K)• Business first, pleasure afterwards - Делу - время, потехе - час (Д), Кончил дело, гуляй смело (K)• Business is business - Дружба - дружбой, а служба - службой (Д), По службе - ни друга, ни не друга (П)• Business is business, and love is 1оvе - Дружба - дружбой, а служба - службой (Д), По службе - ни друга, ни не друга (П)• Business is the salt of life - Где труд, там и счастье (Г)• Everybody's business is nobody's business - Где много пастухов, там овцы дохнут (Г), У семи нянек дитя без глазу (У)• Mind your own business - Не суй свой нос в чужой вопрос (H)• That's no business of mine - Моя хата с краю (M), Не мой воз, не мне его и везти (H)• You can't mix business and pleasure - Дело с бездельем не смешивай (Д), Игра игрою, а дело делом (H) -
3 business administration
Gen Mgt1. a form of management. Business administration is used as a synonym for management, notably in government or the public sector. This use has developed from the administration school of thought established by Henri Fayol, which defines management activities as a set of processes. He argued that to manage was to plan, organize, coordinate, command, and control. These principles were put into exemplary practice by Alfred P. Sloan, Jr. at General Motors and are often seen as characteristic of large bureaucracies.2. the establishment and maintenance of procedures, records, and regulations in the pursuit of a commercial activity. Business administration involves the conduct of activities leading to, and resulting from, the delivery of a product or service to the customer. Administration is often seen as paperwork and formfilling, but it reaches wider than that to encompass the coordination of all the procedures that enable a product or service to be delivered, together with the keeping of records that can be checked to identify errors or opportunities for improvement. -
4 business school
Gen Mgt1. a higher education institution that offers undergraduate and graduate courses in business-related subjects. Business schools provide courses of varying length and level, up to the Master of Business Administration. They cater for full-time students, but also offer part-time and distance learning to those already in employment. Subject coverage is broad, and courses cover all areas of business administration, management, technology, finance, and interpersonal skills.2. in the United States, a department of a university or college that provides similar types of courses -
5 business
مَسْأَلَة \ affair: often plural business: Family affairs kept him at home. business: matter; event: That murder was a shocking business. issue: a matter that causes disagreement and needs to be settled: political issues. matter: an affair; a question: a business matter; a social matter; a matter of opinion. question: a matter: Success in football is a question of skill, not of strength, an uncertain matter The question of his pay has not yet been decided. -
6 business
عَمَلٌ \ act: a deed; sth. done: Men judge us by our acts, not by our words. action: doing things: We want more action and less talk. activity: sth. one does; a form of work or play: Music and swimming are among our school activities. affair: a happening; event; action: The meeting was a noisy affair. appointment: the position for which sb. is chosen: I hope to get a government appointment. business: one’s work: My business is writing books. career: one’s job in life: What career shall I follow on leaving school? A business career?. deed: sth. done; an act: an evil deed. doing: (an) action: This damage was not my doing. Tell me about your doings in London. employment: work; activity: I am growing lazy for lack of employment. function: special work or duty: The function of an ear is to hear. job: regular employment: He has an office job. They lost their jobs when the factory closed, a piece of work I have several jobs to do in my garden. labour: hard work (esp. work with the hands; digging, lifting, carrying, etc.): Heavy labour is very tiring. occupation: employment; job: What is your occupation? Are you a teacher?. operation: the working of a machine or plan: The law is not yet in operation - it comes into operation next year. performance: (an act of) performing: Our team’s performance has been very good this year. There were seven performances of the play. post: a job with particular duties; an official position: He held the post of headmaster for ten years. profession: (used loosely, in a general sense) any work or job. thing: an action: You did the wrong thing. undertaking: a job that has been undertaken: a dangerous undertaking. work: doing or making sth.; sth. that needs doing; the opposite of rest and play: school work; office work; work in the home; a brain always at work (always busy), employment; a paid job He has left school and started work. I’m out of work (unemployed). Jane is at work (at her place of work), sth. sb. has made or done Writers have to sell their work. This crime was the work of a madman.. A work of art: the works of Shakespeare (his plays and poems; to be busy (for some good purpose) \ See Also نشاط (نَشاطٌ)، وظيفة (وَظيفَة) -
7 business
[ˈbɪznɪs] noun1) occupation; buying and selling:مِهْنَةٌ، وَظيفَه، عَمَلThe shop does more business at Christmas than at any other time.
2) a shop, a firm:تِجارَه، مُؤَسّّسَةٌ تِجارِيَّه، دُكّانHe owns his own business.
3) concern:شَأْن، مُهِمَّه، اهْتِمامLet's get down to business (= Let's start the work etc that must be done).
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8 business
مُهِمَّة \ business: concern; duty: It’s my business to find out who did it. commission: an official appointment (of various kinds): a commission in the army; a commission to inquire into the conditions in prisons. errand: a short journey for the purpose of taking or getting sth.: She sent the boy on an errand to the market. He often ran errands (or went on errands) for his mother. job: a piece of work: I have several jobs to do in my garden. mission: a journey that is made on some special duty: He was sent on a dangerous mission to find out enemy secrets. task: a piece of work (usu. hard work) that has to be done: I was given the task of preparing the sports field for the races. -
9 business
أَمْر \ affair: often plural, business: Family affairs kept him at home. business: matter; event: That murder was a shocking business. command: an order: His commands were always obeyed. matter: an affair; a question: a business matter; a social matter; a matter of opinion. order: a command (spoken or written): Officers give orders to their men. thing: a matter; an affair: He told me some strange things. -
10 business continuity
Gen Mgtthe uninterrupted maintenance of business activities. Ensuring business continuity requires a proactive process of identifying essential business functions within an organization and threats to those functions. Plans and procedures may then be put in place to ensure that key functions can continue whatever the circumstances. Plans may be drawn up, for example, for contingency, disaster, and risk management, or for total loss control. -
11 business gift
Mktga present, usually from a supplier to a customer, often used to maintain good relations. Business gifts may range from a pen to a hamper and are often a form of merchandising. The acceptance of a business gift is often governed by an organization’s code of conduct and is often forbidden on the grounds that business gifts, particularly high value ones, may be seen as an attempt to bribe. -
12 business unit
Gen Mgta part of an organization that operates as a distinct function, department, division, or stand-alone business. Business units are usually treated as a separate profit center within the overall, owning business. -
13 business
مِهْنَة \ business: one’s work: My business is writing books. career: one’s job in life: What career shall I follow on leaving school? A business career?. occupation: employment; job: What is your occupation? Are you a teacher?. profession: (used loosely, in a general sense) any work or job. trade: a form of work that needs skill in making or repairing things, etc.: a bricklayer’s trade. -
14 business
شُغْل \ business: one’s work: My business is writing books. employment: work; activity: I am growing lazy for lack of employment. job: regular employment: He has an office job. They lost their jobs when the factory closed. occupation: employment; job: What is your occupation? Are you a teacher?. practice: a doctor’s or lawyer’s business: Dr Grant has a large practice (many people choose to be treated by him). work: doing or making sth.; sth. that needs doing; the opposite of rest and play: school work; office work; work in the home; a brain always at work (always busy), sth. sb. has made or done Writers have to sell their work. This crime was the work of a madman. A work of art; the works of Shakespeare (his plays and poems). \ See Also عمل (عَمَل) -
15 business failure
Gen Mgtan organization that has gone bankrupt. A business that is at risk of failure may be saved by turnaround management, which identifies and deals with the reasons for decline. -
16 business cluster
Gen Mgta group of small firms from similar industries that team up and act as one body. Creating a business cluster enables firms to enjoy economies of scale usually only available to bigger competitors. Marketing costs can be shared and goods can be bought more cheaply. There are also networking advantages, in which small firms can share experiences and discuss business strategies. -
17 business process reengineering
Gen Mgt, Opsthe initiation and control of the change of processes within an organization, in order to derive competitive advantage from improvement in the quality of products. Business process reengineering was popularized by Michael Hammer. It requires a review and imaginative analysis of the processes currently used by the organization. BPR, therefore, has similarities to benchmarking, as this review of processes can reveal critical points where significant improvements in quality can be made. Business process reengineering was at the height of its popularity in the early to mid-1990s. It has been criticized as one of the root causes of the bouts of downsizing and delayering that have affected many parts of industry. It has also received a negative press because few BPR projects have delivered the benefits expected of them.Abbr. BPRThe ultimate business dictionary > business process reengineering
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18 business efficiency
Gen Mgta situation in which an organization maximizes benefit and profit, while minimizing effort and expenditure. Maximization of business efficiency is a balance between two extremes. Managed correctly, it results in reduced costs, waste, and duplication. Max Weber, who developed the concept of the bureaucracy, believed that efficiency was the goal of all bureaucratic organizations, which were designed to run like smooth machines. The greater the efficiency, the more impersonal, rational, and emotionally detached a bureaucracy becomes. The flatter organizations more prevalent today attempt to be more customer-responsive than efficient in this sense, and the notion of such an ordered and impersonal efficiency has lost favor in an era when creativity and innovation are valued as a competitive advantage. -
19 business entity concept
Finthe concept that financial accounting information relates only to the activities of the business entity and not to the activities of its owner(s) -
20 business intelligence
Gen Mgtany information that can be of strategic use to a business
См. также в других словарях:
That’s show business (for you). — sent. That is the way that life really is. (Also with biz and show biz.) □ And now the ar won’t start. That’s show business for you. □ Too bad about the bad investment. That’s show biz … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
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