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trade for

  • 1 Trade For Photos

    Chat: TFP

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Trade For Photos

  • 2 Trade For Prints

    Chat: TFP

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Trade For Prints

  • 3 Debt Aid Trade For Africa

    American: DATA

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Debt Aid Trade For Africa

  • 4 Debt Aids And Trade For Africa

    American: DATA

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Debt Aids And Trade For Africa

  • 5 Trade

       Owing to the Anglo-Portuguese Alliance, England ( Great Britain after 1707) was, until the 1920s, Portugal's main trading partner. The Methuen Treaty (1703) stipulated that Portuguese wines and English woolens would be exempt from custom duties. The imperial nationalist economic ideas of the Estado Novo directed Portuguese trade toward its Africa colonies of Angola, Mozambique, and Guinea- Bissau. The historical importance of the British export market to Portuguese trade necessitated Portugal becoming a charter member of the European Free Trade Area (EFTA) in 1959.
       When Britain joined the European Economic Community (EEC) in 1973, Portugal had to follow, with a trade agreement with the European Union (EU). Negotiations between Portugal and the EU produced an accord that stipulated mutual tariff reductions, until their disappearance in mid-1977 on industrial products, while EU member states were allowed to restrict some Portuguese textiles and paper and cork products. Tariffs were also reduced for Portuguese tinned tomatoes and fish, as well as for port wine. Since gaining full membership in the EU in 1986. Portugal's trade has shifted strongly toward continental EU member states. In the 1990s, EEC/EU member states purchased nearly 75 percent of Portugal's exports and supplied nearly 70 percent of its imports. Within the EEC/EU, Britain, Germany, France, and Spain are Portugal's a main trading partners. Portuguese trade with its former colonies fell sharply after the Revolution of 25 April 1974, as Portugal turned away from Africa and toward Europe.
       In 2007, Portugal's major commodity exports have been textiles, clothing, footwear, machinery, transportation equipment, paper and cork products, wine, tomato paste, chemicals, and plastic products. Portugal's comparative advantage lies in its low hourly costs for skilled labor, which are about 20 percent lower than other EU member states. Manufactured goods account for about 75 percent of merchandise imports; food and beverages about 10 percent; and raw materials (mainly petroleum) about 15 percent.

    Historical dictionary of Portugal > Trade

  • 6 trade

    تِجَارَة \ business: trade in general: Social disorder is bad for business. Business is quiet today. commerce: trade esp. with other nations; buying and selling goods. trade: the business of buying and selling: foreign trade; the motor trade.

    Arabic-English glossary > trade

  • 7 trade

    [treɪd]
    1. noun
    1) the buying and selling of goods:

    Japan does a lot of trade with Britain.

    تِجارَه
    2) (a) business, occupation, or job:

    He's in the jewellery trade.

    حِرْفَه، مِهْنَه، عَمَل تِجاري
    2. verb
    1) ( often with in or with) to buy and sell:

    They trade in fruit and vegetables.

    يُتاجِر
    2) to exchange:

    I traded my watch for a bicycle.

    يُبادِل، يَتَبادَل البَضائِع

    Arabic-English dictionary > trade

  • 8 trade in

    to give (something) as part-payment for something else: We decided to trade in our old car and get a new one (noun ˈtrade-in)
    يَشْتَري ويُعْطي السَّيّاره كجُزءْ من الثَّمَن

    Arabic-English dictionary > trade in

  • 9 trade name

    Mktg
    the proprietary name given by the producer or manufacturer to a product or service. A trade name occasionally becomes the generic name for products of a similar nature, for example, “Thermos” is often applied to all insulated flasks, and “Kleenex” to all tissues.

    The ultimate business dictionary > trade name

  • 10 trade union

    نِقَابَة \ trade union: a workers’ official group which fights for higher pay for its members. \ See Also اتِّحاد عُمَّال

    Arabic-English glossary > trade union

  • 11 trade union

    نِقَابَة عُمَّال \ union: (short form of trade union) a worker’s official group, which fights for better conditions for its members.

    Arabic-English glossary > trade union

  • 12 FÖR

    from fara.
    * * *
    f., gen. farar; old pl. farar, later and mod. farir; the acc. with the article is in old writers often contracted, förna = förina; [fara, cp. far, ferð]:—a ‘fare,’ journey, Nj. 11; er þeir váru komnir á för, when they had started, 655 iii. 3; vera heim á för, to be on the road home, Ísl. ii. 362; vera í för með e-m, to be in company with one. Eg. 340; var brúðrin í för með þeim, Nj. 50: a procession, Lex. Poët.; bál-för, lík-f., funerals; brúð-f., a bridal procession.
    2. chiefly in pl. journeys; hvat til tíðinda hafði orðit í förum hans, what had happened in his journeys, Eg. 81:—of trading voyages (far-maðr), vera í fo:;rum, to be on one’s travels, Ld. 248, Nj. 22; eiga skip í förum, to own a trading ship, Fb. i. 430, (cp. fara milli landa, to fare between countries, i. e. to trade, Hkr. pref.): fara frjáls manns förum, to fare ( live) about free, to live as a free man, N. G. L. i. 32; svefn-farar, sleep, Gísl.; að-farir, treatment.
    3. in law, of vagrants (vide fara A. I. 2); dæma för úmögum, Grág. i. 87; dæma e-m för, 86; dæma úmaga (acc.) á för, to declare one a pauper, order him to ‘fare’ forth, 93, passim in the law (förumaðr).
    4. a hasty movement, a rush; þá syndusk þar miklir hundar ok görðu för at Petro, 656 C. 29; var för (MS. for) í sortanum, the cloud was drifting swiftly, Fms. vii. 163, cp. far:—the phrases, vér munum fara allir sömu förina, all the same way, in a bad sense, xi. 154; munt þú hafa farar Hákonar jarls, x. 322; vera á föru (mod. förum), to be on the wane; lausafé hans er mér sagt heldr á förum, Þorf. Karl. 366; þá var nokkut á föru (förum, pl.) virkit Bersa, there was something wrong with B.’s castle, it was going into ruin, Korm. 148.
    5. an expedition, in compds, Vatns-dals-för, Apavatns-för, Grímseyjar-för, Reykhóla-för, Kleifa-för, the expedition to Vatnsdale, Apavatn, etc., Sturl., Ann.
    COMPDS: farabók, farahagr, fararbann, fararbeini, fararblómi, fararbroddr, fararbúinn, farardvöl, fararefni, farareyrir, fararfé, farargögn, farargreiði, fararhapt, fararhestr, fararhlass, fararkaup, fararleyfi, fararmaðr, fararmungát, fararnautr, fararorlof, fararskjótr, fararskjótalaust, fararstafr, farartálmi.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > FÖR

  • 13 trade(s) union

    a group of workers of the same trade who join together to bargain with employers for fair wages, better working conditions etc.
    نِقابَة عُمّال

    Arabic-English dictionary > trade(s) union

  • 14 trade(s) union

    a group of workers of the same trade who join together to bargain with employers for fair wages, better working conditions etc.
    نِقابَة عُمّال

    Arabic-English dictionary > trade(s) union

  • 15 Trade Development Board

    Fin
    a government agency that was established in 1983 to promote trade and explore new markets for Singapore products, and offers various programs of assistance to companies.
    Abbr. TDB

    The ultimate business dictionary > Trade Development Board

  • 16 trade mission

    Fin
    a visit by businessmen from one country to another for the purpose of discussing trade between their respective nations

    The ultimate business dictionary > trade mission

  • 17 trade war

    Econ
    competition between two or more countries for a share of international or domestic trade

    The ultimate business dictionary > trade war

  • 18 trade credit

    Fin
    credit offered by one business when trading with another. Typically this is for one month from the date of the invoice, but it could be for a shorter or longer period.

    The ultimate business dictionary > trade credit

  • 19 For Trade

    1) General subject: FT ('Обменяю', в объявлениях)
    2) Business: FT

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > For Trade

  • 20 Joint Committee for Investment and Trade

    Trade: JCIT

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Joint Committee for Investment and Trade

См. также в других словарях:

  • History of trade for the People's Republic of China — Trade has been a very significant factor of the People s Republic of China s economy. In the twenty five years that followed the founding of the People s Republic of China in 1949, China s trade institutions were built into a partially modern but …   Wikipedia

  • TRADE AND COMMERCE — In the Bible The geopolitical location of Palestine, set as it is in the heart of the Fertile Crescent, made it a pivotal link in the commercial activities carried on by land and sea between, on the one hand, Egypt and the Arabian Peninsula in… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Trade — A verbal (or electronic) transaction involving one party buying a security from another party. Once a trade is consummated, it is considered done or final. Settlement occurs 1 5 business days later. The New York Times Financial Glossary * * * ▪ I …   Financial and business terms

  • trade — An oral (or electronic) transaction involving one party buying a security from another party. Once a trade is consummated, it is considered done or final. settlement occurs 1 5 business days later. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary A trade is a deal …   Financial and business terms

  • trade — [[t]tre͟ɪd[/t]] ♦ trades, trading, traded 1) N UNCOUNT: usu with supp Trade is the activity of buying, selling, or exchanging goods or services between people, firms, or countries. The ministry had direct control over every aspect of foreign… …   English dictionary

  • Trade —    Though centrally placed in Europe, Austria was historically a side road in European and worldwide trading patterns. Vienna and Linz, both on the Danube River, had lively mercantile communities in the Middle Ages, but their turnover did not… …   Historical dictionary of Austria

  • trade — I n. commerce, business 1) to carry on, conduct, engage in trade 2) to build up, develop, drum up, promote; lose trade 3) to restrain, restrict trade 4) (a) brisk, lively trade (they built up a lively trade) 5) fair trade 6) domestic; export;… …   Combinatory dictionary

  • trade in — verb turn in as payment or part payment for a purchase (Freq. 1) trade in an old car for a new one • Syn: ↑trade • Derivationally related forms: ↑trade in, ↑trade (for: ↑trade) …   Useful english dictionary

  • Trade —    Egypt was largely self sufficient in agriculture and raw materials; nevertheless, trade developed in the Levant beginning in the Predynastic Period for such luxury imports as wine, olive oil, lapis lazuli, and later for such necessities as… …   Ancient Egypt

  • trade — /treɪd/ noun 1. the business of buying and selling ♦ adverse balance of trade situation when a country imports more than it exports ● The country had an adverse balance of trade for the second month running. ♦ to do a good trade in a range of… …   Dictionary of banking and finance

  • trade-last — noun a compliment that I heard about you that I offer to trade for a compliment you have heard about me • Hypernyms: ↑compliment * * * ˈ ̷ ̷ˌ ̷ ̷ noun ( s) : a complimentary remark by a third person that a hearer offers to repeat to the person… …   Useful english dictionary

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