Akademik

export
The customs procedure for taking Community goods out of the customs territory in order to ensure compliance with export restrictions (Art. 161 CC) EU Customs Glossary
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Movement of goods from the UK to a destination outside the EU, this includes the Channel Islands. HM Customs & Revenue Glossary

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I. export ex‧port 1 [ˈekspɔːt ǁ -ɔːrt] noun
1. [countable usually plural] COMMERCE a product or service that is sold to another country:

• A third of America's exports go to American-owned firms abroad.

• The Japanese cosmetics company plans to boost exports (= increase them ) to the US and Europe.

ˌinvisible ˈexports [plural] ECONOMICS COMMERCE
exports such as financial services that are not physical goods or products:

• Selling insurance overseas is one of Britain's largest invisible export.

ˌvisible ˈexports [plural] ECONOMICS COMMERCE
exports that are physical goods, for example industrial products and food:

• The value of the United Kingdom's visible exports to the United States of America has almost doubled over the last decade.

2. [uncountable] COMMERCE the sale of goods to other countries:

• The import and export of goods is more complicated than conducting domestic business within a single country.

• 10,000 bags of coffee for export to the continent

  [m0] II. export export 2 [ekˈspɔːt ǁ -ɔːrt] verb [intransitive, transitive]
1. COMMERCE to sell goods to other countries:

• In the first 11 months of last year, Brazil exported 15 million bags of coffee.

• The mine will produce 9 million tonnes of coal annually of which 5.3 million tonnes will be exported to Japan.

2. to introduce an activity, idea etc to another country:

• We are retailers, and our skills may not be easily exported.

3. COMPUTING to move computer information from one computer to another, from one computer document to another, or from one piece of software to another:

• Can I export the information in a pdf file and then store that file on my laptop?

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Ⅰ.
export UK US /ɪkˈspɔːt/ verb
[I or T] COMMERCE, ECONOMICS to send goods to another country for sale: »

Last year, the US exported $93 million worth of wine.

export sth to sth »

French cheeses are exported to many different countries.

»

The exchange rate is making it difficult for farms and factories to export.

»

Oil companies had contracts with an exporting countries that fixed prices and volumes.

See also RE-EXPORT(Cf. ↑re-export)
[T] to put something from one country into use in other countries: export sth to sth »

He believes the state's educational model can be exported to other states.

»

American culture has been exported all over the world.

[T] IT to copy a large amount of information on a computer either to a different part of the computer's storage space or to another form of storage such as a CD, so that it can be used for a different purpose: »

If they had all the right tools on the same platform they would not need to export data.

export sth to/into sth »

The only way to do this is to export the data into a spreadsheet.

export sth from sth »

This article tells you how to import and export files from UNIX to other systems.

exportable /ɪkˈspɔːtəbl̩/ US  /-ˈspɔːrṱə-/ adjective
»

The value of the new television technology to the company is that it is highly exportable to other countries.

Compare IMPORT(Cf. ↑import) noun
Ⅱ.
export UK US /ˈekspɔːt/ noun COMMERCE, ECONOMICS, TRANSPORT
[C, usually plural] a product that you sell in another country: »

Coffee is one of Brazil's main exports.

»

oil/arms/beef exports

increase/boost/promote exports »

We plan to increase our exports over the next five years.

»

ban/halt/control exports

»

a decline/growth in exports

See also INVISIBLE EXPORTS(Cf. ↑invisible exports), VISIBLE EXPORTS(Cf. ↑visible exports)
[ U] the activity or business of sending goods to another country in order to sell them there: the export of sth »

The ruling banned the export of live cattle.

»

Most of their crops are grown for export.

»

an export company/business

See also DIRECT EXPORT(Cf. ↑direct export), INDIRECT EXPORT(Cf. ↑indirect export)
Compare IMPORT(Cf. ↑import) verb, IMPORT-EXPORT(Cf. ↑import-export)
See Note IMPORT(Cf. ↑import)

Financial and business terms. 2012.