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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
export
I.noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
an export crop (=grown to be exported)
▪ Cocoa is the country's main export crop.
an export permit
▪ An export permit is required for the export of this timber.
an export/import ban
▪ The export ban on live cattle was brought in some years ago.
an import/export business
▪ Kingwell had an export business in New Zealand.
an import/export licence
▪ An export licence was issued in August last year.
export earnings (=money a company earns by exportings goods or services)
▪ Export earnings from oil bring valuable overseas currency into the country.
export goods
▪ The company exports Thai goods to Europe.
export sales (=sales of things to other countries)
▪ Export sales rose for the sixth consecutive month.
import/export quotas
▪ British industry was sheltered from foreign competition by higher tariffs and import quotas.
import/export restrictions (=trade restrictions)
▪ Import restrictions on manufactured goods have been lifted.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
agricultural
▪ One day, this planet could become an agricultural export world.
▪ For 1995, agricultural exports rose 50 percent, while mining exports increased 53 percent.
invisible
▪ This has been undesirable, but not of critical importance because our income from invisible exports has made good the difference.
▪ There were probably invisible exports too: exports of technical skill and artistry, exports of medicine and magic.
main
▪ Its main exports were salt and wine.
▪ It is the main beer export centre for the Group worldwide.
▪ Potash is one of the country's main exports and in 1979 work began on a £65 million extraction plant in Amman.
major
▪ But no-one is claiming this as a major export deal.
▪ A major new export industry has developed.
▪ Mr. Sainsbury All the major export credit agencies are reviewing cover for the Soviet Union.
▪ This proportion will change with gas becoming the major energy export in the early 1990s.
▪ For something over a century the major export item was beaver fur for felting and making into men's hats.
▪ Rotterdam has a major rôle in export refining and supply of products.
manufactured
▪ Small companies improved their share of manufactured exports to 15.3% in 1990 compared with 15.
▪ After two decades cotton came to account for a third of the increase in manufactured exports from 1784-6 to 1794-6.
▪ The success of our manufactured exports gives the lie to the Opposition's portrayal of manufacturing.
▪ As illustrated in figure 2A these top five markets take a 55% share of total manufactured exports.
total
▪ Oil exports totaled $ 8. 45 billion in 1995, representing 14 percent of total exports.
▪ I should mention that in relation to our total export turnover, sales through those agencies have not been significant.
▪ In 1992 total exports were valued at £1,991 million.
▪ Fig. 3 gives the top ten markets' percentage of total exports.
▪ This figure accounts for almost 5% of Grampian's total exports, and is significantly higher than the national figure of 2%.
▪ In the first fifteen years of the nineteenth century re-exporting still accounted for between a fifth and a quarter of total exports.
▪ By 1986, they accounted for one-third of total exports of manufactured goods, mainly in transport equipment, machinery and chemicals.
■ NOUN
business
▪ Unlike industry rivals such as Guinness, Highland has only a relatively small export business - about a third of its sales.
▪ The lack of organization among temporeros is integral to the country's busy fruit production and export business.
▪ She's after the export business.
control
▪ All export controls of armaments and all our customers are subject to the most rigorous control and scrutiny, as she knows.
▪ Ministers will make the concession during the consultation period that follows last week's publication of the arms exports controls bill.
▪ Since coming into office, the Clinton administration has removed export controls on most computers and telecommunications equipment.
crop
▪ White farms are key food producers and the source of tobacco, a crucial export crop.
▪ In 1989 transnationals controlled 70 per cent of international trade and 80 per cent of all the land growing export crops.
▪ Finally, the complementarity thesis predicts that services and subsidies for export crops will also benefit food crops.
▪ Rubber passed coconuts in importance as an export crop in the first decade of the twentieth century.
earnings
▪ Over 90 percent of export earnings comes from oil.
▪ Sugar was the third most important export after tobacco and tea, providing about 10 percent of export earnings.
▪ This increase in export earnings will stimulate the domestic economy.
▪ Though petroleum still makes up four-fifths of export earnings, he has made the country less dependent on oil.
growth
▪ Industrial production, investment and export growth have been worse than expected.
▪ Many multinationals told us they had switched supply accordingly, thus reducing the full extent of the export growth.
▪ Significant progress has been recorded only in respect of the budget deficit and manufactured export growth.
industry
▪ This can be very damaging for export industries and industries competing with imports.
▪ A major new export industry has developed.
licence
▪ The Cook, one of only two authenticated portraits of him, would not have gained an export licence.
▪ An export licence was issued in August last year, and this has now been extended until August 31, 1990.
▪ It lost all fruit along the way and by the time it received an export licence it was beyond drinking.
market
▪ The collapse of the export market for Yorkshire coal brought about the decline of the port.
▪ Cobra is on the hunt to fund an expansion in its 22 export markets.
▪ The healthy export market for four-wheel-drive vehicles contrasts sharply with the rest of the slump-hit industry.
▪ The range of articles produced on the home and export markets has grown considerably in recent years.
oil
▪ A high proportion of their oil export revenues has been invested in the world's main financial markets.
▪ The port closings halted crude oil exports from state-owned oil company Petroleos Mexicanos during the weekend and on Monday.
▪ By 1959 four-fifths of wheat and nine-tenths of soya bean oil exports were paid for in this way.
▪ Exports westward accounted for 40 % of all Middle East oil exports.
performance
▪ Market Research and Barriers to Exporting Fig. 5 illustrates factors that have inhibited improved export performance amongst respondents.
▪ Section 2 will consider the methods that have been used to allocate scarce foreign exchange and their effects on export performance.
price
▪ Under a presidential decree of Aug. 6, oil and gas export prices were deregulated soas to bring them into line with world prices.
▪ The combination of low export prices and high oil import prices means Mr Kufuor's government will have little room to manoeuvre.
▪ But local producers have lesser reputations and command lower export prices.
▪ By 1955 export prices were down to world levels, a development which must have accelerated the scrapping of old plant.
quota
▪ But production quotas would be even more difficult to enforce than export quotas.
▪ An export quota for sawn timber has not yet been set.
▪ After their system of export quotas broke down in 1989, world coffee prices almost halved.
sale
▪ Transworld has added up the units on the list for home and export sales.
▪ Because of low export sales, Jaguar is to make a further 700 redundancies.
▪ Indications are that the matter under investigation may be linked to the way in which these merchants book export sales.
▪ In export sales, Collins led with 1,609,788 units, or 20.75% of the market.
▪ Total domestic and export sales of all Vauxhall vehicles last year rose 10.3 percent to 402,617.
▪ Malt export sales for delivery over the next twelve months have gone exceptionally well.
▪ During that period, he also worked on export sales.
sector
▪ The export sector was freed before the import Sector.
▪ The primary industries are fishing and timber, important export sectors that nevertheless return little to the local economy.
subsidy
▪ In order to compensate firms for the loss of their retention rights, the federal government set up a scheme of export subsidies.
▪ Changes in tariffs and export subsidies might be used. 3.
trade
▪ This kept alive the nineteenth-century export trade in cadets of major ruling houses.
▪ Every na-tion has lost its export trade.
▪ It hopes for a significant export trade in this latest answer to civil disorder.
▪ News reports usually center on export trade to these countries.
▪ The move to the country outside had begun, and so had Aarau's export trade, at that time mostly textiles.
▪ Unemployment, reacting to the world slump and concentrated in the export trades, had risen steadily throughout 1930.
▪ Most of them were from the barbaric tribes nearer the frozen Hub, which had a sort of export trade in heroes.
▪ Its encouragement of textile production for its export trade helped the imperial revenue.
■ VERB
ban
▪ More than 90 countries drafted a treaty in September that would ban export and use of anti-personnel mines.
boost
▪ In an attempt to boost exports, the government increased incentives to companies setting up in export processing zones.
▪ That will lead them to seek weaker currencies to boost their exports, traders said.
▪ A large real depreciation of the peso has also helped, boosting exports in 1995 by over 30 percent in dollar terms.
▪ Do you have sufficient enterprises which are competitive on a world scale to boost your exports in this way?
▪ More food was to be imported and there would be continuing efforts to boost exports.
▪ The dogma of parity ruled out devaluation to boost exports.
▪ Its training programme is boosted by a software export policy introduced by the government last year.
▪ A$235 million would also go on measures to boost exports.
grow
▪ The farmers who are successful are those with medium-sized farms, who are growing for export.
▪ More and more land was needed to grow crops for export and in some cases for the domestic market.
▪ In 1989 transnationals controlled 70 per cent of international trade and 80 per cent of all the land growing export crops.
▪ Unsuitable large-scale farming is also being practised in some areas such as the Praslin watershed where bananas are grown for export.
▪ We are growing crops for export and we are getting foreign exchange.
▪ A large part of the cultivated land is used to grow export crops.
increase
▪ Foreign investment, Scott claims, may reduce food insecurity in a variety of ways, for example by increasing export diversification.
▪ Their first step, naturally, was to increase exports.
▪ Other countries use it to increase their exports.
▪ As well as increasing export earnings they also add to the pipeline network supplying the home market.
▪ As a result, it decided to increase its exports of steel.
▪ They blamed the job losses on automation of the timber industry and increasing exports of raw, unprocessed logs.
▪ The end of the Gulf war has prompted Rover Group to increase exports of its cars.
▪ A marginal saving in costs for Project, which is looking to increase its exports.
reduce
▪ Countries with lower inflation rates resisted revaluation as this would reduce export profitability.
rise
▪ Unemployment, reacting to the world slump and concentrated in the export trades, had risen steadily throughout 1930.
▪ Its exports rose by 24% in 1988, accounting for a third of the increase in world trade.
▪ In the third quarter of this year, our exports rose by 1 percent.
▪ For 1995, agricultural exports rose 50 percent, while mining exports increased 53 percent.
▪ However, the level of total exports and of exports of manufactures rose throughout the long boom and the 1970s.
▪ For 1995, those type of imports fell 35 percent, with those associated with export production rising 33 percent.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
invisible earnings/exports/trade etc
▪ Moreover, the major source of under-recording on the balance of payments up to 1949 was invisible trade.
▪ On this basis, Britain was the world's biggest generator of invisible earnings, and has probably remained so this year.
▪ Such earnings are little appreciated outside the specialist areas of business such as finance and insurance which directly contribute to invisible earnings.
▪ There were probably invisible exports too: exports of technical skill and artistry, exports of medicine and magic.
▪ This has been undesirable, but not of critical importance because our income from invisible exports has made good the difference.
▪ Trade gap narrows despite cut in invisible earnings.
market-led/export-led etc
▪ It is therefore more than ever necessary that the recovery should be export-led rather than led by domestic consumption.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ An international agreement restricts the export of missiles.
▪ Britain's total exports to the other EU member states now exceed imports.
▪ Saudi Arabia is one of the world's leading exporters of oil.
▪ The country's main export is coal.
▪ The value of China's exports to the US rose by over 50% last year.
▪ Wheat is one of our country's chief exports.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Again, these can be used to assess potential export demand or continuity of import supplies.
▪ It hopes for a significant export trade in this latest answer to civil disorder.
▪ It is trading ahead of this time last year, when sales were hit by the Gulf war, but exports are slowing.
▪ It was in this context of increased regulation and hazard export that Raybestos Manhattan came to Ireland.
▪ The directive also applies to objects not returned at the end of a lawful temporary export.
▪ Yet the partners poured money into modernization, believing exports would give Quaker a profitable future.
II.verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
company
▪ We have many companies exporting high quality products to markets throughout the world.
▪ The company also exports programs to owners of computers in the United States.
country
▪ In all but the smallest countries export success, at least in manufactures, depends largely on a solid domestic market.
▪ Individuals in most countries know that exporting is important, and that export success impacts at all levels of society.
▪ Poor countries exporting to the industrialised world face tariffs four times as high as those facing rich countries.
▪ These seem amazing facts in a country which daydreams about exporting its democracy.
▪ At these allocations the home country exports manufactures and imports food.
▪ Less determined countries export their waste and thus acquire an undeserved reputation for being green.
▪ In this case the home country exports good 1, just as in the partial equilibrium model discussed in the previous section.
goods
▪ Briefly, they exported manufactured goods and capital, and they imported raw materials.
▪ Foreign-funded enterprises exported goods worth $ 665 million, up 33 percent over 1994, the report said.
▪ From Sept. 15 foreigners were forbidden to export scarce consumer goods, unless purchased for hard currency.
▪ A nation should restrict its foreign trade so that it exported more finished goods than it imported.
▪ The South exported textiles and electronic goods in return for zinc and semi-finished products from the North.
output
▪ Typically, firms have been required to export all their output to attract the full set of incentives.
▪ However, we now make a distinction between output delivered to the domestic market and exported output.
product
▪ We have many companies exporting high quality products to markets throughout the world.
▪ About 40 % of the foodequipment business is international, but it consists chiefly of exporting products to distributors and licensees abroad.
▪ Rather than focus on big leveraged buyouts, Ripplewood will primarily look at medium-size businesses with potential to export their products.
▪ They moved, in short, from exporting products to exporting jobs.
■ VERB
import
▪ There is a tremendous deficit between what we import and what we export.
▪ We could import and export anything.
▪ It will also import and export a good range of standard formats.
▪ There is one way, and only one way, in which a country can import more than it exports.
▪ Every civilization imports and exports aspects of its culture.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
invisible earnings/exports/trade etc
▪ Moreover, the major source of under-recording on the balance of payments up to 1949 was invisible trade.
▪ On this basis, Britain was the world's biggest generator of invisible earnings, and has probably remained so this year.
▪ Such earnings are little appreciated outside the specialist areas of business such as finance and insurance which directly contribute to invisible earnings.
▪ There were probably invisible exports too: exports of technical skill and artistry, exports of medicine and magic.
▪ This has been undesirable, but not of critical importance because our income from invisible exports has made good the difference.
▪ Trade gap narrows despite cut in invisible earnings.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Ancient artefacts cannot be exported.
▪ In 1986 they exported 210,000 cases of wine to the UK.
▪ Japanese televisions and hi-fi systems are exported all over the world.
▪ The influence of African music has been exported to many parts of the western world.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ At these allocations the home country exports manufactures and imports food.
▪ Foreign-funded enterprises exported goods worth $ 665 million, up 33 percent over 1994, the report said.
▪ She felt very strongly about animals being exported live to the continent for slaughter, horses or cattle.
▪ They pay for the weapons they carry, and for the guns he exports to arm the rebels destabilising his neighbours.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Export

Export \Ex*port"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Exported; p. pr. & vb. n. Exporting.] [L. exportare, exportatum; ex out+portare to carry : cf. F. exporter. See Port demeanor.]

  1. To carry away; to remove. [Obs.]

    [They] export honor from a man, and make him a return in envy.
    --Bacon.

  2. To carry or send abroad, or out of a country, especially to foreign countries, as merchandise or commodities in the way of commerce; -- the opposite of import; as, to export grain, cotton, cattle, goods, etc.

Export

Export \Ex"port\, n.

  1. The act of exporting; exportation; as, to prohibit the export of wheat or tobacco.

  2. That which is exported; a commodity conveyed from one country or State to another in the way of traffic; -- used chiefly in the plural, exports.

    The ordinary course of exchange . . . between two places must likewise be an indication of the ordinary course of their exports and imports.
    --A. Smith.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
export

by 1610s, "carrying out of a place;" perhaps from late 15c., from Latin exportare "to carry out, bring out; send away, export," from ex- "away" (see ex-) + portare "carry" (see port (n.1)). The sense of "send out (commodities) from one country to another" is first recorded in English 1660s. Related: Exported; exporting; exporter.

export

1680s, from export (v.).

Wiktionary
export
  1. of or relating to exportation or exports n. 1 (context countable English) something that is exported 2 (context uncountable English) the act of exporting v

  2. 1 (context transitive English) to carry away 2 (context transitive English) to sell (goods) to a foreign country 3 (context transitive English) to cause to spread in another part of the world 4 (context transitive computing English): to send (data) from one program to another 5 (context transitive English) to put up (a child) for international adoption.

WordNet
export
  1. n. commodities (goods or services) sold to a foreign country [syn: exportation] [ant: import]

  2. v. sell or transfer abroad; "we export less than we import and have a negative trade balance" [ant: import]

  3. cause to spread in another part of the world; "The Russians exported Marxism to Africa"

Gazetteer
Export, PA -- U.S. borough in Pennsylvania
Population (2000): 895
Housing Units (2000): 513
Land area (2000): 0.381411 sq. miles (0.987851 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.381411 sq. miles (0.987851 sq. km)
FIPS code: 24432
Located within: Pennsylvania (PA), FIPS 42
Location: 40.416251 N, 79.623679 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 15632
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Export, PA
Export
Wikipedia
EXPORT

EXPORT is an exobiology project led by the European Space Agency, that deployed an external module to the International Space Station to study the photo-processing of organic molecules and the survival of some micro-organisms, as well as the effect of solar UV on unshielded organic molecules and micro-organisms while exposed to outer space.

Export (disambiguation)

Export is the movement of goods, or selling of services out of a country, area or settlement.

Export may also refer to:

Export (cigarette)

Export is a Canadian line of cigarettes and rolling tobacco produced by JTI Macdonald. It was introduced in 1928 by Macdonald Tobacco as Macdonald's Gold Standard, the boxes were marked "Export" and they quickly became known under that name. The most recognized products are the Export 'A' product line. However, JTI also produces an unfiltered 'Export Plain' cigarette and Export rolling tobacco.

Usage examples of "export".

The missile gyroscopes Iraq illegally acquired in 1995 came from Russian submarine-launched nuclear-armed ballistic missiles, which strongly suggests that the Russian government too has been at least cavalier about illegal arms exports to Iraq.

The bull was particularly bellicose in tone and the French retaliated, expelling Italian bankers from the realm and, much more to the point, cutting off the export of money, which denied the papacy a considerable part of its income.

England should sell for twenty shillings a quarter, the merchant might export into France, and afford it to the people of that kingdom for eighteen shillings, because the bounty on exportation would, even at that rate, afford him a considerable advantage.

A general tax laid on all property alike, including that intended for export, is not within the prohibition, if it is not levied on goods in course of exportation nor because of their intended exportation.

Where the sale to a commission merchant for a foreign consignee was consummated by delivery of the goods to an exporting carrier, the sale was held to be a step in the exportation and hence exempt from a general tax on sales of such commodity.

The giving of a bond for exportation of distilled liquor is not the commencement of exportation so as to exempt from an excise tax spirits which were not exported pursuant to such bond.

The number and quality of the articles exported from France were extravagantly exaggerated.

His side business, importing and exporting wool, like all businesses on Lowth, grew less each year.

That they were manipulatable at all was a tribute to a few small dedicated families who had settled on their home world and made quite a nice business out of training and exporting the animals.

Blue Boar too that I had met Mansfield for that crucial meeting in my last term when he had posed as an export director of an engineering company and discussed the prospect of my joining his firm.

The Porticus Aemilia in the Port of Rome was a very long building which housed firms and agents dealing with shipping, import and export.

The vegetable product through which this protectorate first attracted trade was coffee, the export of which, however, has passed through very disheartening fluctuations.

Tree Frog beer since the affair with the Quincunx, when somebody had tried to poison him by slipping mescalomide into a bottle of Export Dark.

For unauthorized dealing in the trophies of certain scheduled wild game, as opposed to mere poaching or hunting, for buying and reselling and exporting, the maximum penalty will be twelve years at hard labour and a fine not exceeding one hundred thousand dollars.

Italian straw hats exported to the United States are not made in Italy but are of Japanese origin, as are also the sennit braids used in the sewed straw hats made in the United States and in England.