business 1 [businesses, -pl ] - traducción al Inglés
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business 1 [businesses, -pl ]businesses, -pl ] - traducción al Inglés

MarketPlace: Households; MarketPlace: BUsiness; MarketPlace: BUsinesses; MarketPlace: Business

business1 [businesses, -pl.]      
(n.) = comercio, negocio

Def: Referido a la actividad comercial.
Ex: The treatise arose from Kaiser's work in indexing information relating to business and industry.
----
* be back in business = volver a funcionar, reanudar las operaciones, volver a abrir
* Better Business Bureau = Oficina para el Mejor Comercio
* bid + Posesivo + business = licitar servicios, sacar servicios a concurso público
* book business, the = comercio del libro, el
* business class = clase business
* business partner = socio
* business people = gente de negocios, hombres de negocios
* business school = escuela de gestión, escuela de negocios, facultad de empresariales, empresariales
* business year = año fiscal, ejercicio económico, ejercicio fiscal
* by the close of business = antes de finalizar el horario de oficina
* close of business = final de la jornada laboral
* do + business = hacer negocios, mantener relaciones comerciales
* drive out of + business = forzar a cerrar un Negocio
* electronic business (e-business) = comercio electrónico
* energy utility business, the = industria energética, la
* enter + a business = dedicarse a, dedicarse a un negocio
* family-run business = negocio familiar
* go out of + business = quedarse sin negocio
* information business, the = mundo de la información, el
* international business = comercio internacional, negocio internacional
* in the business of = dedicado a
* line of business = profesión, negocio, trabajo
* make + business = hacer negocio
* monkey business = trapicheos, tejemanejes, negocio sucio
* multibillion dollar business = negocio multimillonario
* put + Nombre + out of business = arruinar
* show business = mundo del espectáculo, el; industria del espectáculo, la
* small business = pequeño negocio, pequeña empresa
* small business owner = pequeño empresario
* stay in + business = seguir aflote, no quebrar
business card         
  • Oscar Friedheim]] card cutting and scoring machine from 1889, capable of producing up to 100,000 visiting and business cards a day
  • [[Eugène Chigot]], post impressionist painter, business card 1890s
  • 200px
  • A business card from [[Richard Nixon]]'s first Congressional campaign, in 1946.
CARD BEARING BUSINESS INFORMATION ABOUT A COMPANY OR INDIVIDUAL
Business cards; Meishi; Business card printing; Business Card; Membership card; Name card; Business Cards; Japanese business card; Businesscard
tarjeta profesional
number one         
  • The 24-hour tower clock in [[Venice]], using ''J'' as a symbol for 1
  • [[Hoefler Text]], a typeface designed in 1991, represents the numeral 1 as similar to a small-caps I.
  • alt=Horizontal guidelines with a one fitting within lines, a four extending below guideline, and an eight poking above guideline
  • 1 as a resin identification code, used in recycling
  • This Woodstock typewriter from the 1940s lacks a separate key for the numeral 1.
NATURAL NUMBER
1 (the number); ¹; One (number); 1 E0; One; Unity (number); ₁; ١; ۱; Number one; ១; 1.0; No 1; 1; NO.1; ➊; ➀; ❶; Unity (mathematics); The number one; 𐡘; ꩑; ༡; 1 (numeral); One (1); Number-one; Numberone; ௧; १; ১; ੧; No.1; ૧; ୧; ౧; ೧; ൧; ߁; ໑; ၁; ႑; ꧑; ᥇; 𐒡; ꣑; 1 (glyph); Firstly; Nº 1; Unit number; 1e0; 1E0; 1 (number); 1️⃣; 10^0; Unit (number); ASCII 49; \x31; 2^0; U+0031; User talk:Theonlysameer/sandbox; 1024^0; 1×2^0; 1B0; 1×10^0; 1000^0; 100^0; 1^1; 1^0; 1⁰; 1¹; 1**0; 1**1; 2⁰; 2**0; 1²; 1³; 1⁴; 1⁵; 1⁶; 1⁷; 1⁸; 1⁹; 1¹⁰; 1^2; 1^3; 1^4; 1^5; 1^6; 1^7; 1^8; 1^9; 1^10; 1**2; 1**3; 1**4; 1**5; 1**6; 1**7; 1**8; 1**9; 1**10; 10⁰; 10**0; 1000⁰; 1000**0; 1 B0; 1024⁰; 1024**0
(adj.) = número uno, líder, principal
Ex: Eyestrain is the number one complaint of computer users.

Wikipedia

Lotus Marketplace

Lotus Marketplace was a database program developed jointly by Lotus Development Corporation (as the software developer) and Equifax (as the information provider), announced on April 10, 1990, but cancelled shortly after on January 23, 1991, mainly due to massive protests and lawsuit threats, citing invasion of privacy. This program was rather large (even by today's standards), as it was supposed to be released on several CD-ROMs.

Lotus Marketplace was to be released in two editions, Lotus Marketplace: Business (containing information about businesses) and Lotus Marketplace: Households (containing information about peoples and households).

The Business edition of this program contained information about 7 million businesses in the United States, just like Yellow Pages, but could quickly and flexibly be searched. Unlike the Households edition, this edition was not so controversial and was released in October 1990, but was cancelled along with the Households edition; concerns about profitability were cited.

The Households edition of this program became infamous and the object of considerable opprobrium because it was supposed to contain private information about 120 million people and 80 million households in the United States. Information such as names, addresses, telephone numbers, demographic information, and prior purchasing behavior were contained in the program and could be searched quickly and flexibly. This program was strongly protested by many, who cited customer privacy issues (because by using this program telemarketers could get hundreds of names and addresses, and mass mail those addresses without addressees' consent). The backlash online was particularly intense, with a new Usenet newsgroup formed to discuss it. Information was circulated online about how to contact Lotus and request the removal of one's information from the database; more than 30,000 people would eventually do so. The decision to not release it was seen as a victory for online activism.