Wall Street - significado y definición. Qué es Wall Street
Diclib.com
Diccionario ChatGPT
Ingrese una palabra o frase en cualquier idioma 👆
Idioma:

Traducción y análisis de palabras por inteligencia artificial ChatGPT

En esta página puede obtener un análisis detallado de una palabra o frase, producido utilizando la mejor tecnología de inteligencia artificial hasta la fecha:

  • cómo se usa la palabra
  • frecuencia de uso
  • se utiliza con más frecuencia en el habla oral o escrita
  • opciones de traducción
  • ejemplos de uso (varias frases con traducción)
  • etimología

Qué (quién) es Wall Street - definición

STREET IN MANHATTAN
Wall street; Wall Street, Manhattan; Wall St; Wall St.; Wall Street (Manhattan); Wall Street (New York City); History of Wall Street; History of American finance; Wall st; Wall Street, New York, New York
  • [[1 Wall Street]], at Wall Street and Broadway
  • US headquarters of [[Deutsche Bank]] at [[60 Wall Street]] in 2010
  • Wall Street {{circa}} 1870-87
  • The original city map, called ''the [[Castello Plan]]'', from 1660, showing the wall on the right side
  • A crowd at Wall and Broad Streets after the 1929 crash, with the [[New York Stock Exchange Building]] is on the right. The majority of people are congregating in Wall Street on the left between the "House of Morgan" ([[23 Wall Street]]) and [[Federal Hall National Memorial]] (26 Wall Street).
  • [[Federal Hall National Memorial]]
  • first1= Huw}}</ref>
  • An engraving from 1855, showing a conjectural view of Wall Street, including the original Federal Hall, as it probably looked at the time of [[George Washington]]'s inauguration, 1789
  • Slave market by Wall Street c. 1730
  • Pier 11
  • Trinity Church]] looking west on Wall Street
  • Detail of [[New York Stock Exchange Building]]
  • Street sign for Wall Street at the corner with Broadway, in front of [[1 Wall Street]]
  • Wall Street subway station]]
  • upright=1.2
  • Wall Street bombing, 1920. Federal Hall National Memorial is at the right.

Wall Street         
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
Wall Street is a street in New York where the Stock Exchange and important banks are. Wall Street is often used to refer to the financial business carried out there and to the people who work there. (BUSINESS)
On Wall Street, stocks closed at their second highest level today...
Wall Street seems to be ignoring other indications that consumers are spending less.
N-PROPER
Wall Street         
·add. ·- A street towards the southern end of the borough of Manhattan, New York City, extending from Broadway to the East River;
- so called from the old wall which extended along it when the city belonged to the Dutch. It is the chief financial center of the United States, hence the name is often used for the money market and the financial interests of the country.
Wall Street (photograph)         
PHOTOGRAPH BY PAUL STRAND
Wikipedia talk:Articles for creation/Wall Street (1915 photograph); Wall Street (1915 photograph)
Wall Street is a platinum palladium print photograph by the American photographer Paul Strand taken in 1915. There are currently only two vintage prints of this photograph with one at the Whitney Museum of American Art (printed posthumously) and the other, along with negatives, at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

Wikipedia

Wall Street

Wall Street is an eight-block-long street in the Financial District of Lower Manhattan in New York City. It runs between Broadway in the west to South Street and the East River in the east. The term "Wall Street" has become a metonym for the financial markets of the United States as a whole, the American financial services industry, New York–based financial interests, or the Financial District itself. Anchored by Wall Street, New York has been described as the world's principal financial and fintech center.

Wall Street was originally known in Dutch as "Het Cingel" (or "the Belt") when it was part of New Amsterdam in the 17th century. An actual wall existed on the street from 1653 to 1699. During the 18th century, Wall Street was a slave trading marketplace and a securities trading site, and from the early eighteenth century (1703) the location of Federal Hall, New York's first city hall. In the early 19th century, both residences and businesses occupied the area, but increasingly business predominated, and New York City's financial industry became centered on Wall Street. In the 20th century, several early skyscrapers were built on Wall Street, including 40 Wall Street, once the world's tallest building.

The Wall Street area is home to the New York Stock Exchange, the world's largest stock exchange by total market capitalization, as well as the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and many commercial banks and insurance companies. Several other stock and commodity exchanges have also been located in downtown Manhattan near Wall Street, including the New York Mercantile Exchange and other commodity futures exchanges, and the American Stock Exchange. To support the business they did on the exchanges, many brokerage firms had offices nearby. However the direct economic impacts of Wall Street activities extend worldwide.

Wall Street itself is a narrow and winding street running from the East River to Broadway and lined with skyscrapers, as well as the New York Stock Exchange Building and Federal Hall National Memorial and One Wall Street at its western end. The street is near multiple New York City Subway stations, ferry terminals, and the World Trade Center site.

Ejemplos de uso de Wall Street
1. "Wall Street helped create the foreclosure crisis, and Wall Street needs to help solve it," she said.
2. By Ami Ginsburg Tags: Wall street, Israel These days finance–sector stocks on Wall Street are in the doghouse.
3. "Wall Street has good days and bad days," said Heather Tierney at her Wall Street Burger Shoppe.
4. The phrase "Wall Street thinks" is a tsunamic oxymoron because Wall Street, by and large, does not think.
5. Some of Obama‘s more Wall Street–oriented advisers may be uncomfortable with these themes and policies, but Obama isn‘t running for president of Wall Street.