preference table - significado y definición. Qué es preference table
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Qué (quién) es preference table - definición

SYSTEM OF RECIPROCALLY-ENACTED TARIFFS OR FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS
Commonwealth preference; Commonwealth Preference; Imperial preference; Colonial preference; Colonial Preference

Preferans         
  • Score sheet for four players
  • [[Croatia]]n version of three-player game
TRICK-TAKING GAME
Russian preference; Russian Preference; Prefa; Preference (Russian)
Preferans () or Russian Preference is a 10-card plain-trick game with bidding, played by three or four players with a 32-card Piquet deck. It is a sophisticated variant of the Austrian game Préférence, which in turn descends from Spanish Ombre and French Boston.
Table Alphabeticall         
  • The title page of the third edition of ''Table Alphabeticall''.
ENGLISH DICTIONARY PUBLISHED IN 1604
A Table Alphabeticall; Table alphabeticall; Table Alphabetical
A Table Alphabeticall is the abbreviated title of the first monolingual dictionary in the English language, created by Robert Cawdrey and first published in London in 1604.
Table (database)         
SET OF DATA ELEMENTS ARRANGED IN ROWS AND COLUMNS AS PART OF A DATABASE
Database table; Database Tables; Cell (database); Table (SQL); SQL table; Base table
A table is a collection of related data held in a table format within a database. It consists of columns and rows.

Wikipedia

Imperial Preference

Imperial Preference was a system of mutual tariff reduction enacted throughout the British Empire following the Ottawa Conference of 1932. As Commonwealth Preference, the proposal was later revived in regard to the members of the Commonwealth of Nations. Joseph Chamberlain, the powerful colonial secretary from 1895 until 1903, argued vigorously that Britain could compete with its growing industrial rivals (chiefly the United States and Germany) and thus maintain Great Power status. The best way to do so would be to enhance internal trade inside the worldwide British Empire, with emphasis on the more developed areas — Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and South Africa — that had attracted large numbers of British settlers.

The Dominions enacted policies of imperial preference in the late 19th and early 20th century: Canada (1897), New Zealand (1903), South Africa (1903), and Australia (1907). Due to its commitments to free trade, Britain did not reciprocate these trade policies until the 1932 Ottawa Conference amid the Great Depression.

The Ottawa Agreement had little, if any, effect on intra-Empire trade.