Nesta página você pode obter uma análise detalhada de uma palavra ou frase, produzida usando a melhor tecnologia de inteligência artificial até o momento:
бухгалтерский учет
множественные ставки (две и более ставок накладных расходов, используемых при отнесении накладных затрат на себестоимость продукции; используются в крупных компаниях, поскольку предполагается, что в их ситуации одна единая ставка не позволит сделать это эффективно (напр., если одно из подразделений компании трудоинтенсивное, а другое - машиноинтенсивное, то для первого лучше использовать ставку на основе трудо-часов, а для второго - на основе машино-часов))
Смотрите также
бухгалтерский учет
накладные расходы [затраты] [издержки] (любые затраты, которые невозможно непосредственно отнести на себестоимость определенной продукции (обычно это все затраты, кроме прямых затрат труда и материалов), напр., затраты на аренду помещений, электроэнергию, канцелярские товары и другие расходы на хозяйственное обслуживание производства и управления; подразделяются на производственные накладные расходы, административные накладные расходы, накладные расходы по сбыту, накладные расходы на исследования и разработки)
косвенные затраты (в межотраслевом балансе: затраты, которые входят в данный продукт через затраты сопряженных отраслей)
синоним
The Liverpool Overhead Railway (known locally as the Dockers' Umbrella or Ovee) was an overhead railway in Liverpool which operated along the Liverpool Docks and opened in 1893 with lightweight electric multiple units. The railway had a number of world firsts: it was the first electric elevated railway, the first to use automatic signalling, electric colour light signals and electric multiple units, and was home to one of the first passenger escalators at a railway station. It was the second oldest electric metro in the world, being preceded by the 1890 City and South London Railway.
Originally spanning five miles (8 km) from Alexandra Dock to Herculaneum Dock, the railway was extended at both ends over the years of operation, as far south as Dingle and north to Seaforth & Litherland. A number of stations opened and closed during the railway's operation owing to relative popularity and damage, including air bombing during World War II. At its peak almost 20 million people used the railway every year. Being a local railway, it was not nationalised in 1948.
In 1955, a report into the structure of the many viaducts showed major repairs were needed that the company could not afford. The railway closed at the end of 1956 and despite public protests the structures were dismantled in the following year.
Since 1977, Liverpool's rapid transit/commuter rail needs have been served by the partly underground Merseyrail network, which was formed from local suburban lines and new tunnel formed into a network, using no former infrastructure of the Liverpool Overhead Railway.