air bill of lading

  • 1bill of lading — bill of lad·ing / lā diŋ/: a document issued by a carrier that lists goods being shipped and specifies the terms of their transport ◇ A bill of lading serves as a receipt for the goods, a contract for the transport of the goods, and a document of …

    Law dictionary

  • 2Bill of lading — Admiralty law History …

    Wikipedia

  • 3Through Bill Of Lading — A bill of lading that allows the transportation of goods both within domestic borders and through international shipment. The through bill of lading is often required for the exportation of goods, as it serves as a receipt or carriage contract… …

    Investment dictionary

  • 4КОНОСАМЕНТ — BILL OF LADINGРасписка, выданная перевозчиком, выступающим в качестве получателя груза, подтверждающая, что он получил перечисленные в расписке товары от указанного в ней отправителя для транспортировки в указанное место назначения указанному… …

    Энциклопедия банковского дела и финансов

  • 5AWB — Air Waybill an airline Air Waybill is a bill of lading which covers both domestic and international flights transporting goods to a specified destination. This is a non negotiable instrument of air transport that serves as a receipt for the… …

    Financial and business terms

  • 6carriage of goods — ▪ law Introduction       in law, the transportation of goods by land, sea, or air. The relevant law governs the rights, responsibilities, liabilities, and immunities of the carrier and of the persons employing the services of the carrier.… …

    Universalium

  • 7Consignee — See also: Consignment Admiralty law …

    Wikipedia

  • 8Freight forwarder — The storefront of one of many freight forwarders located around Guangzhou s garment districts. The list of destinations indicate that this business serves importers of Chinese clothes to countries such as Russia and Azerbaijan. A freight… …

    Wikipedia

  • 9International commercial law — is the body of law that governs international sale transactions. [Mo, John S.; International Commercial Law (2003) 1.] A transaction will qualify to be international if elements of more than one country are involved. [Pryles, Jeff Waincymer, and… …

    Wikipedia

  • 10Waybill — Admiralty law History …

    Wikipedia