gross produce

  • 1gross — ► ADJECTIVE 1) unattractively large or bloated. 2) vulgar; unrefined. 3) informal very unpleasant; repulsive. 4) complete; blatant: a gross exaggeration. 5) (of income, profit, or interest) without deduction of tax or other contributions; total.… …

    English terms dictionary

  • 2gross product — ˌgross ˈproduct noun [uncountable] ECONOMICS the total value of goods and services produced in a particular place: • In California, farmers produce about 10% of the state s gross product. * * * gross product UK US noun [U] ECONOMICS ► the total… …

    Financial and business terms

  • 3gross output — noun The total selling value of (a firm s) output within a given period, incl the value of necessary materials bought to produce that output • • • Main Entry: ↑gross …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 4gross margin — n technical the difference between what something costs to produce and what it is sold for …

    Dictionary of contemporary English

  • 5gross profit — noun count BUSINESS the difference between the price that someone sells goods for and what it costs to produce them …

    Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • 6Gross domestic product — GDP redirects here. For other uses, see GDP (disambiguation). Not to be confused with Gross national product or Gross domestic income. CIA World Factbook 2005 figures of total nominal GDP (top) compared to PPP adjusted GDP (bottom) …

    Wikipedia

  • 7gross profit — noun (finance) the net sales minus the cost of goods and services sold • Syn: ↑gross profit margin, ↑margin • Topics: ↑corporate finance • Hypernyms: ↑net income, ↑ …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 8produce — Synonyms and related words: Irish potato, Kraut, accomplish, achieve, act, adduce, advance, affect, aftermath, allege, array, assemble, attain, aubergine, author, avails, baked goods, be a gas, be a hit, be productive, beans, bear, bear fruit,… …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 9gross — 01. We saw a cat that had been run over by a car. It was really [gross]. 02. Don t pick your nose; it s really a [gross] habit. 03. He made this really [gross] meal out of all the left overs in his fridge. 04. Why does mom wear such a small… …

    Grammatical examples in English

  • 10gross — adj., v., & n. adj. 1 overfed, bloated; repulsively fat. 2 (of a person, manners, or morals) noticeably coarse, unrefined, or indecent. 3 flagrant; conspicuously wrong (gross negligence). 4 total; without deductions; not net (gross tonnage; gross …

    Useful english dictionary