Betekenis van:
black-market

black-market
Bijvoeglijk naamwoord
  • verboden; onwettig
  • distributed or sold illicitly

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen


Voorbeeldzinnen

  1. I've heard that Tom buys things on the black market.
  2. Did you buy it on the black market?
  3. Their works are mainly for the black market.
  4. Thus, it is ensured that no black market practices are applied.
  5. Appingedam, however, can be considered a ‘black area’ in which the market situation is characterized by the availability of different broadband services over at least 2 competing infrastructures (such as telephone and cable TV networks). For projects covering ‘black areas’ only, there is a high risk that state intervention crowds out existing and future private investments.
  6. Again, it is the consistent practice of the Institutions to consider this criterion as fulfilled if the company uses the official exchange rate for all its transactions involving foreign currencies. Thus, it is ensured that no black market practices are applied.
  7. Given that the average price of the Community Industry (around EUR 1000‘Macro Black’ and around EUR 1500 for ‘Macro Green’) is considerably higher, Chinese exporting producers would, in the absence of measures, have an important incentive to divert significant export quantities from their present third country markets to the Community market.
  8. In its decision to initiate proceedings, the Commission made it clear that the assessment of the capacity situation of an electricity market should take account of the physical specificities of electricity, and of the potentially enormous disturbance that electricity black-outs can create both for the economy and for citizens’ everyday life.
  9. Even clearer on this score is the explanation given by Mr Bon, France Télécom's former CEO, before the same commission of enquiry:‘There is one fundamental point that the black scenario never included: the fact that access to the capital market was closed off to us.
  10. The difference in price becomes even further pronounced when taking into account the fact that Turkish producers exported mainly black tubes to the Community market (i.e. those with a low cost) whereas imports from the cumulated countries were mainly galvanised tubes (i.e. those with a high cost).
  11. ‘White areas’ have no broadband provision at all, ‘grey areas’ are similar to a natural monopoly where the network is controlled by a single operator not granting access to its basic infrastructure. Appingedam, however, can be considered a ‘black area’ in which the market situation is characterized by the availability of different broadband services over at least 2 competing infrastructures (such as telephone and cable TV networks). For projects covering ‘black areas’ only, there is a high risk that state intervention crowds out existing and future private investments.
  12. I mean, of course!… I wasn't there!…Mr Vincent de La Bachelerie: It did not necessarily go without saying, and we are in fact monitoring …’. Even clearer on this score is the explanation given by Mr Bon, France Télécom's former CEO, before the same commission of enquiry:‘There is one fundamental point that the black scenario never included: the fact that access to the capital market was closed off to us.
  13. In the market for gas treatment and sulphur recovery technologies, IFP and Prosernat compete with such gas treatment equipment suppliers as KCC, KPS, SIIRTEC-NIGI, Hanover Maloney, Frames, TDE and GPS, with such gas sweetening technology licensees as UOP, ExxonMobil, Shell Global Solutions, BASF, Eneos and Huntsman, and with such sulphur specialists as Jacobs, Black & Veath Pritchard, Lurgi, Parsons, Technip-KTI, SIIRTEC-NIGI, CBI and TPA.