Betekenis van:
business people

business people
Zelfstandig naamwoord
    • people who transact business (especially business executives)

    Synoniemen

    Hyperoniemen


    Voorbeeldzinnen

    1. Our business calls for a lot of people.
    2. When we started out in this business, many people said that we would fail.
    3. Business people exchange cards at the beginning or end of a meeting.
    4. The insider trading scandal put a lot of people out of business.
    5. The website's tagline has to let people know what that business does and how it differs from the competition.
    6. In business today, too many executives spend money they haven't earned, to buy things they don't need, to impress people they don't even like.
    7. When I was in elementary school I thought, from the bottom of my heart, that the teachers were great people and I was influenced by the teachers' attitudes and moral lessons, but middle school was just a business like any other.
    8. When you're young, you look at television and think, there's a conspiracy. The networks have conspired to dumb us down. But when you get a little older, you realize that's not true. The networks are in business to give people exactly what they want. That's a far more depressing thought.
    9. As far as their publication is concerned, the first declaration was published in a national daily newspaper aimed at an audience of business people and financiers.
    10. raising awareness of the importance of creativity, innovation and entrepreneurship for personal development, as well as for economic growth and employment, and fostering entrepreneurial mindsets, particularly among young people, through cooperation with the business world;
    11. Whenever the circumstances are appropriate, tailored support should be made available to specific categories of business (e.g. start-ups or recently transferred companies) or entrepreneurs (e.g. young people, women, older workers or those from ethnic minority communities).
    12. European microfinancing instruments can help to support the structures of the social economy which assist people who are excluded with social reintegration and which help them to develop the minimum skills required in order to undertake a lasting business project.
    13. Necessary knowledge includes the ability to identify available opportunities for personal, professional and/or business activities, including ‘bigger picture’ issues that provide the context in which people live and work, such as a broad understanding of the workings of the economy, and the opportunities and challenges facing an employer or organisation.
    14. The demand for quality digital content in Europe, with balanced access and user rights, by a broad community, be they citizens in society, students, researchers, SMEs and other business users, or people with special needs wishing to augment their knowledge, or ‘re‐users’ wishing to exploit digital content resources to create services, is increasingly apparent.
    15. BGB is the holding company that owns the BGB group, which was formed in 1994 by the amalgamation of several credit institutions formerly controlled by the Land of Berlin; BGB also does business as a credit institution in its own right. In 2000 BGB had a group balance sheet total of about EUR 205 billion in 2000, about EUR 189 billion in 2001 and about EUR 175 billion in 2002. This put it in tenth place among German banks in 2001 and in twelfth place in 2002. It employed some 17000 people in 2000, a little over 15000 in 2001 and about 13000 in 2002.