Betekenis van:
housing industry

housing industry
Zelfstandig naamwoord
  • bedrijf uit de sector bouwnijverheid; bedrijf dat huizen bouwt
  • an industry that builds housing

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen

housing industry
Zelfstandig naamwoord
  • bouwbedrijven; bouwbedrijf; economische tak; geheel van bouwmensen; branche v.d. bouwnijverheid
  • an industry that builds housing

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen


Voorbeeldzinnen

  1. This group passes out information on such things as travel and health care, and encourages its members to vote on issues that affect this age group such as legislation regulating the insurance industry, medical care and housing.
  2. Afterwards, the situation on the Dutch and German housing market improved, with peaks in 2006 and 2007. According to the Netherlands, data from the German Tiles Federation (Ziegelverband) show that the German industry recovered from 2004/2005 onwards.
  3. On the basis of this and two other, similar trustee agreements, NordLB became the owner — in legal but not in financial terms — and the trustee administrator of the assets for promoting housing, agriculture and industry on the Land’s behalf.
  4. In short, at the beginning of the century both the German and the Dutch industry made heavy losses on the German market, but the German brick sector has gained as a result of the recovery of the housing market in Germany, and the Dutch brick producers have not.
  5. On the basis of this and two other, similar trustee agreements, NordLB became the owner — in legal but not in financial terms — and the trustee administrator of the assets for promoting housing, agriculture and industry on the Land’s behalf. It granted promotional loans in its own name, but on the Land’s financial account.
  6. (‘BdB’), an association representing private banks established in Germany, informed the Commission among other things that, under a law adopted on 17 December 1991, the Land of Lower Saxony’s shares in assets used to promote housing, agriculture, trade and industry had been transferred to NordLB with effect from 31 December 1991.
  7. At the beginning of the present century there was severe stagnation in the markets for the construction of housing in Germany and the Netherlands (in 2000/2001 the German brick industry experienced a loss of almost 20 % of turnover and sales).
  8. By letters of 31 May and 21 December 1994, the Bundesverband deutscher Banken e.V. (‘BdB’), an association representing private banks established in Germany, informed the Commission among other things that, under a law adopted on 17 December 1991, the Land of Lower Saxony’s shares in assets used to promote housing, agriculture, trade and industry had been transferred to NordLB with effect from 31 December 1991.
  9. Nevertheless, the Netherlands observes that the figures from the Dutch Central Statistics Office that have been submitted show that since then the export of Dutch bricks to Germany has lagged behind. In short, at the beginning of the century both the German and the Dutch industry made heavy losses on the German market, but the German brick sector has gained as a result of the recovery of the housing market in Germany, and the Dutch brick producers have not.