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Incomen. money, goods or other economic benefit received. Under income ...
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Income1. The amount of money (nominal or real) received by a person, household, or other economic unit per unit time. May or may not be in return for services provided or goods sold. 2. National income. 3. [..]
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IncomeReceipts of rents/interest/dividends for example, produced by capital held.
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IncomeIncreases in economic benefits in the form of inflows or enhancements of assets, or decreases of liabilities that result in an increase in equity (other than increases resulting from contributions by owners).
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Income the money that a person, a region, a country, etc. earns from work, from investing money, from business, etc. people with high/low incomes a weekly disposable income (= the money that you have left t [..]
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Incomec. 1300, "entrance, arrival," literally "a coming in;" see in (adv.) + come (v.). Perhaps a noun use of the late Old English verb incuman "come in, enter." Meaning " [..]
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IncomeA flow of money, goods, and benefits to a person or an organization.
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Incomewages, salary, or amount of money earned.
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IncomeReceipts or benefits, usually in the form of money, regularly accruing from labor, business, or property. [D02833]
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IncomeRevenue earned or received by households that can be used for consumption or saving. For the aggregate economy, earned income is termed national income, while received income is termed personal income [..]
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IncomeMoney, goods, or other economic benefit received. Under income tax laws, income can be active through one's efforts or work, or passive from rentals, stock dividends, investments, and interest on [..]
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IncomeMonies or other compensation received from any source. This includes wages, commissions, bonuses, Social Security and other retirement benefits, unemployment compensation, disability, interest, and dividends. Generally, all income is taxable unless it is specifically exempted by law.
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Incomethe financial gain (earned or unearned) accruing over a given period of time Income is the consumption and savings opportunity gained by an entity within a specified time frame, which is generally exp [..]
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Incomemoney received. Can be considered at three scales:
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IncomeThis term is used in several ways. Some use the word interchangeably with revenues. Others use the word to signify a net amount, such as income from operations (revenues minus expenses in the company& [..]
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IncomePayment of wages usually earned from work or investments. This is usually measured by year.
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IncomeDefinitions (2) 1. For corporations, revenues minus cost of sales, operating expenses, and taxes, over a given period of time. Income is the reason corporations exist, and is often the single most imp [..]
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IncomeTo dream of coming into the possession of your income, denotes that you may deceive some one and cause trouble to your family and friends. To dream that some of your family inherits an income, predicts success for you. For a woman to dream of losing her income, signifies disappointments in life. To dream that your income is insufficient to support [..]
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Incomeis any monetary amount that we get paid from a job, sale of assets or investments. For example you may work a regular job as a shop assistant and make a wage. At the weekend you may sell and old TV on [..]
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Incomea gain or recurrent benefit usually measured in money that derives from capital or labor ;also : the amount of such gain received in a period of time [an of $20,000 a year]
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IncomeThe amount of money received from employment (salary, wages, tips), profit from financial instruments (interest, dividends, capital gains), or other sources (welfare, disability, child support, Social Security and pensions).
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IncomeInflow of REVENUE during a period of time.
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IncomePayments earned by households for selling or renting their productive resources. May include salaries, wages, interest and dividends.
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IncomeThe amount of money taken in.
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IncomeThe sum of money wages and salaries (earnings) plus income other than earnings.
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IncomeOperating cash flows less overheads and depreciation, either before tax or after tax earnings.
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IncomeMoney you earn from work, business, investments, etc.
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IncomeMoney you earn or receive as a result of investments.
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Incomemoney you receive from work, business, investments, etc.
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IncomeFor an individual, income means the amount of money received during a period of time, including money received in exchange for labor or services, from the sale of goods or property, or as profit from [..]
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IncomeMoney that comes in from property, business or work
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IncomePayment people earn for the work they do.
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IncomeThe payment people receive for providing resources in the marketplace. When people work, they provide human resources (labor) and in exchange they receive income in the form of wages or salaries. Peop [..]
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IncomeDividends or interest received by owners of equity or bonds respectively. Dividends represent a portion of earnings paid to shareholders while interest is compensation to bondholders in the form of ca [..]
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IncomeIncome means "the gain derived from capital, from labor, or from both combined." Sanford & Brooks v. Commissioner, 11 B.T.A. 452, 459 (B.T.A. 1928)
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IncomeThe portion of investment return from interest or dividend payments, taxable at an individual's ordinary income tax rate.
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IncomeMoney earned as wages or received from other sources
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IncomeIncome refers to all the money that you have coming in each week or month and includes wages, benefits and even rent if you let out part of your home to someone else. The level of your income, balance [..]
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IncomeA measure of whether the economy is rigged for you or against you.
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IncomeThere are two types of income: earned and unearned. Earned income is money paid for services, typically in the form of salary, wages and tips. Unearned income is money received not for work, such as i [..]
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IncomeThe amount of money a person receives from all sources. These sources include wages, commissions, bonuses, Social Security and other retirement benefits, unemployment compensation, disability, interes [..]
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Income"Total income" is the sum of the amounts reported separately for wages, salary, commissions, bonuses, or tips; self-employment income from own nonfarm or farm businesses, including p [..]
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IncomeMonies or other compensation received from any source. This includes wages, commissions, bonuses, Social Security and other retirement benefits, unemployment compensation, disability, interest, and di [..]
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Incomesee profit.
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Income"Income is the maximum amount that a household, or other unit, can consume without reducing its real net worth provided the net worth at the beginning of the period is not changed by capital...
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Incomen. ingreso(s); percepción; (taxed income) ingresos tributables; (untaxed income) ingresos no tributables (or libre de impuestos), ingresos no gravados con impuestos
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IncomeAn inward flow of money over time. For most people this consists of wages or salary, but other sources are benefits, pensions, interest on savings and dividends from shares. Industrial Revolution A phrase coined by Tawney in the 1880s to describe the process by which the UK had developed from an agricultural society into a society based on manufact [..]
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Incomehas the same meaning as Earnings.
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IncomeSensitive Repayment - Repayment schedule that assigns fixed payments for one year at a time.
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Incomeis money you receive in the form of salary or wages, interest from bank accounts, dividends from shares, and rent from investment properties.
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IncomeRevenues or receipts accruing from business enterprise, labor, or invested capital.
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IncomeRevenues or receipts accruing from business enterprise, labor, or invested capital.
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IncomeThe money paid to you from all sources including but not restricted to church collections, donations, rent and fundraising activities. As defined in section 4 loss of income in our church choice policy
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IncomeAn investment objective of Income indicates you seek to generate income from investments and are interested in investments that have historically demonstrated a low degree of risk of loss of principal value. Some examples of typical investments might include high quality; short and medium-term fixed income products, short-term bond funds and covere [..]
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IncomeMonies or other compensation received from any source. This includes wages, commissions, bonuses, Social Security and other retirement benefits, unemployment compensation, disability, interest, and di [..]
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IncomeThe money you earn through employment or self-employment, paid by a pension or gained through investments and savings.
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IncomeThe return on your investment that arises from dividends
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IncomeLike ‘supply’, ‘demand’, ‘rent’, ‘welfare’ and ‘utility’, the word ‘income’ is a part of common speech that has entered economics as a technical term. ...
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Income"Income" includes earnings or other periodic entitlements to moneys from any source and any other property subject to withholding for support under the laws of this state.
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Income, sb. a running sore. ‘What makes you lame?’ ‘A tuk’ it first wi’ an income in ma knee.’
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Incomeregular payments from an investment derived from interest on cash or bonds, dividends on shares, rent from properties or income.
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IncomeMonies or other compensation received from any source. This includes wages, commissions, bonuses, Social Security and other retirement benefits, unemployment compensation, disability, interest, and dividends. Generally, all income is taxable unless it is specifically exempted by law.
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IncomeIs the dividend or interest received from an investment.
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IncomePayments to unitholders made from the dividends, and interest earned on the securities held by a fund. Bond funds pay dividends more frequently than growth funds. Income distributed through dividends is distinct from returns which is the capital appreciation on investment. Index Fund
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Incomen. money, goods or other economic benefit received. Under income tax laws, income can be "active" through one's efforts or work (including management) or "passive" from rental [..]
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IncomeIncome consists of the profits generated by the fund, with the exclusion of unrealized capital gains, indicated in the annual and six-monthly statement of the fund.
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IncomeInflow of revenue during a period of time. (See net income.)
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IncomeThe amount of money an individual receives in a particular time period.
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IncomeThe total amount of money you earn from employment and other sources.
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IncomeFor child support purposes, any periodic form of payment to an individual, regardless of source, including wages, salaries, commissions, bonuses, worker’s compensation, disability, pension, or retirem [..]
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IncomeIncome is money you get, for example from work you do or from interest on savings.
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IncomeThe sum of all wages, salary, commissions, bonuses, and tips; self-employment income from own non-farm and farm businesses, including proprietorships and partnerships; interest, dividends, net rental income, royalty income, and income from estates and trusts; Social Security and Railroad Retirement income; Supplemental Security Income; any public a [..]
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IncomeGenerally referring to money income, this term is used in the Census as well as sample surveys and the Economic Accounts and can be per capita, or for persons, households or families with income. Income data based on tax returns will be for tax returns filers or for those filing taxable returns. Check data sources and survey questionnaires to deter [..]
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IncomeA household's total income from all sources, including wage or salary income; self-employment income; interest, dividend, or net rental income; Social Security income; public assistance income; u [..]
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IncomeIn the Current Population Survey, income includes money income (prior to payments for personal income taxes, Social Security, union dues, Medicare deductions, etc.) from: (1) money wages or salary; (2) net income from nonfarm self-employment; (3) net income from farm self-employment; (4) Social Security or Railroad Retirement; (5) Supplemental Secu [..]
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IncomeHousehold income from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS) and the MEPS predecessor surveys used in this report was created by summing personal income from each household member to create family income. Family income was then divided by the number of people that lived in the household during the year to create per capita household income. Po [..]
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IncomeAs defined by the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 (PRWORA), income is any periodic form of payment to an individual, regardless of source, including wages, sala [..]
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IncomeOne of the five demand determinants assumed constant when a demand curve is constructed, and that shift the demand curve when they change. Income affects demand differently for normal goods and inferi [..]
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IncomeRevenue earned or received by households that can be used for consumption or saving. For the aggregate economy, earned income is termed national income, while received income is termed personal income [..]
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IncomeThe Concise Oxford Dictionary defines income as "receipts from one's lands, work, investment etc." This definition has been adapted by economic theory, where, for instance, a consumer m [..]
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IncomeIncome is the maximum amount that a household, or other unit, can consume without reducing its real net worth.
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IncomeThe amount of money one makes, generally measured on a yearly basis.
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IncomeAmount of money received from any or all of the following: wages, interest, dividends, sales or rental of property or services, business or farm profits, certain welfare programs, and subsistence allowances such as taxable and non-taxable social security benefits and child support.
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IncomeThe amount of money received from employment (salary, wages, tips), profit from financial instruments (interest, dividends, capital gains), or other sources (welfare, disability, child support, Social Security, and pensions).
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IncomeThe amount of money received from employment (salary, wages, tips), profit from financial instruments (interest, dividends, capital gains), or other sources (welfare, disability, child support, Social [..]
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Incomemoney a person earns or receives
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IncomeThe amount of money received from any or all of the following: wages, interest, dividends, sales or rental of property or services, business or farm profits, certain public assistance programs, disabi [..]
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IncomeThe total dollar amount of money received to support the project. This includes:
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IncomeThe amount of money received from employment (salary, wages, tips), profit from financial instruments (interest, dividends, capital gains), or other sources (welfare, disability, child support, Social [..]
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IncomeThe amount of money received from employment (salary, wages, tips), profit from financial instruments (interest, dividends, capital gains), or other sources (welfare, disability, child support, Social [..]
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Incomen. money, goods or other economic benefit received. Under income tax laws, income can be "active" through one's efforts or work (including management) or "passive" from rental [..]
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Incomerevenues which are earned.
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IncomeAmount of a company's total sales (revenue) remaining after subtracting all of its costs, in a given period of time.
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Incomelang=en
1800s=1843
* '''1843''' — . ''''.
*: The two young Cratchits laughed tremendously at the idea of Peter's being a man of business; and Peter himself looked thoughtfully at the fire from betw [..]
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IncomeIncome is the consumption and savings opportunity gained by an entity within a specified timeframe, which is generally expressed in monetary terms. However, for households and individuals, "incom [..]
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IncomeIncome is the consumption and savings opportunity gained by an entity within a specified timeframe, which is generally expressed in monetary terms. However, for households and individuals, "incom [..]
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IncomeIn U.S. business and financial accounting, the income is generally defined by GAAP and the Financial Accounting Standards Board as: Revenues - Expenses; however, many people use it as shorthand for ne [..]
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