Meaning Import
What does Import mean? Here you find 62 meanings of the word Import. You can also add a definition of Import yourself

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Import


n. ~ The process of incorporating data from an external source into an application. Notes:  Transferring data from one source to another may be merely copying. 'Import' connotes a transforma [..]
Source: www2.archivists.org

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Import


A Java(TM) programming language keyword used at the beginning of a source file that can specify classes or entire packages to be referred to later without including their package names in the referenc [..]
Source: docs.oracle.com

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Import


In hydrologic terms, water piped or channeled into an area
Source: w1.weather.gov

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Import


1580s, "consequence, importance;" 1680s, "that which is imported;" both from import (v.).
Source: etymonline.com

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Import


early 15c., "signify, show, bear or convey in meaning," from Latin importare "bring in, convey, bring in from abroad," from assimilated form of in- "into, in" (see in- (2 [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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Import


/ɪmˈpoɚt/ verb imports; imported; importing 1 import /ɪmˈpoɚt/ verb imports; imported; importing Learner's definition of IMPORT [+ object] 1  : to bring a product into a country to be sold a [..]
Source: learnersdictionary.com

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Import


To bring goods in from a foreign country.
Source: atlasvanlines.com

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Import


Movement of products from one country into another. The import of automobiles from Germany into the US is an example.
Source: inboundlogistics.com

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Import


Where a site consumes electricity as opposed to generating and exporting power. Import is the most common type of site.
Source: edfenergy.com

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Import


to bring in a good or service from another area for trade.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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Import


good traded from another area.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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Import


A Java keyword used at the beginning of a source file that can specify classes or entire packages to be referred to later without including their package names in the reference.
Source: oracle.com

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Import


A good or service that is sold to a U.S. resident from a foreign resident. Imports include government and nongovernment goods and services; however they exclude goods and services to the U.S. military [..]
Source: bls.gov

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Import


Goods and services produced by the foreign sector and purchased by the domestic economy. In other words, imports are goods purchased from other countries. The United States, for example, buys a lot of [..]
Source: glossary.econguru.com

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Import


commodities (goods or services) bought from a foreign country bring in from abroad transfer (electronic data) into a database or document an imported person brought from a foreign country; &qu [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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Import


bring in from another country
Source: eenglish.in

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Import


Definition To have a product shipped into a country or region. opposite of export.
Source: investorwords.com

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Import


To use data produced by another application. The ability to import data is very important in software applications because it means that one application can complement another. Many programs, for exam [..]
Source: webopedia.com

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Import


A publication produced and issued in one country and brought into another for sale in the same unaltered form. The name of the importer may be printed on the title page in addition to, or in place of, [..]
Source: abc-clio.com

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Import


Goods that are bought or traded and shipped from another country.
Source: canadiangeographic.com

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Import


To bring data into a document from another document, often generated by a different application.
Source: www-rohan.sdsu.edu

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Import


To receive goods from a foreign country.
Source: manitoulintransport.com

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Import


To receive goods from a foreign country.
Source: logisuite.com

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Import


To receive digital records and associated metadata into one system from another, either from within the organisation or from elsewhere.
Source: naa.gov.au

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Import


To convert and use a file created by another program.
Source: dataphysics.com

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Import


See upload.
Source: simplenet.com.au

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Import


Because of the rigid source code naming convention, the Java compiler can easily find the corresponding source or class files just from the fully qualified name of a package and class. By fully qualif [..]
Source: mindprod.com

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Import


A tool in Studio that you use to load a course or library in OLX format into your existing course or library. When you use the Import tool, Studio replaces all of your existing course or library conte [..]
Source: edx.readthedocs.io

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Import


(n) commodities (goods or services) bought from a foreign country(n) an imported person brought from a foreign country(n) the message that is intended or expressed or signified(n) a meaning that is no [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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Import


To bring goods from overseas into one's country.
Source: internationalshippingusa.com

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Import


Shipment of goods from a foreign country.
Source: rgintl.biz

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Import


To bring foreign goods into a country. In international sales, the importer is usually the buyer or an intermediary who accepts and transmits goods to the buyer.
Source: cvinternational.com

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Import


To convert a file from one system or application to the format of the system or application being used.
Source: computeruser.com

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Import


To receive goods from a foreign country.
Source: rsmck.com

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Import


Act of bringing or carrying in from an outside source, especially goods or materials from a foreign country for trade or sale. Source: Encyclopedia
Source: obs-traffic.museum

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Import


A good or service purchased from foreign suppliers. 
Source: ok.gov

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Import


 Instead of opening standard file types, Import is often used for importing parts of files, program settings, plug-ins, or other unconventional file formats.  
Source: magazine.org

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Import


A car imported from another country. No cars sold via our dealers are imports, they are all UK spec cars, the exact same cars your local dealer sells. We strongly advise never buying an import car.
Source: carwow.co.uk

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Import


Made outside the USA
Source: owfinc.com

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Import


The process of bringing data into a document from another computer, program, type of file format, or device.
Source: pcl.co.nz

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Import


To bring into a country, from abroad.
Source: crewtraffic.com

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Import


Shipment of goods from a foreign country.
Source: oecgroup.com

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Import


To bring (copy) data from a table, another file, or another application into the current table. You can also import scripts from one FileMaker Pro file into another.
Source: filemaker.com

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Import


Goods or services purchased from another country and brought into one’s own country.
Source: calstate.edu

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Import


to bring or carry in from an outside source, especially to bring in (goods or materials) from a foreign country for trade or sale
Source: articles.extension.org

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Import


Any resource, intermediate good, or final good or service that buyers in one country purchase from sellers in another country.
Source: globaledge.msu.edu

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Import


To gain access to symbols that are exported from another module. See use in Chapter 29.
Source: archive.oreilly.com

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Import


by other modules.
Source: perldoc.perl.org

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Import


To gain access to symbols that are exported from another module. See use
Source: perldoc.perl.org

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Import


You'll often see import
Source: silshack.github.io

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Import


Water piped or channeled into an area.
Source: srh.noaa.gov

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Import


In hydrologic terms, water piped or channeled into an area
Source: forecast.weather.gov

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Import


 to land on, bring into, or introduce into, or attempt to land on, bring into, or introduce into, any place subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, whether or not such landing, bringing, or introduction constitutes an importation within the Customs Laws of the U.S., except that, for the purpose of any ban issued under 16 U.S.C. 1371(a)(2) [..]
Source: nmfs.noaa.gov

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Import


Goods and services produced by the foreign sector and purchased by the domestic economy. In other words, imports are goods purchased from other countries. The United States, for example, buys a lot of [..]
Source: amosweb.com

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Import


In hydrologic terms, water piped or channeled into an area
Source: weatherdudes.com

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Import


(economics) import (the act of importing)
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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Import


''(English verb)'' to signify: * ''What this imported, I could ill divine.'' *: '''1800''' , , line 105
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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Import


The movement of goods into a country for trade.
Source: rgs.org

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Import


Import is the act of bringing goods into a country. Import may also refer to: import and export of data, in computing import tariff, a tax on imported goods import quota, a type of trade restriction [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Import


An import is the receiving country in an export from the sending country. Importation and exportation are the defining financial transs of international trade.In international trade, the importation a [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Import


An import is the receiving country in an export from the sending country. Importation and exportation are the defining financial transs of international trade.In international trade, the importation a [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Import


An import is the receiving country in an export from the sending country. Importation and exportation are the defining financial transs of international trade.In international trade, the importation a [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org





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