Trade in a sentence as a noun

If that clock expires, the CRAs must remove that tradeline from your report and never reinstate it.

" The CRA will get in touch with the debt collection company, have their attempt timeout, and nuke the trade line.

Whether it is the best choice for a given venture turns on how the founders in that venture see the trade-offs.

Instead [...] we must work in sales and marketing to convince someone with money to trade cash for our trinket, so that we can have purchasing power to access the natural bounty of the land.

But, again, there are always trade-offs and founders should weigh these carefully in deciding whether the Kima way is the way they want to choose.

If it's not, enjoy the fact that you're in a trade where even untrained, mediocre practitioners reach the top 10% of American incomes.

First, computer programmers are certainly among the most respected trades.

Despite understanding the financial markets better than most, I never trade individual stocks.

If that employee gets appropriate respect for his skill set, and reasonable compensation for the risks inherent in a startup, then it's a fair trade.

Trade in a sentence as a verb

If the answer to this is that it is worth it for many startups to make such tradeoffs in exchange for fast cash, I would add that these funds are not being offered to just any startup.

But can we build a multi-hundred mile long steel tube to the required tolerances?I would be inclined to trade off efficiency for manufacturability.

Numerous economists have made the point that a large trade surplus can be a sign of economic weakness: perpetual insufficient demand at home in the domestic market.

With the constant trade and monopoly prices, I was able to further entrench my dominant position each month by continuing to out bid any other doctor who tried to purchase avian meat.

What the **** I consider driving a car to work to be hardly justifiable at all in our trade, but a 31 year old fire truck is sending a giant **** you to anyone else trying to reduce their carbon emissions.

It is always a trade-off between optimum investor protections and practical limitations on such protections in the name of letting legitimate capital formation get done.

This sort of trade-off is not worth it for all companies but, for those that dream to do significant scaling and that need to have doors opened to future VC investors, the YC stamp of approval and the YC resources offer value that is not easily found elsewhere.

One can open-source his own works as a matter of commitment to the idea that all information ought to be free or for any other reason but that doesn't mean the law ought to abrogate protections for proprietary, trade secret information that most businesses need to keep confidential information as a matter of competitive advantage.

Trade definitions

noun

the commercial exchange (buying and selling on domestic or international markets) of goods and services; "Venice was an important center of trade with the East"; "they are accused of conspiring to constrain trade"

noun

the skilled practice of a practical occupation; "he learned his trade as an apprentice"

See also: craft

noun

the business given to a commercial establishment by its customers; "even before noon there was a considerable patronage"

See also: patronage

noun

a particular instance of buying or selling; "it was a package deal"; "I had no further trade with him"; "he's a master of the business deal"

See also: deal

noun

people who perform a particular kind of skilled work; "he represented the craft of brewers"; "as they say in the trade"

See also: craft

noun

steady winds blowing from east to west above and below the equator; "they rode the trade winds going west"

noun

an equal exchange; "we had no money so we had to live by barter"

See also: barter swap swop

verb

engage in the trade of; "he is merchandising telephone sets"

See also: merchandise

verb

turn in as payment or part payment for a purchase; "trade in an old car for a new one"

verb

be traded at a certain price or under certain conditions; "The stock traded around $20 a share"

verb

exchange or give (something) in exchange for

See also: swap swop switch

verb

do business; offer for sale as for one's livelihood; "She deals in gold"; "The brothers sell shoes"

See also: deal sell