English-Spanish translations for turnover

  • cifra de negociosTan solo un 8 % de las PYME hacen un 15 % o más de su cifra de negocios en los mercados europeos. Only eight per cent of SMEs make 15 per cent of their turnover in the European markets. El mantenimiento del factor de la cifra de negocios para dividir las tasas administrativas parece ser el medio más adecuado. Maintaining turnover as a key for dividing administrative charges seems the most appropriate way. Si tan solo duplicáramos esta cifra, un 20 % de las PYME haría un 30 % de su cifra de negocios en el mercado interior y podríamos hacerlo si lo queremos. If we simply doubled this, so that 20 per cent of SMEs made 30 per cent of that turnover in the internal market, we could achieve what we want.
  • movimiento de mercancías
  • rotaciónNo me explico cómo incluso en los puestos más altos de la administración PHARE hay una rotación tan violenta del personal. This rapid turnover at all levels does of course mean a loss of continuity, experience and knowhow. Otra consecuencia ha sido la elevada rotación de profesores en las escuelas con una alta concentración de hjos de inmigrantes. Another outcome has been the very fast turnover of teaching staff in those schools with a high concentration of migrant children. Una rotación constante de la plantilla es problemática a muchos niveles, y debemos recordar que somos seres humanos, no una pieza del engranaje económico. A constant turnover is problematic on many levels and we have to remember that we are human beings, not cogs in an economic wheel.
  • vuelco

Definition of turnover

  • The amount of money taken as sales transacted in a given period
  • The frequency with which stock is replaced after being used or sold, workers leave and are replaced, a property changes hands, etc
  • A semicircular pastry made by turning one half of a circular crust over the other, enclosing the filling (usually fruit
  • A loss of possession of the ball without scoring
  • A measure of leg speed: the frequency with which one takes strides when running, typically given in strides per minute
  • An apprentice, in any trade, who is handed over from one master to another to complete his time
  • Capable of being turned over; designed to be turned over

Examples

  • The company had an annual turnover of $500,000.
  • High staff-turnover can lead to low morale amongst employees
  • Those apartments have a high turnover because they are so close to the railroad tracks.
  • They only served me one apple turnover for breakfast.
  • The Nimrods committed another dismaying turnover en route to another humiliating loss.
  • a bad turnover in a carriage
  • a turnover collar

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