Need another word that means the same as “export”? Find 17 synonyms and 30 related words for “export” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
The synonyms of “Export” are: sell abroad, sell overseas, market abroad, market overseas, send abroad, send overseas, trade internationally, transport, transmit, spread, disseminate, circulate, communicate, pass on, put about, convey, exportation
Export as a Noun
Definitions of "Export" as a noun
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “export” as a noun can have the following definitions:
- A product or service sold abroad.
- Commodities (goods or services) sold to a foreign country.
- The selling and sending out of goods or services to other countries.
- Sales of goods or services abroad, or the revenue from such sales.
- Of a high standard suitable for export.
Synonyms of "Export" as a noun (1 Word)
exportation | The commercial activity of selling and shipping goods to a foreign country. |
Usage Examples of "Export" as a noun
- Wool and mohair were the principal exports.
- Meat exports.
- The export of Western technology.
- Export ales.
Export as a Verb
Definitions of "Export" as a verb
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “export” as a verb can have the following definitions:
- Transfer (data) in a format that can be used by other programs.
- Cause to spread in another part of the world.
- Send (goods or services) to another country for sale.
- Spread or introduce (ideas and beliefs) to another country.
- Sell or transfer abroad.
- Transfer (electronic data) out of a database or document in a format that can be used by other programs.
Synonyms of "Export" as a verb (16 Words)
circulate | Move around freely from person to person or from place to place. Blood circulates in my veins. |
communicate | Pass on (an infectious disease) to another person or animal. The heat is communicated through a small brass grating. |
convey | Go or come after and bring or take back. It s impossible to convey how lost I felt. |
disseminate | Spread throughout an organ or the body. There is a subset of these low grade tumours that can disseminate and migrate. |
market abroad | Engage in the commercial promotion, sale, or distribution of. |
market overseas | Make commercial. |
pass on | Accept or judge as acceptable. |
put about | Estimate. |
sell abroad | Be approved of or gain acceptance. |
sell overseas | Give up for a price or reward. |
send abroad | To cause or order to be taken, directed, or transmitted to another place. |
send overseas | To cause or order to be taken, directed, or transmitted to another place. |
spread | Spread out or open from a closed or folded state. I spread a towel on the sand and sat down. |
trade internationally | Do business; offer for sale as for one’s livelihood. |
transmit | Transmit or serve as the medium for transmission. Sexually transmitted diseases. |
transport | Transport commercially. She was transported with pleasure. |
Usage Examples of "Export" as a verb
- The information can be exported to a database.
- The Greeks exported Hellenic culture around the Mediterranean basin.
- The Russians exported Marxism to Africa.
- We export less than we import and have a negative trade balance.
- Nearly all the bananas produced were exported to Britain.
Associations of "Export" (30 Words)
barter | The action or system of bartering. Paper money ceases to have any value and people resort to barter. |
budget | Provide a sum of money for a particular purpose from a budget. A budget guitar. |
business | Business concerns collectively. Maybe something positive will come out of the whole awful business. |
capitalism | An economic system based on private ownership of capital. Private ownership is a key feature of capitalism. |
commerce | The activity of buying and selling, especially on a large scale. The changes in taxation are of benefit to commerce. |
commercial | Of or relating to commercialism. Commercial grade of beef. |
commercially | In a way that is concerned with buying, selling, and making a profit. He made historical drama appear commercially viable. |
credit | Used in the phrase to your credit in order to indicate an achievement deserving praise. She had 15 credit on her account. |
dealing | The activity of buying and selling a particular commodity. My dealings with the gentler sex. |
debit | Enter as debit. 10 000 was debited from their account. |
deficit | (in sport) the amount or score by which a team or individual is losing. The balance of payments is again in deficit. |
economic | Relating to economics or the economy. Economic growth. |
emporium | A centre of commerce; a market. |
exporter | A person or group spreading or introducing ideas and beliefs to another country. Japan has only begun to be an exporter of culture in the last couple of decades. |
financial | Shares in financial companies. An independent financial adviser. |
fiscal | Involving financial matters. The budget deficit for fiscal 1996. |
importation | The introduction of an idea from a different place or context. The government takes a tough stance on illegal drug importation. |
importer | Someone whose business involves importing goods from outside (especially from a foreign country. The EU is the largest importer of agricultural products from developing countries. |
international | A player who has taken part in an international game or contest. International waters. |
investor | A person or organization that puts money into financial schemes, property, etc. with the expectation of achieving a profit. Foreign investors in the British commercial property sector. |
market | The free market. The bottom s fallen out of the market. |
protectionism | The policy of imposing duties or quotas on imports in order to protect home industries from overseas competition. |
rates | A local tax on property (usually used in the plural. |
sales | Income (at invoice values) received for goods and services over some given period of time. |
statecraft | Wisdom in the management of public affairs. Issues of statecraft require great deliberation. |
swap | Exchange or give (something) in exchange for. Let s do a swap. |
trade | A trade wind. She has traded millions of dollars worth of metals. |
trader | A person who buys and sells goods, currency, or shares. |
transact | Conduct business. The dealer must know the price at which he is prepared to transact. |
transaction | An input message to a computer system dealt with as a single unit of work. No transactions are possible without him. |