Need another word that means the same as “export”? Find 17 synonyms and 30 related words for “export” in this overview.
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
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “export” as a noun can have the following definitions:
exportation | The commercial activity of selling and shipping goods to a foreign country. |
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “export” as a verb can have the following definitions:
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. |
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. |
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