Takings meaning in Urdu
Takings Synonyms
Takings Definitions
1) Takings, Issue, Payoff, Proceeds, Return, Take, Yield : منافع, پیداوار : (noun) the income or profit arising from such transactions as the sale of land or other property.
Useful Words
Bring Out : شائع کرنا , Estate Agent : جائیداد کی خرید و فروخت کرنے والا , Community Property : شوہر اور بیوی کی جائیداد , Rentier : ایسا شخص جو مقررہ آمدنی رکھتا ہو , Bagman : رشوت لینے یا تقسیم کرنے والا , Immovable : جائیداد , Park : پارک , Isthmus : خشکی کا وہ حصہ جس کے دونوں طرف پانی ہو اور خشکی کے دو بڑے حصوں کو ملائے , Fen : دلدل , Landholding : ارضی ملکیت , Bookkeeper : کاروباری حساب لکھنے والا , Bookkeeping : کاروباری حساب لکھنا , Daybook : کھاتے کی کتاب , Affairs : کار سرکار , Register : کاپی , Account : حساب کا پرچہ , Register : کھاتوں کی فہرست , Financier : سرمایہ کار , Register : درج کرنا , Foreign Exchange : زر مبادلہ , Malleability : صورت پذیری , Chattel : منقولہ جائداد , Trespass : بے جا مداخلت کرنا , Abandonment : جائیداد سے دست برداری , Communisation : قومی ملکیت میں لینا , Commerce : تجارت , Home Banking : ہوم بینکاری , Estate : جائیداد , Balance Of International Payments : توازن ادائیگی , Commercial Law : قانون تجارت , High Finance : بڑی اور پیچیدہ لین دین
Useful Words Definitions
Bring Out: prepare and issue for public distribution or sale.
Estate Agent: a person who is authorized to act as an agent for the sale of land.
Community Property: property and income belonging jointly to a married couple.
Rentier: someone whose income is from property rents or bond interest and other investments.
Bagman: a racketeer assigned to collect or distribute payoff money.
Immovable: property consisting of houses and land.
Park: a large area of land preserved in its natural state as public property.
Isthmus: a relatively narrow strip of land (with water on both sides) connecting two larger land areas.
Fen: low-lying wet land with grassy vegetation; usually is a transition zone between land and water.
Landholding: ownership of land; the state or fact of owning land.
Bookkeeper: someone who records the transactions of a business.
Bookkeeping: the activity of recording business transactions.
Daybook: a ledger in which transactions have been recorded as they occurred.
Affairs: transactions of professional or public interest.
Register: a book in which names and transactions are listed.
Account: a statement of recent transactions and the resulting balance.
Register: an official written record of names or events or transactions.
Financier: a person skilled in large scale financial transactions.
Register: record in writing; enter into a book of names or events or transactions.
Foreign Exchange: the system by which one currency is exchanged for another; enables international transactions to take place.
Malleability: the property of being physically malleable; the property of something that can be worked or hammered or shaped without breaking.
Chattel: personal as opposed to real property; any tangible movable property (furniture or domestic animals or a car etc).
Trespass: a wrongful interference with the possession of property (personal property as well as realty), or the action instituted to recover damages.
Abandonment: the voluntary surrender of property (or a right to property) without attempting to reclaim it or give it away.
Communisation: a change from private property to public property owned by the community.
Commerce: transactions (sales and purchases) having the objective of supplying commodities (goods and services).
Home Banking: banking in which transactions are conducted by means of electronic communication (via telephone or computer).
Estate: everything you own; all of your assets (whether real property or personal property) and liabilities.
Balance Of International Payments: a system of recording all of a country's economic transactions with the rest of the world over a period of one year.
Commercial Law: the body of rules applied to commercial transactions; derived from the practices of traders rather than from jurisprudence.
High Finance: large and complex financial transactions (often used with the implication that those individuals or institutions who engage in them are unethical).