| turnover | act of turning over; number of people coming in and leaving (e.g. employees and customers); gross revenues, total business done; rate of selling or producing; change, reversal; kind of pastry with a sweet filling (apples, cherries etc.) | en | (isim) | en |
| turnover | The act or result of turning over; an upset; as, a bad turnover in a carriage | en | en |
| turnover | A semicircular pie or tart made by turning one half of a circular crust over the other, inclosing the fruit or other materials | en | en |
| turnover | An apprentice, in any trade, who is handed over from one master to another to complete his time | en | en |
| turnover | Admitting of being turned over; made to be turned over; as, a turnover collar, etc | en | en |
| turnover | The turnover of a company is the value of the goods or services sold during a particular period of time. The company had a turnover of £3.8 million | en | en |
| turnover | The turnover of people in an organization or place is the rate at which people leave and are replaced. Short-term contracts increase staff turnover | en | en |
| turnover | For mutual funds, a measure of trading activity during the previous year, expressed as a percentage of the average total assets of the fund A turnover rate of 25% means that the value of trades represented one-fourth of the assets of the fund For finance, the number of times a given asset, such as inventory, is replaced during the accounting period, usually a year For corporate finance, the ratio of annual sales to net worth, representing the extent to which a company can grow without outside capital For markets, the volume of shares traded as a percent of total shares listed during a specified period, usually a day or a year For Great Britain, total revenue Percentage of the total number of shares outstanding of an issue that trades during any given period | en | en |
| turnover | In accounting terms, the number of times an asset is replaced during a set period In trading, the volume of shares traded on the exchange on a given day In employment matters, turnover refers to the total number of employees divided by the number of employees replaced during a certain period In the U K , the term refers to a company's annual sales volume BACK TO TOP | en | en |
| turnover | For mutual funds, a measure of trading activity during the previous year, expressed as a percentage of the average total assets of the fund For example, a turnover rate of 50% means that the value of trades represented one-half of the assets of the fund Actively managed mutual funds typically have higher turnover rates that passively managed funds (sometimes referred to as index funds) | en | en |
| turnover | Mutual Funds: A measure of trading activity during the previous year, expressed as a percentage of the average total assets of the fund A turnover ratio of 25% means that the value of trades represented one-fourth of the assets of the fund Finance: The number of times a given asset, such as inventory, is replaced during the accounting period, usually a year Corporate: The ratio of annual sales to net worth, representing the extent to which a company can growth without outside capital Markets: The volume of shares traded as a percent of total shares listed during a specified period, usually a day or a year Great Britain: total revenue | en | en |
| turnover | Also called turnover rate - The period of time (ussually in hours) required to circu- late a volume of water equal to the volume of water contained in the pool or spa Pool capacity in gallons, divided by pump flow rate in gallons per minute (gpm), divided by 60 minutes in 1 hours, will give hours for 1 turnover | en | en |
| turnover | As applies to the portfolios of individuals and institutional investors such as mutual funds, the volume of shares traded relative to the total number of shares owned during a given period, usually a year | en | en |
| turnover | The volume of shares traded as a percentage of total shares listed on an exchange during a period, usually a day or a year The same ratio is applied to individual securities and the portfolio of individual or institutional investors | en | en |
| turnover | The currency value of the stock traded or the total currency value of trade in a market for a period of time, usually one day Turnover is used in contradistinction to volume of shares | en | en |
| turnover | The ratio of a weekly rating to a four-week reach This ratio serves as an indication of the relative degree to which the audience of a program changes The higher the ratio is the greater the turnover in the audience will be | en | en |
| turnover | a The number of new legislators elected by voters to replace those who have left or been defeated in a given period of time b The ratio of this number to the total number of legislators | en | en |
| turnover | The percent of the securities portfolio that has been sold or replaced by the fund over the course of a year, expressed as a percentage of average daily NAV | en | en |
| turnover | Money earned by your business before deducting any business expenses It includes receipts in cash or in kind for goods sold or work done, commission, fees receivable, tips, insurance proceeds for loss of stock and profits, and so on It does not include Business Start-Up Allowance (or Enterprise Allowance) Also, do not include amounts received from the sale of capital items, that is assets which are of lasting use to the business, such as business premises, plant, machinery and vehicles Turnover should be included in your accounts when it is earned, even if you do not receive the money until later | en | en |
| turnover | The rate of audience change for a specific program during a specific amount of time | en | en |
| turnover | The total amount of income received by a business during a specified period (usually a year) | en | en |
| turnover | A turnover is caused by losing control of the puck to the opposing team | en | en |
| turnover | the involuntary loss of possession of the ball during a play, either by a fumble or by throwing an interception | en | en |
| turnover | Players are going for "turnover" when they play as many tiles as possible in order to draw as many new tiles as possible By playing for turnover (usually using 5 or 6 tiles in one play), a player maximizes his/her chances for drawing the better tiles (In order from first to fifth they are: blank, S, E, X, Z) If you have played 60 tiles in a game, you had a 60% chance of drawing the good tiles That's a 50% better chance than your opponent had | en | en |
| turnover | The total value (unit of trading multiplied by number of contracts) of all contract lots traded on an exchange, for a specified period of time | en | en |
| turnover | The term used to describe the flight of a disc that curves to the right when thrown flat or at hyzer A less overstable or understable disc will generally be easier to turn over | en | en |
| turnover | the number of times a swimmer's arms turn over (cycle) in a given distance or time during a race | en | en |
| turnover | (Audience) tune-in and tune-out The departure of part of an audience (households or persons) during the course of a program or schedule, and the arrival of new audience not tuned in earlier | en | en |
| turnover | The rate of water flow through a filter A high turnover rate is recommended for reef tanks | en | en |
| turnover | The rate at which fat is used up during a frying operation Rapid turnover is desirable so that an amount of fresh fat equivalent to the original fat load will have been added to maintain the fat level and replace the absorbed fat in a relatively short time | en | en |
| turnover | The total money value of securities traded, as calculated by multiplying price by the number of securities traded | en | en |
| turnover | the ratio of the number of workers that had to be replaced in a given time period to the average number of workers | en | en |
| turnover | made by folding a piece of pastry over a filling | en | en |
| turnover | the volume measured in dollars; "the store's dollar volume continues to rise" | en | en |
| turnover | the act of upsetting something; "he was badly bruised by the upset of his sled at a high speed" | en | en |