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Lettris
Lettris is a curious tetris-clone game where all the bricks have the same square shape but different content. Each square carries a letter. To make squares disappear and save space for other squares you have to assemble English words (left, right, up, down) from the falling squares.
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English dictionary
Main references
Most English definitions are provided by WordNet .
English thesaurus is mainly derived from The Integral Dictionary (TID).
English Encyclopedia is licensed by Wikipedia (GNU).
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Translation
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1.what is left of your pay after deductions for taxes and dues and insurance etc
2.the excess of revenues over outlays in a given period of time (including depreciation and other non-cash expenses)
earnings, lucre, net, net pay, net profit, net salary, profit, profits, take-home pay
total amount; sum; sum of money; amount of money[ClasseParExt.]
remuneration[Classe]
wage; pay; salary; wages; earnings; remuneration; wage-packet; payment[ClasseHyper.]
(wage; pay; salary; wages; earnings; remuneration; wage-packet; payment)[Thème]
economy[Domaine]
monetaryWage[Domaine]
regular payment[Hyper.]
compensate, recompense, remunerate - pay - ante up, pay, pay up - compensate, make it up, make up, pay, pay off - earn, garner - bear, pay, yield[Dérivé]
payroll, paysheet[Desc]
net income (n.)
ressource d'une entreprise (fr)[ClasseParExt.]
surplus des recettes sur les dépenses (fr)[Classe]
(profit; profits)[Thème]
money[Domaine]
income[Domaine]
financial gain - bring in, clear, earn, gain, make, pull in, realise, realize, take in - bear, pay, yield - capitalist[Hyper.]
earnings, lucre, net, net income, net profit, profit, profits - profiteer[Dérivé]
clear, net, sack, sack up[Domaine]
expenditure, outgo, outlay, spending - break even - lose, turn a loss[Ant.]
income[Hyper.]
profit, turn a profit - clear, net - profiteer[Dérivé]
net income (n.)
| Accountancy |
|---|
| Key concepts |
| Accountant · Accounting period · Accrual · Bookkeeping · Cash and accrual basis · Cash flow forecasting · Chart of accounts · Convergence · Journal · Special journals · Constant item purchasing power accounting · Cost of goods sold · Credit terms · Debits and credits · Double-entry system · Mark-to-market accounting · FIFO and LIFO · GAAP / IFRS · General ledger · Goodwill · Historical cost · Matching principle · Revenue recognition · Trial balance |
| Fields of accounting |
| Cost · Financial · Forensic · Fund · Management · Tax (U.S.) |
| Financial statements |
| Balance Sheet · Cash flow statement · Income statement · Statement of retained earnings · Notes · Management discussion and analysis · XBRL |
| Auditing |
| Auditor's report · Control self-assessment · Financial audit · GAAS / ISA · Internal audit · Sarbanes–Oxley Act |
| Accounting qualifications |
| CIA · CA · CPA · CCA · CGA · CMA · CAT · CIIA · IIA · CTP |
Net income in accounting is an entity's income minus expenses for an accounting period.[1] It is computed as the residual of all revenues and gains over all expenses and losses for the period,[2] and has also been defined as the net increase in stockholder's equity that results from a company's operations.[3] In the context of the presentation of financial statements, the IFRS Foundation defines net income as synonymous with profit and loss.[1]
Net income is a distinct accounting concept from profit. Profit is a term that "means different things to different people"[3], and different line items in a financial statement may carry the term "profit", such as gross profit and profit before tax.[1] In contrast, net income is a precisely defined term in accounting.[3]
Contents |
Net income can be distributed among holders of common stock as a dividend or held by the firm as an addition to retained earnings. As profit and earnings are used synonymously for income (also depending on UK and US usage), net earnings and net profit are commonly found as synonyms for net income. Often, the term income is substituted for net income, yet this is not preferred due to the possible ambiguity. Net income is informally called the bottom line because it is typically found on the last line of a company's income statement (a related term is top line, meaning revenue, which forms the first line of the account statement).
The items deducted will typically include tax expense, financing expense (interest expense), and minority interest. Likewise, preferred stock dividends will be subtracted too, though they are not an expense. For a merchandising company, subtracted costs may be the cost of goods sold, sales discounts, and sales returns and allowances. For a product company advertising, manufacturing, and design and development costs are included.
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