| ex- |
A Latin word meaning "from" or "out of," generally used to denote that a security is being sold without a benefit that has been announced, such as a dividend or rights issue.
Ãâó: www.citibank.com/corpbank/securities/glossarye.jsp
|
|---|---|
| ex- |
From. When used in pricing terms such as "ex factory" or "ex dock," it signifies that the price quoted applies only at the point of origin (in the two examples, at the seller's factory or a dock at the import point). In practice, this kind of quotation indicates that the seller agrees to place the goods at the disposal of the buyer at the specified place within a fixed period of time.
Ãâó: www.cecunc.org/business/international/export-terms...
|
| ex- |
From the point where the shipment begins movement, eg, "Ex Factory" "Ex Mine" or "Ex Warehouse." See "Terms of Sale."
Ãâó: www.shipbrokering.com/shippingterm3.html
|
| ex- |
(1) A room or building equipped so that telephone lines terminating there may be interconnected as required. The equipment may include manual or automatic switching equipment. (2) A telephone switching center; an aggregate of traffic-carrying devices, switching stages, controlling and signaling means at a network node that enables subscriber lines and/or other telecommunication circuits to be interconnected as required by individual callers. ...
Ãâó: www.isg-telecom.com/telco_glossary.htm
|
| ex- |
A font height or size that is relative to the height of X in that font family.
Ãâó: www.cougarcreationsinc.com/web_definitions.htm
|