| 释义 | 
		Definition of microbusiness in English: microbusinessnounˌmʌɪkrə(ʊ)ˈbɪznɪsˈmaɪkroʊˌbɪznəs A business that operates on a very small scale.  more than half the new enterprises are sole proprietorships or microbusinesses with no more than two employees  Example sentencesExamples -  The cost of creating a microbusiness on the average is just 1800 Euros, which is only one tenth of the cost of providing benefits to the unemployed.
 -  Those microbusinesses are individuals without a substantial—or in many cases, any—business history or infrastructure behind them.
 -  He runs a microbusiness in Columbus, Ohio.
 -  Along with bolstering savings, workers are looking to microbusinesses as a hedge against the risk of layoffs or pay cuts.
 -  If, despite a low or nonexistent overhead, decent profits still manage to elude a microbusiness, that's not necessarily a showstopper.
 -  There's one other marketing edge a microbusiness can exploit, and from the point of view of conventional small businesses it might be considered an especially insidious one.
 -  Relatively few owners of conventional businesses perceive their existence to be imperiled by online microbusinesses.
 -  There were more then one million microbusinesses that needed money to expand and couldn't get it.
 -  Microbusinesses could even spring up in the rapidly growing business-to-business auction market.
 -  Microbusinesses are using such marketing ploys in virtual communities Internet wide.
 -  The merits of blogging as a marketing tool for our microbusinesses are no mystery.
 -  The program establishes business centres across the country, which are registered as NGOs, and provide useful training to small and microbusinesses, and also helps facilitate access to credit.
 -  This was no microbusiness.
 -  It seems to hit the smallest businesses the solo business owners and microbusinesses—with under 5 employees—the hardest.
 -  Among the 53 percent who moved out of poverty, many derived their income not from a microbusiness alone, but from a combination of self-employment and wages.
 -  There are 13 million microbusinesses today, most of them based at home.
 -  The entire world of online auctions and related microbusinesses is still rather small, accounting for perhaps 1% of annual U.S. retail sales.
 -  There are hundreds of microbusinesses in Camden right now.
 -  You see women with cell phones in the villages of India, running microbusinesses.
 -  For self-employed entrepreneurs and microbusinesses, the tax code's complexity can be daunting.
 
    Definition of microbusiness in US English: microbusinessnounˈmīkrōˌbiznəsˈmaɪkroʊˌbɪznəs A business that operates on a very small scale.  more than half the new enterprises are sole proprietorships or microbusinesses with no more than two employees  Example sentencesExamples -  This was no microbusiness.
 -  Those microbusinesses are individuals without a substantial—or in many cases, any—business history or infrastructure behind them.
 -  The entire world of online auctions and related microbusinesses is still rather small, accounting for perhaps 1% of annual U.S. retail sales.
 -  There were more then one million microbusinesses that needed money to expand and couldn't get it.
 -  If, despite a low or nonexistent overhead, decent profits still manage to elude a microbusiness, that's not necessarily a showstopper.
 -  You see women with cell phones in the villages of India, running microbusinesses.
 -  For self-employed entrepreneurs and microbusinesses, the tax code's complexity can be daunting.
 -  There's one other marketing edge a microbusiness can exploit, and from the point of view of conventional small businesses it might be considered an especially insidious one.
 -  There are 13 million microbusinesses today, most of them based at home.
 -  It seems to hit the smallest businesses the solo business owners and microbusinesses—with under 5 employees—the hardest.
 -  The program establishes business centres across the country, which are registered as NGOs, and provide useful training to small and microbusinesses, and also helps facilitate access to credit.
 -  The cost of creating a microbusiness on the average is just 1800 Euros, which is only one tenth of the cost of providing benefits to the unemployed.
 -  Microbusinesses are using such marketing ploys in virtual communities Internet wide.
 -  He runs a microbusiness in Columbus, Ohio.
 -  Among the 53 percent who moved out of poverty, many derived their income not from a microbusiness alone, but from a combination of self-employment and wages.
 -  The merits of blogging as a marketing tool for our microbusinesses are no mystery.
 -  There are hundreds of microbusinesses in Camden right now.
 -  Along with bolstering savings, workers are looking to microbusinesses as a hedge against the risk of layoffs or pay cuts.
 -  Relatively few owners of conventional businesses perceive their existence to be imperiled by online microbusinesses.
 -  Microbusinesses could even spring up in the rapidly growing business-to-business auction market.
 
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