释义 |
Definition of pre-tax in English: pre-taxadjective priːˈtaks (of income or profits) considered or calculated before the deduction of taxes. pre-tax profits rose 23 per cent Example sentencesExamples - It allocates half of its pre-tax profits to dividends.
- This has risen each year to a turnover of £330m and a pre-tax profit of £9.88m for last year.
- In the interim years pre-tax profits were around the €200 million level.
- The firm said it made a pre-tax profit of £300,000 for the July to September quarter.
- The profit shareout is based on 15 per cent of the company's pre-tax profit for 2000.
- Annual pre-tax profit is expected to be around £180m compared to £159m last year.
- The company took on staff in 2001 and saw an increase in its turnover and pre-tax profit.
- Overall, the group is expected to post pre-tax profits of £65m against £75m last time.
- Lloyds reported a pre-tax profit of £1.6bn in the first half last year.
- The global banking giant this morning reported pre-tax profits of £6.7b after goodwill amortisation.
- It is expecting pre-tax profits to come in at £31.9m on Friday, down from £39.6m last time.
- Brokers have pencilled in pre-tax profits of £618m, up from £615m the previous year.
- The self-employed personal contributions are not tax deductible, so one is paying it from pre-tax income.
- The good news was that the company reported a pre-tax profit for the quarter to the end of September.
- Operating profit, pre-tax income and net income were all up on 1999 figures.
- The group is tipped to turn in pre-tax profits of £58.5m on Thursday against £42.3m last year.
- As such, a pre-tax profit of £100m has been pencilled in by brokers.
- Congress needs to enact policies that boost pre-tax wages and after-tax incomes.
- The group says it expects to report pre-tax profit for the year ending in March to be at the top of forecasts.
- Therefore, turnover has gone up 480 fold and pre-tax profit is 500 times larger.
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