turnover

US: /ˈtɝˌnoʊvɝ/
UK: /tˈɜːnə‍ʊvɐ/


English Vietnamese dictionary


turnover
  • vòng quay, sự tròn xoay

Advanced English dictionary


+ noun
1 [C, usually sing, U] ~ (of sth) the total amount of goods or services sold by a company during a particular period of time: The firm has an annual turnover of $75 million. + a rise / fall in turnover
2 [sing.] ~ (of sb) the rate at which employees leave a company and are replaced by other people: The factory has a high turnover of staff.
3 [sing.] ~ (of sth) the rate at which goods are sold in a shop/store and replaced by others: Special offers help to ensure a fast turnover of stock.
4 [C] a small pie in the shape of a triangle or half a circle, filled with fruit or jam: an apple turnover

Thesaurus dictionary


n.
gross (revenue), (total) business, volume:
Although turnover increased by ten per cent, profits were down by two per cent.

Collocation dictionary


1 amount of business a company does

ADJ.

large | low, small | company, group | aggregate, combined, total
The combined turnover of both businesses has doubled in the last two years.
| gross, net | annual, daily, etc. | global, worldwide | market | capital | stock

VERB + TURNOVER

have | record
The company recorded a turnover of £50 million last year.
| boost, increase | reduce

TURNOVER + VERB

be up | be down
Turnover was down compared with last year's figures.
| double, grow, increase, rise
The firm's UK turnover increased (by) 30% to £10 million.
| drop, fall, slip
Turnover fell from £12 million to £11 million.
| reach sth
Turnover reached $2 billion in the 12 months to September.
| exceed sth, top sth
The company's worldwide turnover exceeds $5 billion.

TURNOVER + NOUN

figure, growth, rate, tax

PHRASES

a decline/fall in turnover, an increase/a rise in turnover
> Special page at BUSINESS

2 rate at which people come and go from a job/place

ADJ.

fast, high, rapid | low | labour, staff | population
The inner city has a rapid population turnover.

VERB + TURNOVER

have


Concise English dictionary


turnoversnoun
+the ratio of the number of workers that had to be replaced in a given time period to the average number of workers
+a dish made by folding a piece of pastry over a filling
+the volume measured in dollars
+the act of upsetting something