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Перевод: sterling
[прилагательное] стерлинговый; установленной пробы; безукоризненный; надежный; подлинный; первоклассный; полновесный; полноценный; [наречие] в фунтах стерлингов; [существительное] стерлинг ; фунт стерлингов; английская валюта; серебро установленной пробы
Тезаурус:
- Gerald Sterling neatly summed up the Conservative case: "Voting Labour means high taxes, high taxes mean less to spend, less to spend means fewer things bought, fewer things bought means fewer things produced, and fewer things produced means less work for everyone."
- But Mr Lawson and the Bank may only have bought a week for sterling.
- Sterling was unchanged, while the dollar was down by 2.1%.
- Despite the disappointment, sterling lost only 0.5 pfennings to close in London at DM2.9562.
- The Government's dilemma is that sterling is falling because the financial markets no longer have faith in government policy towards the pound.
- Looking into Roget again, one finds the following: excellence, integrity, precious, unalloyed, sterling, standard, true, unimpaired, unadulterated, first class, second to none.
- Whilst England favours sterling and upstanding professionals like Billy Wright, Bobby Charlton and Gary Lineker, Scotland has traditionally lionised the anti-heroes, players like Alex James, Jim Baxter, Jimmy Johnstone and Mo Johnston, men who seem to be at war with authority and traumatised by their exceptional skills.
- WITH UK mortgage interest rates heading towards 14.75 per cent, and the possibility of even higher rates in prospect as a result of the sterling crisis, borrowers can be forgiven for taking notice of the proliferation of newspaper advertisements extolling the virtues of foreign currency loans.
- The decision was particularly sensitive for the Government as PO's chairman, Sir Jeffrey Sterling, is a special adviser to the DTI - a post he has held since 1983.
- The timing question aside, there appears to have been basic agreement between Mrs Thatcher and Mr Lawson on the need to defend sterling.
- STERLING succumbed to heavy worldwide selling again yesterday despite sizeable intervention in the foreign exchange markets by the Bank of England to break the fall, writes Peter Torday.
- Currency receivables can be sold forward thereby locking in the Sterling equivalent.
- His only known connection is that both he and Sterling have held shares in Winchmore, a small London company under DTI scrutiny.
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