operating
11operating — adjective 1. involved in a kind of operation (Freq. 2) the operating conditions of the oxidation pond • Participle of verb: ↑operate 2. being in effect or operation de facto apartheid is still operational even in the new African nations Leslie… …
12Operating — Operate Op er*ate, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Operated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Operating}.] [L. operatus, p. p. of operari to work, fr. opus, operis, work, labor; akin to Skr. apas, and also to G. [ u]ben to exercise, OHG. uoben, Icel. [ae]fa. Cf. {Inure},… …
13operating — adj. Operating is used with these nouns: ↑budget, ↑condition, ↑cost, ↑expenditure, ↑expense, ↑income, ↑instruction, ↑lease, ↑licence, ↑manual, ↑margin, ↑ …
14Operating — Ope|ra|ting [ ɔpəreitiŋ] das; [s] <aus gleichbed. engl. operating zu to operate »in Gang setzen, bedienen«> das Bedienen (von Maschinen, Computern o. Ä.) …
15operating — / ɒpəreɪtɪŋ/ noun the general running of a business or of a machine ▪▪▪ ‘…the company blamed over capacity and competitive market conditions in Europe for a £14m operating loss last year’ [Financial Times] …
16operating — / ɒpəreɪtɪŋ/ noun the general running of a business or of a machine ▪▪▪ ‘…the company blamed over capacity and competitive market conditions in Europe for a £14m operating loss last year’ [Financial Times] …
17Operating system — Operating systems …
18Operating model — is a term that is used in many contexts. An operating model is the abstract representation of how an organization operates across process, organization, technology domains in order to deliver value defined by the organization in scope. Any… …
19Operating surplus — is an accounting concept used in national accounts statistics (such as United Nations System of National Accounts (UNSNA) and in corporate and government accounts. It is the balancing item of the Generation of Income Account in the UNSNA. It may… …
20Operating system advocacy — is the practice of attempting to increase the awareness and improve the perception of a computer operating system. The motivation behind this may be to increase the number of users of a system, to assert the superiority of one choice over another …